Archive for January, 2010

Extend Eee PC Battery Life with eee-control

January 6th, 2010

asus-eee-pc-at-newegg

I’ve been using a small utility called eee-control on my Asus Eee PC 901 battery netbook with Ubuntu. eee-control lets you take control of the hardware on Eee PCs. Some of these controls, like the performance modes, were easily accessible in the default Asus Linux distribution but not from Ubuntu. Extend Eee PC laptop Battery Life with eee-control It includes:

  • on/off toggles for the wifi and bluetooth radios, the camera, and the SD card reader
  • front-side bus performance modes including over and under clocking
  • sensor readings for temperature, fan level, and fan RPM
  • hotkey setup for extra buttons
  • smarter fan control
  • Use the external  laptop battery as 12 cell Sony VGP-BPS8

I would absolutely recommend eee-control to anyone using Linux on an Eee PC. Be sure to turn on the smart fan control feature because with it my system is much quieter and even silent at times. By turning off the wireless radios and using powersave mode I can now push my Eee PC 901 to six hours of battery life by using the method Extend Eee PC Battery Life with eee-control.

Installing eee-control on Ubuntu is easy. Download and install the latest deb package provided by the author of eee-control like VGP-BPS2 Sony VGP-BPS2C control. Reboot so that the eee-control daemon can be started. When you log in you should have a new Eee icon in your desktop’s notification area.

The article Via Tombuntu

Good product about AC charger

January 5th, 2010

Good product about AC charger

Good product launch Programmable USB / AC Li-Ion charger solution

WPG Group Pinjia Summit Group recently been actively fujitsu t4220 battery promoting the new SMB138 lithium-ion battery, SMB138 can be directly AC / DC converter and USB interface for an input power to provide handheld devices (Mobile / Hand-Held Device) Best charging solution. With built-in automatic adjustment mechanism can be based on the size of the input power self-regulating charge current and high efficiency Switching Mode ways to implement the battery charge is different from the traditional linear (Linear Mode) charging significantly improve the charging efficiency to save HSTNN-OB53 charge time, heat, PCB space, has been plagued by the problem for engineers.

SMB138 is industry’s most advanced manufacturing process, in order to 3MHz Switching Mode Converter for the core, providing more than 90% of the conversion efficiency, output charge current is more up to 1.25A with vgp-bps9s. With a patent TurboCharge feature, allowing users to be able to meet the USB 2.0 specification, the input by the system in accordance with the situation appropriately adjust the size of the charge current, full and effective use of input power, will charge up to the provisional Li River to make the menu letter. In addition, SMB138 also provides USB OTG (On-The-Go) function, without additional components be installed, may be provided separately 5V/500mA output, offer services such as mobile devices are commonly used VGP-BPS10, such as the Bluetooth Headset.

A unified interface & one-sided access

January 5th, 2010

A unified interface & one-sided access

Later, Dixon went to pass, the Association to visit Frederick and dslr battery grip a number of cell phone stores, but the surprise is that even a number of sales that had never heard of the “cell phone charger uniform standards.” When a reporter referred to “universal charger”, the response of the majority of sales are “not that universal chargers do.” National Institute of Standardization of this province, experts say the current market popular “universal charger” is not a unified standard general-purpose charger. Universal charger can be used for different models of mobile phone charger, but not as common as a USB charger port, both connected with the power outlet can also be connected to the computer and other canon bg-e2n battery grip equipment.

“At present, a unified interface, one-sided access to the power side of the USB interface, for most consumers do not practical significance. After all, the use of computer USB port to charge the phone the consumer is not over, not to mention the body of mobile phone interface is not unity, can not be considered a truly unified mobile phone charger. “mobile phone chain, Purchasing Guide canon bg-e3 battery grip Association Hang Huang told reporters that although the standard has been implemented more than a month, but due to technical problems, be able to use common cell phone charger is still not available, and the all the different brands phone charger is a vast use of a common project in the short term difficult to achieve. In the Suning Appliance, Nokia cell phone sales staff said that although 15 certified by the department concerned in the general-purpose charger Nokia’s products there, but due to brand competition, product cost and other factors, really want to promote the opening of this standard will not be easy with canon bg-e5 battery grip, at least Hefei is also the current market can not be bought using a common cell phone charger.

Saving my laptop battery life methods

January 4th, 2010

We all like quests… right?? Well, mine has to do with getting the most out of my battery on my aging laptop. Aging that includes the power-providing battery. I already have a head start on this with my laptop specs. It is a Dell Inspiron 700m Battery . It is also based on the Centrino platform, which was Intel’s first major play into laptop powersaving. Included within are an arsenal of powerful components that use minimal power (at the time).

 

My specific laptop was based off of the Carmel platform. It includes an Intel Pentium M 1.6GHz processor with variable speeds ranging from 600MHz to 1.6GHz, the Intel 2200BG wireless networking card, and the (unfortunately) low-powered 855 Chipset which includes Intel Extreme Graphics 2. Also included is a 12.1″ widescreen LCD Powerful Dell laptop battery, which I am sure uses less power than some of the larger screens out there.

I already had low power-consumption in mind when I installed Slackware (started with 10.2). I installed cpufreq-utils and cpufreqd which allowed me to adjust my processor speed depending on certain power conditions. I also purchased a larger battery (on this model the Dell Latitude D830 Battery is in the back, so the larger one extends further out the back). The original was a 4-Cell that provides 2200mAh. I replaced that with an 8-cell that provides 4400mAh of power. When the battery was new it provided a whooping 5 hours of battery life. Sadly batteries will dwindle and the power it is capable of putting out will shorten over time.

So to get to the point of my quest, my goal was to get the maximum life out of my laptop. The reason was that I was getting ready to go on leave. I currently am stationed at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, and flight times back to the states are kinda long. So I wanted to be able to use my laptop for as long as possible while I was flying (partially due to the fact that I can’t sleep on planes, even when assisted with sleep medication). So with the help of Google, I was able to come up with the following.

First things first, I found I needed to re-compile my kernel. This will be distro-specific, due to different distros compiling kernels different ways. Mine will all be based off of Slack 12.1 which is the version I was running at the time with my Dell Latitude D620 Battery. The biggest reason for me, was to included tickless-support, which basically only wakes up the processor when there is something for it to do.

Next was to get a program called PowerTOP (PowerTOP needs certain things built into the kernel, the items needed are listed on their site). It is developed by Intel and is used to show what is causing your processor to wake from its low power state. The other benefit it gives is it will tell you some information on how to use less power Dell Latitude D520 Battery, such as disabling Bluetooth, or setting a lower scan rate for your wireless. It provides hotkeys so you can change these directly in the program without exiting. It also provides the actual commands that it uses to change these. This way you can make them into a script (like I did).

Some of the functionality it wants to change may not be beneficial for everyday use of a laptop (like disabling Bluetooth). So if you want some of these to run everytime you run your laptop you could add them to your system startup with Dell Inspiron 1721 Battery, which in Slackware is under /etc/rc.d/rc.local (distros vary in their startup procedures, so yours may be different). For other times (like when on a plane and you don’t want any wireless devices running) you can make a specific script for it that you run when needed.

Another tool worth mentioning is laptop-tools. This is a script that will run in the background and whenever the laptop starts using the battery, it automatically will provide powersavings. There is a detailed article about what it does here.

Now come the common sense items. People should realize these, but lets face it… everyone has brain-farts.

  • Dim your laptop screen to the lowest level still viewable. The higher the brightness of your LCD screen, the more power your backlight will consume.
  • Don’t use your Dell Inspiron 1420 Battery CD/DVD drive. It uses a lot of power to spin a disc. Their are plenty of tutorials to convert your dvd’s to a file on your hard drive.
  • Don’t use external devices. Even an external mouse or usb drive will use additional power.
  • Depending on your distro you may want to consider using a different window manager. Some window managers have a lot of programs running in the background that will take up processing power and in turn use more of your battery. While I normally run KDE 4, I use windowmaker when I am trying to save power.
  • Disable 3D acceleration in your Dell C1295 Dell KD476. Again, this will use unnecessary processing power. You can do this in your /etc/X11/xorg.conf file by commenting out the Load dri and glx modules. Just put a # in front of them.
  • Disable any unused services. If you won’t be using your webserver or database software, there is no reason to be running those in the background. You can add any of these to your powersave script.
  • Disable any unused hardware. You can do this by removing the modules. If you won’t be using usb, then remove it. Some of the devices you may want to consider disabling are: firewire, pcmcia slot, bluetooth, wireless, card readers, and more this can saved Dell Inspiron E1705 Battery life.
  • The more obvious one is, if possible, buy a larger battery. This will be dependent on the laptop, because some laptops do not have any larger batteries available. Worst case, buy a new one to replace your aging battery.

Unfortunately I don’t have an amount of extra Dell Latitude D820 Battery life this gave me, but I did lower my wake-ups from idle per second by more than 400 wake-ups. And this is just when I am using KDE4. With switching to windowmaker I was able to lower the total amount to 40-60 wake-ups per second. Granted, when I am running my video player that number does go up, but the lower the number of wake-ups the less power your processor will consume.

The article Via bassmadrigal’s blog