Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

LNT Battery Change

November 26th, 2009

After a long period of running out of time, the sight of the moon as we drove home this evening was enough to drive me to change the battery in the LNT module sitting atop my Meade LX90. It didn’t take long and was easier than the instructions had led me to think it would be. The change was followed by some recalibration (as required) and all seemed to work quite well.

The alignment wasn’t perfect, but it was done in a rush and I hope it’ll get better as I’m able to take more time.

I also tried attaching the D300 to the scope. The proved to be a huge improvement over the D70 as the exposure metering works – which proved useful in saving time and wasted images Once again, the biggest problem was getting the focus spot on – but that’s something I need to work on.

Dell Details for laptop Battery Recall

October 10th, 2009

Dell announced a recall today of dell laptop battery sold in many of our notebook computers over the past two years. You may have seen the recent New York Times story or have seen other details in the blogosphere. As the leader of the mobile business for Dell, I wanted to share my thoughts on this recall.

Lithium-ion is a proven technology which has been widely used in our industry for over ten years. These batteries are not just for notebook computers – they are found in many electronic products including cell phones and music players. For more information on lithium-ion safety, you can visit the Portable Rechargeable Battery Association.GD761 U4873

I don’t mind telling you this recall follows an extensive investigation, but the decision to err on the side of safety was never in doubt. My team and I come to work in Austin and around the world every day so we can put great products in the hands of our customers. There were very few incidents to go on here, and it would have been easy to justify them as anomalies. However, we’re not willing to do that, because in everything that we do, it is absolutely about safety first,so there are many latpop battery replacements bring out,such as inspiron E1705 battery ,xps m1330 battery ,inspiron E1505 battery ,inspiron B120 battery .

This is a voluntary recall of approximately 4.1 million batteries, making it one of the largest in Dell’s history. Many of you are thinking that this action is a direct result of the notebook fire at a business meeting in Osaka, Japan back in June, as well as a couple of other incidents that have been posted on the Internet.

The fact is, we are looking at safety data every single day, and this did not start when we heard about the incident in Osaka. Our technical support agents are trained to look out for anything that comes up on a call that might be indicative of a safety matter, no matter how small. When we hear about these things, we work with the customer to get them a new replacement system right away, so they can get back up and running. We then work with the customer to get the affected system back to Dell (we call this a “capture”) so we can take a good, hard look at it. Dell has a global safety organization with engineers and experts at our centers around the world. In most of these cases, we are able to determine that the cause of the customer complaint is not a hazard for other customers. Nevertheless, we learn a lot from our customers’ experience and we use this information in the future development of our products,latitude d600 battery ,latitude d500 battery. That’s one reason it’s great having a direct relationship with our customers.

In very rare instances, a real safety hazard does present itself. In these cases, the customer captured systems are sent through a detailed forensic analysis, kind of like what you would see on “CSI.” Dell has extensive lab capability for these investigations and a lot of the work is done right here. We also work with third-party labs to complete and verify this analysis, because we value independent outside opinions. In any case, our safety engineers are involved every step of the way.

Analyzing the data is the tricky part—that’s what brought us to where we are today. We’re lucky that in being direct we have access not only to real-time customer data, but also can correlate that information with data from our component supply partners such as Sony, who is the manufacturer of the latitude d830 battery cells in this particular case. We look at product performance data all the time, but we give it extra scrutiny when there is a problem that might impact our customers and their well being. In this case, there was not much to go on, especially considering how few incidents there were in relation to how many notebooks Dell sells as the largest notebook brand worldwide. Since we engage directly with our customers and build every system to each customer’s unique order, we know what product we have shipped to whom. We are now focused on communicating to those notebook customers impacted by this recall and making the replacement process as simple as possible. Some might say we are being conservative and even overreacting in taking this broad action, but even one more incident is too many.

On behalf of Dell, I’d like to apologize to all affected customers. Above all else, your safety is important to us. We also understand that the work that you do on your notebook is invaluable to you, and we’re committed to getting replacement batteries shipped out to you as quickly as we can.

To determine if your laptop battery is part of this recall, you can go here. This website will be live shortly after midnight Central Time. This site is now live. You’ll find answers to FAQs and new information as it is available here on Direct2Dell.

keep your laptop’s battery or batteries at their best

October 6th, 2009

The NewerTech Intelligent Battery Charging Station is the solution you’ve been waiting for!

Load two batteries(gd761,kd476) and when first battery is done charging, the unit “intelligently” begins charging the second battery. Plus, not only does this product charge your batteries quickly and correctly, but the deep conditioning feature can both extend the life of your battery, as well as bring back additional life to a inspiron e1705 battery that’s started to show its age.

You’re probably asking yourself why you need to condition your batteries. Aren’t the Li-Ion batteries immune to the “memory effects” that plagued the old style NiMh batteries? Yes, they are – to a point! It is always best to exercise the battery cells to get the longest life and most runtime possible. And instead of the hassle of charging and draining, charging and draining, charging and draining, this charger makes conditioning a simple, painless task!

With such maintenance, you’ll be sure to get the longest runtimes over the longest lifetime possible. Whether for your stock Apple powerbook g4 battery, or for one of our industry leading NuPower batteries, the NewerTech Intelligent Battery Charging Station will help you to get the most from your battery by being an extremely convenient way to keep them charged and ready to go.

Review Of Dell XPS M1330 Laptop

September 16th, 2009

The Dell XPS M1330 is designed for those that want power on the go. If you’re also fashion conscious and like to standout in a crowd, the looks of the XPS M1330 will help you in that area too. Sleek design coupled with a portable form factor and powerful components come together to make for a compelling notebook.

Build and Design

Our pre-production XPS M1330 as equipped:

  • 13.3-inch WXGA screen with LED backlight
  • “Crimson” red paint (also available in “Tuxedo” black or “Pearl” white)
  • 2.0GHz Core 2 Duo T7300 processor, Santa Rosa chipset (up to 2.4GHz available)
  • 2GB DDR2-667 SDRAM (up to 4GB DDR2 SDRAM available)
  • 160GB 5400 RPM SATA HDD (32GB SSD drive available)
  • Slot-loading dual-layer DVD±RW drive
  • 128MB NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS
  • WWAN option for Verizon
  • Ethernet, 802.11a/g/n (Intel 4965), Bluetooth option
  • Integrated VGA webcam
  • HDMI, VGA, 1394, two USB 2.0 ports, integrated media reader (MS, SD, xD), fingerprint reader
  • Media Center remote located in ExpressCard slot
  • Windows Vista Home Premium
  • Dimensions 12.5″ x 9.4″ x 0.87″ – 1.33″
  • Weight starts at 4 pounds with 6-cell battery(xps m1330 battery)
  • Unlike the bulky, unattractive 12-inch Dell XPS m1210 with li-ion xps M1210 battery , the M1330 has clearly been built with an emphasis on good looks and clean lines, ditching the earlier model’s cumbersome, rotating Web cam and thick chassis. The system is slightly wedge shaped, going from 0.87 inch in the front to 1.3 inches in the rear. At less than four pounds, it’s one of the lightest 13-inch laptops we’ve seen–nearly a full pound lighter than the popular yet hefty 13-inch Apple MacBook, and a touch lighter than the 12-inch XPS M1210 with powerful dell xps m1210 battery .

    The keyboard tray is brushed silver with black accents, while the lid is available in black, white, or red. Our review unit had the matte-red finish (Dell calls it Crimson Red), which looks great, but more color options (as with the newly revamped Inspiron line of laptops) would have been welcome.

    Dell manages to squeeze a good number of extras onto the keyboard tray, including touch-sensitive controls for volume and media playback, an eject button for the slot-loading DVD drive, and a quick-launch button for Dell’s proprietary Media Direct software. The biggest drawback we found with the M1330’s design was the tiny, 2.75-inch touchpad, which we found to be particularly frustrating given the fact that there’s plenty of room on the wrist rest for a bigger pad.

    You will love:Dell XPS M1330 has 2 megapixel camera sensor resolution which is higher in comparison with similar priced notebooks. Dell XPS M1330 has only 4-pound weight,9 cells dell xps M1330 battery. Price comes upto $715 this notebook has great features for the money.

    You will hate:Screen size 13.3-inch is somewhat smaller than some similarly priced notebooks. This notebook has a modest 2.0 GHz CPU speed. Graphics-intensive applications will certainly hinder performance on a system that relies on relies shared video RAM.

    Summary

    There are very few 13-inch laptops on the market that bring the caliber of hardware and performance of the Dell XPS M1330. We’re getting a glimpse of the future in ultraportable power with the Dell XPS M1330 battery .Its battery is as good as inspiron e1505 battery . Game-capable graphics, blazing processor speed, and a pile of RAM all packed into a lovely chassis that’s as comfortable to carry as a hardback airport romance novel. Despite the extra cash you’ll shell out, we think the Dell XPS M1330 is the clear choice over other cheaper, less powerful notebooks.

    How to use and conservation of GPS built-in lithium battery

    September 15th, 2009

    How to use and conservation of GPS built-in lithium battery

    1. Do not deliberately GPS built-in lithium Laptop battery that will put clean in the charge, when the system prompted a time of low power can be charged, should be put before the injury for the lithium battery is not small.

    2. To use the random charging accessories for charging, do not use third-party charger.

    3. Most of the built-in lithium-car GPS, so do not be demolished or converted the laptop battery without permission.

    4, as far as possible to avoid the body exposed to extremely high or extremely low temperature environment, but also to avoid the erosion of the liquid.

    In fact, Car GPS built-in lithium Pavilion DV2000 battery is not your imagination so fragile, so long as a little heart, the conservation and reasonable, built-in lithium battery life can be maintained at three years and change bad habits, we can give built-in lithium battery with the greatest protection, let give full play to their power as a car navigation system to provide a stable life to protect.

    At present, the market most of the mainstream car GPS with built-in lithium battery power supply. Lithium-ion iBook G4 battery has a discharge stability, small size and other features relative to conventional nickel-metal hydride and nickel cadmium batteries for the obvious advantages. Many portable electronics market, digital products are used in lithium-ion battery power supply.

    But lithium-ion Toshiba PA3399U-2BRS battery is not perfect, the use of lithium more stringent environmental requirements, and the high cost of batteries and the discharge current is its relatively small defects can not be ignored. Then, as the use of large lithium-ion batteries: automotive GPS products, the use of lithium batteries that power supply should be careful when there. In daily for VGP-BPS2C battery conservation, and many casual habits could have built-in lithium-vehicle navigation systems cause fatal injuries. So we specialize in power from a vehicle built-in lithium use and conservation aspects of the daily summary of some experiences to share.

    Many users use the GPS when the car, regardless of the body are used to power the adequacy of the charging of plug in vehicles to use, such use would cause harm lithium batteries in serious even built-in lithium Toshiba PA3451U-1BRS battery can not be used. Plug in Car Charger for GPS because the car after the power supply will be carried out on the built-in lithium rechargeable, if the user habitually used GPS navigation, you are doing each time you use the equivalent of charging and discharging, thereby affecting the battery life. Which affect the capacity of lithium Dell Inspiron 6000 Battery life and a major factor is the need for a battery charge and discharge times, which is why many users feel less and less power-car GPS durable reason.

    The right to use is: should wait to run out of electricity, or GPS navigation instrument in itself to give low power to remind the car after the connection charge for charging to use. If your car GPS Car Charger to use the long-term connection, it is best to conduct a full-month charge and discharge, which is run out o飞Dell inspiron 6400 battery power to conduct a full volume of charge, so that the greatest degree of protection can extend the life of lithium batteries.

    The user has just purchased for GPS products, its appearance in general only 50% of capacity or less. When you first use the Apple laptop battery in I need to put power to make, and then charging an external battery charger, and charge for the first time the best more than 15 hours, the second and the third meeting such as the battery runs out after use, the charging time is best but also more than 12 hours, but it should be noted that charge no more than 24 hours, otherwise the battery will produce a surplus of energy resulting in the internal decomposition of the electrolyte inside the battery voltage increase caused by natural or explosions.

    In addition, for long-term non-use of the GPS, the Li-ion Dell laptop battery will automatically discharge the next best to the battery is full before use after use, so as to avoid over-discharge the battery caused damage. The use of GPS in the process, try to avoid exposure to the body or in a humid environment, the use of harsh external environment would cause instability in Li-ion battery discharge.

    Skytone Alpha 680 netbook with Google Android reviewed – Video

    September 11th, 2009

    The Skytone Alpha 680 is one of the first netbooks to ship with the Google Android operating system preinstalled. Its pa3191u-3brs pa3284u-1brs battery is very strong to work 5-6 hours.  And to be honest, Android might not be the best choice for this netbook.  The company clearly didn’t spend a lot of time customizing the OS to play well with the hardware, and instead basically threw the version of Android used on cellphones onto a clamshell netbook. On the bright side, the netbook does feature a 7 inch, 800 x 480 pixel touchscreen display that can be folded over the keyboard for use in tablet mode, which makes the device a bit more smartphone-like.

    The folks at Rokland picked up an Alpha 680 recently to see how well Google Android works with the WiFi adapters the company sells and insert the Pavilion DV4 battery, Pavilion DV4T battery, Pavilion DV5 battery,. But since there hasn’t been much information about the 680 published since earlier this year, the company decided to go ahead and post a video overview, which you can see after the break. Rokland will post a full review on the company’s blog soon as well.

    Overall, Rokland wasn’t particularly impressed with the netbook design. It’s rather clunky looking, has an unattractive yellow finish, and doesn’t really take advantage of all Android’s features with Latitude D420 battery Latitude D430 battery. For instance, the display orientation doesn’t auto-rotate when you rotate the screen. And flicking from one window to the next with your finger is difficult.

    For a little while this summer it looked like Google Android on netbooks might be the next big thing. We even saw some machines running Android and a version of the Firefox web browser that appeared to have been ported to run on the OS. But now that Google is pushing its upcoming Chrome operating system for netbooks and Latitude D810 battery Latitude D830 battery, it seems likely that Android will remain confined to cellphones with the odd exception here and there like the Skytone Alpha 680.

    via Netbook Choice

    sony cybershot h3 digital camera introduction

    September 9th, 2009

    If you’re reading this, then you probably already know that there are a lot of different kinds of cameras in the world. This year, we saw the birth of a new variation with the advent of superzooms that don’t have electronic viewfinders, such as the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H3 original battery code np-bg1 I’ll be writing about here. The upside is that the cameras can be smaller than their EVF-laden counterparts, and if you despise peering into a tiny hole at an LCD while framing your shots, then you’ll welcome this evolution. However, if you’ve discovered as I have that an EVF can come in handy when shooting certain subjects (I like using one when shooting baseball batters), then you might want to check out one of Sony’s other superzooms, such as the DSC-H7 or DSC-H9 , these two digital camera battery code sony np-bg1.

    While the H3’s small body design (for a superzoom) is definitely handy when trying to fit it in a bag or jacket pocket, it leaves few options for the button layout. Sony basically had to put the zoom rocker smack in the middle of where your thumb should naturally rest, which might seem good at first, but I ended up accidentally nudging it often when shooting, throwing off my zoom setting and messing up the framing of my shot. If Sony would’ve moved the shutter button a little to the left and the mode dial forward, the zoom rocker could’ve been moved farther right and given room for your thumb. However, as the body design goes, that’s the biggest flaw. The grip, though small, is effective–curl your middle finger over the top of the grip, and the rest of your fingers fall nicely into place, though it does leave your pinky dangling, which always irks me. It seems as though camera makers have begun to despise the pinky finger. Most entry-level dSLRs and almost all superzooms have grips that can’t fit a pinky.

    Dominating the front of the camera is a Carl Zeiss-branded Vario-Tessar 10x optical 38-380mm equivalent f/3.5-4.4 zoom lens, which feeds light to an 8.1-megapixel CCD sensor. Around back you’ll find a 2.5-inch, 115,000-pixel LCD. Caffeine addicts should be pleased to know that the H3 includes Sony’s Super Steady Shot optical image stabilization to help compensate for hand shake. In case the built-in lens isn’t wide or long enough for you, Sony offers both a 0.7x-wide angle converter (VCL-DH0758 bp-511) and a 1.7x telephoto converter (VCL-DH1758). The necessary adapter ships with the camera and can also accept 58mm screw-on filters. The camera also comes with a lens hood that attaches to the front of the adapter. Unfortunately, it’s so large that it obscures a large portion of the flash, which makes the use of fill flash almost useless if you use the hood. However, the adapter itself can likely provide enough shade from the sun when the lens is zoomed to its widest, which means that the hood is only really necessary when shooting telephoto shots, in which the camera’s built-in flash probably won’t be able to provide fill flash anyway.

    As is the rage these days, Sony separates the H3’s menu system into two sections. If you press the Menu button, it brings you to the shooting menu, which is home to settings you change often while shooting, such as image size, face detection, exposure and flash compensation, ISO, white balance, and more. If you press the Home button, you go to the setup menus, which let you control less-oft-changed settings, such as whether you have a lens adapter attached, or whether you want the AF assist light on or off. The menus use a new design that looks very similar to the menus on Sony’s PlayStation Portable. They look nice and are pretty intuitive, though it’s strange that there’s an option for the shooting menu in the home menu, but if you select it, it tells you to press the Menu button instead of just porting you over to that menu.

    Like a lot of superzooms, the H3 includes manual exposure controls, though there are only two apertures to choose from and these vary depending on the focal length you’re using at any given time. You won’t find aperture- or shutter-priority, but there are the usual array of scene modes, some of which are in the menu and some of which reside on the mode dial, as well as program and full auto shooting modes.

    Sony says that the H3 can output images and video to an HDTV if you buy the optional VMC-HD1 component video cable for about $40. However, since it’s not included with the camera and Sony didn’t send us one with the review sample, I can’t verify this, though I don’t really doubt them. This is a nice option, but I’d rather have seen an HDMI output on the camera instead of being forced to buy Sony’s cable. Either way, viewing images on HD has always been a better experience for me than using the regular standard-definition outputs found on most compact cameras.

    Except for a slow flash recycle time, the DSC-H3 performed well in our lab tests. The camera took 1.8 seconds to start up and capture its first JPEG, no doubt slowed a bit by the fact that the lens has to extend before you can shoot. It took 1.3 seconds between JPEGs with the flash disabled, jumping to 2.6 seconds between shots with the flash turned on. Shutter lag measured an impressive 0.4 second in our high-contrast test and 1 second in our low-contrast test, which mimic bright and dim shooting conditions, respectively. In burst mode, we were able to get an average of two frames per second, regardless of image size.

    Image quality from the H3 can be quite nice if you stick with ISOs 100 and 200, though that niceness is marred a bit by the lens’ noticeable distortion, as well as some purple fringing on high-contrast edges toward the edges of images. I saw more noise than I would’ve liked at ISO 400. While images are still very usable and much of the noise is minimized during printing, there is a noticeable falloff in shadow detail and fine detail at ISO 400. Stepping up to ISO 800, noise increases only slightly, but there’s more of a falloff in shadow and fine detail. At ISO 1,600 noise becomes heavy and most shadow and fine detail is lost. The top sensitivity setting of ISO 3,200 yields extremely noisy images with completely blocked up shadows and fine details. For example, text which was crisp and clear at ISO 200 and below, becomes completely illegible at ISO 3,200. I suggest staying below ISO 1,600 when shooting with the H3 and sticking with ISO 100 or ISO 200 whenever possible.

    If you want a long zoom lens in a camera that’s smaller, if not lighter, than most superzooms, Sony’s DSC-H3 is a decent choice. Since this is a new category, it’s hard to draw comparisons, but when Canon’s Powershot SX100 hits the market in October, we should be able to get a better idea of how this Sony compares with the competition.

    Zen and the Art of Laptop Battery Maintenance

    August 2nd, 2009

    Zen and the Art of Laptop Battery Maintenance

    Keep your notebook or netbook’s power pack in tune

    We all own more battery powered products than ever before, and in most cases those laptop batteries are rechargeable. Laptops, music players, phones – they all have rechargeable power packs, almost all of them using lithium.

    These batteries don’t last forever. No matter what you do, their capacity to hold charge will decline over time, typically down to 80 per cent after 12-18 months in the case of laptop batteries.

    That’s a range, not an absolute cut-off point, so how can we make these batteries last as long as possible? Ignoring the exceedingly rare risk of a fire, is there any way to ensure we get the best performance from our portable power supplies?

    Follow some basic rules, and the answer is yes.

    The model usage pattern is the mobile phone. Of all the rechargeable laptop batteries we’ve used, the ones in phones have always proved to retain their capacity longer than batteries in laptops, cameras and MP3 players. It takes a long time, generally speaking, for a phone battery to reach the point where no matter how long you charge it, it goes from full to empty in a very short space of time.

    Contrast that with the netbook battery sitting next to us, which although less than a year old will discharge from full in under 20 minutes. That’s with the netbook just sitting there, screen on, connected to the internet. It should last eight times that.

    The keys to pa3420u-1brs battery longevity are regular usage and making sure cells are recharged before they become empty. Phone batteries typically take a couple of days to run down and tend not to be constantly on and off the charger during that period. Rather than waiting until the phone has so little power it switches off, most handset owners recharge their phones when they get a low-charge warning, usually around ten per cent capacity.

    This ensures a steady, even cycle of charge and discharge, and if there’s an operating condition lithium batteries respond well to it’s regularity.

    The 6t473 Laptop batteries won’t, of course, give you two days of usage, so it’s not necessarily practical to follow that charge-discharge-recharge pattern exactly, but you can get close. Make sure you regularly use your laptop on battery power. Don’t work on it with it always plugged into the mains.

    If you do use the mains as your primary power source – as you might well if the notebook’s your main machine – at least make sure you use your laptop on HP Pavilion DV4000 battery power a couple of times a week. This is what we didn’t do with the netbook. It has stayed attached to its AC adaptor for most of its life, with the battery barely being used.

    The connected battery will charge to 100 per cent and then the battery pack’s electronics will ensure the cells receive no further charge. At this point, the biggest threat to the battery is heat from the laptop’s internals. Make sure your laptop’s vents don’t become covered. Beyond the heat generated by its operation, a laptop can safely be left connected to the mains.

    There’s no harm in removing the battery from a laptop that’s going to stay connected to the mains for a while. Just make a note of the optimum HP Pavilion DV1000 battery storage conditions – more on this later – and don’t inadvertently yank the power cable. With no battery, there’s no back-up for your laptop’s memory.

    Apple machines are an exception, and others may be too: they auto-underclock the processor when the battery’s removed, so despite being connected to the mains, they won’t run at full strength. We think that’s daft, but that’s Apple for you.

    When you use your laptop on PB995A battery power, make sure its charge drops to at least 80 per cent. But don’t let it drop to zero. Depending on which operating system you use and how its power settings are configured, you’ll get a low-power warning first and, later, your machine will sleep, hibernate or shut down.

    At this point, your battery should still be charged to 5-10 per cent of its capacity, and you should now charge it, whether you want to continue working or not. If you’re not going to be able to do so for some time, make sure you’ve saved your work and your laptop’s shut down or hibernating rather than sleeping. These two modes turn the laptop off whereas sleeping just keeps it ticking over, but power is still being drained and you run the risk of emptying the battery.

    Completely draining the battery is a no-no. Battery manufacturers and laptop makers say that it’s a good idea to drain the HP Pavilion ZV5000 battery as far as the laptop will allow every so often and to then charge fully in order to synchronise the various capacity monitors within the power pack and the laptop. That ensures that your capacity read-outs are as accurate as they can be.

    There seems to be a consensus that daily-use laptops don’t really need this, and certainly not on even a monthly basis. Occasional-use laptops, on the other hand, may benefit.

    Eking out the charge while your using your computer on Pavilion ZV5000 battery power is simply a matter of disabling Bluetooth and Wi-Fi if you don’t need them, making sure your system spins down the hard drive when it’s not required, and – perhaps best of all – dimming the screen’s backlight.

    How temperature affects a battery’s capacity decline
    Battery capacity after one year

    If running to empty or never discharging at all are to be avoided, high temperatures are right out. Batteries’ inevitable capacity decline can be slowed by keeping the inspiron 1150 battery cool

    According to website Battery University, a battery kept full will see its capacity drop by six per cent after a year if it’s kept at freezing point. Kept at 60°C, however, the same battery will lose 40 per cent of its capacity to hold charge after just three months.

    At 25°C, you’re looking at a 20 per cent capacity loss after one year. Since your working environment is likely to be less than 25°C, the reduction will you see will be a little less than that, and by making sure the Toshiba PA3107U-1BRS battery is used regularly and evenly, you should be able to delay the point at which the battery has only 80 per cent of its starting capacity to 18 months or more.


    Cycle logical: check your battery’s recharge count in Mac OS X

    Hot-running laptops will have the reverse effect, so if your notebook’s like that, consider buying a cooling stand to help draw heat away from the machine and Compaq Presario V4000 battery. Don’t keep your laptop in a hot car cabin, or in direct sunlight.

    If your laptop’s going to remain unused for a long period, keep it cool. Never freeze it, but sticking the battery in the fridge, for example, will prolong its life. Battery manufacturers recommend storing batteries with a charge level of 40-50 per cent.

    If you do refrigerate a Pavilion ZD8000 battery, don’t start using it as soon as you take it out again. Leave it several hours to warm up to room temperature first. Rapid warming could cause condensation, and you don’t want moisture forming inside your battery pack or laptop.

    If you have a spare battery pack handy, keep it cool and charged to 40-50 per cent of its maximum capacity until you’re ready to take it on your travels. At that point, charge it up and use it as often as you use the other battery, so they both undergo regular charge and discharge cycles.

    Charge Cycles Explained

    Battery longevity – how long the battery lasts rather than how long it’ll power a device from a full charge – is typically measured in cycles, with one cycle being a discharge from full to empty.

    This doesn’t need to happen all at once. A cycle is reached when 100 per cent of a Latitude D800 battery’s potential capacity has been taken, even if it’s charged up in the meantime. If you drain a battery by half one day, charge it back up, take 25 per cent the next day, charge it up again then drain it by a quarter on the third day, that’s one cycle: 50 per cent + 25 per cent + 25 per cent.

    That might suggest the best way to eke out cycles isn’t to discharge the battery too much, but don’t forget, lithium-based Dell laptop battery like to be used, not left on 100 per cent all the time.

    Laptop makers typically say a machine’s battery capacity will have declined to 80 per cent of its original capacity after 300-odd cycles.

    Western Digital Announces 1TB 2.5-Inch Drives That Won’t Fit In Your Laptop

    July 28th, 2009

    The storage-capacity gap between laptop battery and desktop hard drives just shrank significantly.

    Western Digital announced Monday two laptop (as inspiron 1150 6t473) drives that offer “extreme” amounts of storage: the Scorpio Blue 1TB and the Scorpio Blue 750GB. Prior to this announcement, the largest laptop hard drive available was 500GB.

    Scorpio Blue

    (Credit: Western Digital)
    Currently, the largest desktop hard drive on the market is 2TB. The Scorpio Blue 1TB drive, though half the capacity, is still very impressive, considering the fact that a 2.5-inch laptop drive is much smaller than a 3.5-inch desktop drive. The new WD laptop drives are the first that use 333GB per platter technology for your pa3420u-1brs pa3450u-1brs.

    The Scorpio Blue hard drives support the SATA2 (3Gbps) standard but have a thickness of 12.5 millimeters, as opposed to 9.5 millimeters in other 2.5-inch drives. This means the new drives will not fit in all 2.5-inch slots in laptops.

    For this reason, WD designates them as a perfect fit for PB955A portable storage solutions and they’ll be in WD’s new My Passport Essential SE Portable USB drive .

    Other than capacity, the new Scorpio Blue drives also feature a set of advanced storage technologies, including:

    WhisperDrive, which is WD’s technology that uses seeking algorithms to produce one of the quietest 2.5-inch drives available
    ShockGuard, which helps the drive withstanding shock, such as accidental drops, and vibrations better
    SecurePark, which is a mechanism that parks the recording heads off the disk surface during spin up and spin down and when the drive is off. This ensures that the recording head never touches the disk surface to improve long-term reliability to fits for Laptop battery
    Both new drives come with 8MB of buffer memory and spin at 5,200rpm, which is slightly slower than the 5400rpm speed of mainstream laptop drives.

    The Scorpio Blue 750GB drive (model WD7500KEVT) is available now and costs $190. The 1TB version (model WD10TEVT) is, for now, only available configured into the My Passport Essential SE USB drive, but it will be available as an internal hard drive in a few weeks. It will cost $250 for Discount laptop battery.

    HOW TO downgrade from Vista to XP for laptops.

    July 15th, 2009

    Hi there! I’ve seen lately a lot of threads about downgrading laptop with Vista to XP. It seems that people have a lot’s of problems downgrading so I decided to write some simple steps that you need to do before you start the downgrade.

    Step one.

    Open the Device manager in Vista, you can find it in Control Panel \ System and Maintenance \ System on the side tab there is the link to the Device Manager. Write down what Display adapter, LAN controller/WLAN controller and Audio controller you have, you need to know those when looking the drivers for Windows XP. You can also look what chipset drivers you need. You can see them in system devices. Some manufacturers have some technical specifications on their sites So they will be helpful also when you are looking the correct drivers. Please notice that dont do this with the Laptop battery in it, just use ac adapter.

    Step two.

    Look all the drivers that you would need for windows XP in internet. Most of them can be found on the support pages of the chip makers that have provided their chips to your Discount laptop battery. Drivers that you need are mainly Display adapter-, LAN controller/WLAN controller- and Audio controller drivers. The chipset drivers can be installed after XP has been installed. Save the drivers to removable media, USB memory stick or CD-R disc, so they are safe when you install the Windows XP. And remember to disconnect the media before starting the installation of Windows XP.

    Step three.

    Install the Windows XP from it’s CD. Remember to pres enter when prompted ” Press any key to boot from CD. “. When selecting the location of the installation remember to remove the vista partition and create new partition for Windows XP.

    Step four.

    When Windows XP is installed install the network cards/WLAN cards drivers if needed. Then run Windows Update to get the updates. I highly recommend that you update to SP3 before installing any audio/video drivers. After Windows XP is fully updated install the audio and video drivers you obtained earlier. Reboot after both installations are done, the setups may prompt you to reboot but select reboot later, this may success to PA3107U-1BRS.

    And finally some things what you should know.

    1. When the laptop manufacturer has shipped the laptop OEM code (40Y6795 40Y6797) with Vista pre-installed it means that they are only supporting that operating system and therefore some or all features of the laptop may not work on other operating systems.

    2. nVidia or AMD/ATi don’t offer drivers for their mobile products. So you would need drivers with modified inf files. For AMD/ATi mobility cards you can use our MonilityModder.NET to modify the normal desktop version of AMD/ATi’s Catalyst drivers. For nVidia you can look the site called laptopvideo2go.com Do note that the inf modified nVidia drivers might cause some problems with hotkey functions.