1 / 11

Power management for Laptops

Power management for Laptops. Batteries & power management. Nickel Cadmium (Ni-Cd) Nickel-Metal Hydride (Ni-MH) Lithium-Ion (Li-Ion). Nickel Cadmium. Biggest problem Battery Memory. Losing a significant amount of battery life when repeatedly recharging without completely draining.

vina
Download Presentation

Power management for Laptops

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Power management for Laptops

  2. Batteries & power management • Nickel Cadmium (Ni-Cd) • Nickel-Metal Hydride (Ni-MH) • Lithium-Ion (Li-Ion)

  3. Nickel Cadmium • Biggest problem Battery Memory. • Losing a significant amount of battery life when repeatedly recharging without completely draining.

  4. Nickel-metal Hydride • Still susceptible to Battery memory • Still susceptible to heat • Can take more recharges

  5. Lithium-Ion • No longer susceptible to Battery memory. • Last twice as long as Nickel-metal • Cannot handle as many charges as Nickel Cadmium (sacrifice life span for length of time) • Lithium-Ion batteries will explode if over charged. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMy2_qNO2Y0

  6. Care of batteries & storage • Store batteries in cool place & keep batteries at 70-80% • Never drain batteries all the way to 0% • Remember that a rechargeable batteries has a limited number of recharge/ discharge times

  7. Power management on Notebooks • Every part of a laptop uses power • Earlier laptop used to much power for each individual part constantly draining the batteries • They needed a way for you system to go into a hibernation type mode.

  8. System manage mode (SMM) • Intel began development of a possessor to handle power management • CPU clock speed to slow down or stop without losing running state • Power save mode • Collectively they were called SMM • Was not enough (you need a BIOS & OS that could fully utilize the SMM modes) • BIOS & OS utilization • Intel sent out specifications for APM & ACPI • APM Advanced Power Management • APCI Advanced configuration and power interface

  9. Requirements on APM/ACPI • Need SMM powered CPU • Need APM compliant BIOS • Enables the CPU to shut off peripherals when desired • It also need an OS system that know how to request particular devices to be shut down and to ask for the CPU clock to be slowed or stopped • ACPI (successor to AMP) • ACPI and allows user the ability to manage hot swappable items

  10. APM Levels • Full on (power connected) • APM enables (power disconnected but batteries at full charge) • CPU and RAM are being watched / none used devices may be disabled • APM Standby • CPU is stop and RAM stores all programs all devices are turned off • APM Suspend • Everything on PC is shut down to save power consumption • Critical information is written to the hard drive (typically know as your hibernation state)

  11. ACPI Levels • G0- Fully operational • G1 - into sleep stage mode • S1 CPU stop processing but power to both ram and CPU stay the same • S2 CPU is shut down • S3 Standby mode is enabled RAM stays with power • S4 Hibernation mode is enabled RAM information is stored to HDD • G2 or S5All components turn off except for USB keyboard or mouse • G3 everything is shut off except for the RTC which is the Real time clock and all components are powered down.

More Related