Laptops tend to lose their charm quickly when you’re
constantly
looking for the nearest power outlet to charge
up. How do you keep
your battery going for as long as possible? Here
are 15 easy ways to
do so.
1. Defrag
regularly - The faster your hard drive
does its work - less demand you are going to put on the hard drive and
your battery. Make your hard drive as efficient as possible
by defragging
it regularly. (but not while it’s on battery of course!) Mac OSX is
better built to handle fragmentation so it may not be very applicable
for Apple systems.
2. Dim your screen - Most laptops
come with the
ability to dim your laptop screen. Some even come
with ways to modify
CPU and cooling performance. Cut them down to the lowest
level you can
tolerate to squeeze out some extra battery juice.
3. Cut down on programs running in the
background.
Itunes, Desktop Search, etc. All these add to the CPU load
and cut
down battery life. Shut down everything that isn’t crucial
when you’re
on battery.
4. Cut down external devices -
USB devices
(including your mouse) & WiFi drain down your laptop
battery.
Remove or shut them down when not in use. It goes without
saying that
charging other devices (like your iPod) with your laptop when on
battery is a surefire way of quickly wiping out the charge on your
laptop battery.
5. Add more RAM - This
will allow you to process
more with the memory your laptop has, rather than relying on
virtual
memory. Virtual memory results in hard drive use,
and is much less
power efficient. Note that adding more RAM will consume more energy, so
this is most applicable if you do need to run memory intensive programs
which actually require heavy usage of virtual
memory.
6. Run off a hard drive rather
than CD/DVD - As
power consuming as hard drives are, CD and DVD drives are
worse. Even
having one in the drive can be power consuming. They spin,
taking
power, even when they?re not actively being used. Wherever
possible,
try to run on virtual drives using programs like Alcohol 120%
rather than optical ones.
7. Keep the battery contacts
clean: Clean your
battery’s metal contacts every couple of months with a cloth moistened
with rubbing alcohol. This keeps the transfer of power from
your
battery more efficient.
8. Take care of your battery -
Exercise the
Battery. Do not leave a charged battery dormant for long
periods of
time. Once charged, you should at least use the battery at
least once
every two to three weeks. Also, do not let a Li-On battery completely
discharge. (Discharing is only for older batteries with memory effects)
9. Hibernate not standby -
Although placing a
laptop in standby mode saves some power and you can instantly resume
where you left off, it doesn’t save anywhere as much power as
the hibernate function does. Hibernating a PC will
actually save your
PC’s state as it is, and completely shut itself
down.
10. Keep operating
temperature down - Your laptop
operates more efficiently when it’s cooler. Clean
out your air vents
with a cloth or keyboard cleaner, or refer to some extra tips by LapTopMag.com.
11. Set up and optimize your power
options - Go to
‘Power Options’ in your windows control panel and set it up so that
power usage is optimized (Select the ‘max battery’ for maximum
effect).
12. Don’t multitask - Do
one thing at a time when
you’re on battery. Rather than working on a spreadsheet,
letting your
email client run in the background and listening to your
latest set of
MP3’s, set your mind to one thing only. If you don’t you’ll
only drain
out your batteries before anything gets completed!
13. Go easy on the PC demands -
The more you demand
from your PC. Passive activities like email and word
processing
consume much less power than gaming or playing a DVD. If
you’ve got a
single battery charge - pick your priorities wisely.
14. Get yourself a more
efficient laptop - Laptops are getting more
and more efficient in nature to the point where some manufacturers are
talking about all day long
batteries. Picking up a newer more
efficient laptop to replace an aging one is usually a quick
fix.
15. Prevent the Memory Effect -
If you’re using a
very old laptop, you’ll want to prevent the ‘memory effect’ - Keep the
battery healthy by fully charging and then fully discharging it at
least once every two to three weeks. Exceptions to the rule are Li-Ion
batteries (which most laptops have) which do
not suffer from the memory
effect.
Bonus Tip #1: Turn
off the autosave function.
MS-Word’s and Excel’s autosave functions are great but because they
keep saving regular intervals, they work your hard driver harder than
it may have to. If you plan to do this, you may want to turn it back on
as the battery runs low. While it saves battery life in the beginning,
you will want to make sure your work is saved when your battery
dies.
Bonus Tip #2: Lower the graphics
use. You can do
this by changing the screen resolution and shutting off fancy graphic
drivers. Graphics cards (video cards) use as much or more power today
as hard disks - Thanks Andrew
Update 7/7/07: Bonus Tip #1 to give caution about turning off
autosave, tip #8 to change information about discharging batteries -
thanks to all who pointed it out. Added Bonus tip #2, Tip #1 to add in
clause in regards to Mac OSX, Tip #1 about the spinning of hard drives
- thanks to all who pointed it out