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How to keep your laptop battery happy, healthy

As college students, almost every Aggie has a laptop; they are a great tool due to their mobility. However, they are less effective when they are constantly plugged into a power source. There are many myths and tips on how to maximize battery life and battery health in order to get the most of your device.

The way you charge your battery can affect its ability to hold a charge in the long run. Some believe that you should let your computer drain and then charge it to 100 percent to keep the battery healthy. However, according to a Microsoft spokesperson, this might not be the best practice.

“If you frequently drain a lithium-ion battery, and then recharge it, it can quickly lose its ability to hold a charge, which affects the accuracy of the battery meter …  Lithium-ion batteries last longer if you charge them often, a little at a time, to maintain a minimum charge of about 40 percent capacity,” said a Microsoft spokesperson in an email interview.

The practice of draining then fully charging is not for lithium-ion batteries, which most current laptops have. But if your computer has a nickel cadmium (NiCd) battery or a nickel metal hydride (NiMH) one (which are commonly found in older laptops) than this practice would work for you.

There are ways to check up on your computer’s battery without having to take your device to the local computer store. Battery health is a comparison between your laptop manufacturer’s advertised capacity and the current capacity of the battery. Most laptops have a page to show the condition of the battery health and give pop-up warnings when your battery’s health is critical.

For example, with most MacBook Pros you can hit the option key while clicking the the battery icon in the menu bar. This will give you a current status; if any option says anything but “Normal” then look into it. You can easily do an internet search to figure out how to check your specific laptop’s battery life.

There are many apps or widgets that you can download to do this also. Bjango has created iStat Pro and iStat Menu. If you have a MacBook with Mac OS X Lion or an older version of  OS X, then you can download the iStat Pro widget for free. The iStat menu app is an updated, non-free version for new OS X.

The iStat products can tell you your battery health, cycle count, temperature and other information. Marc Edwards is the founder of Bjango.

“We show some stats that may help diagnose the current status of a MacBook’s battery … iStat Menus also shows the battery condition, as reported by OS X, plus volts and amps for the curious … iStat Menus also provides configurable additional battery warnings, if you’d like an early indication that you’re running a bit low on power,” said Marc Edwards, the founder of Bjango, in an email interview.

Andrew Robertson is the operations manager, buyer and lead technician at the UC Davis TechHub repair center. Robertson stresses the role charging cycles play in a battery’s health.

Think of a laptop’s charging cycles the way you think of a car’s mileage. Charge cycles are incremented every time you charge from point A to point B. Just as a car is only built to last a certain amount of miles, a battery is only built to last a certain amount of charge cycles. For example, charging from 70 percent to 100 percent is one cycle.

“Most people, when they have battery issues, it will be because it was left charging for much longer than it should be at a single time period,” Robertson said.

According to Robertson, if you leave your laptop charging for too long your battery will get to full charge, which is one cycle, then use a bit then charge it back up again. Depending on how long you keep it plugged in, this will result in more cycles than you should have.

Keep in mind your battery’s age as well. As they get older, it becomes harder for them to hold a charge.

High temperatures also hinder a battery from holding a charge.

“Extreme temperatures can degrade battery life over time. At extreme high or low temperatures (such as freezing),”  said Choon Chng, a Chrome hardware engineer in an email interview.

Try to keep your laptop on a surface where the air can circulate. Avoid using it with its fabric sleeve under it. If you can hear the device’s fans going crazy, this means your laptop’s temperature is too high.

Taking care of your laptop is more than just avoiding spilling coffee on it. If handled properly, it will last you your whole college career and hopefully into your job.

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9 Tips for Longer Laptop Battery Life

We’ve all been there. You’re in a meeting, or on the road, or in a classroom, and you find, to your horror, that your laptop is nearly dead. Maybe you forgot your power adapter, maybe there isn’t an available outlet. For whatever reason, your battery power is dwindling, and you still have stuff to get done. Hope is not lost, however. There are some things you can do to buy more time on that almost-dead battery so you can meet a deadline or respond to an important email before it’s too late.

Some of these techniques are for when you need to stretch your battery at that very moment, while others are preventative measures, best implemented before your battery life comes up short. There is some of overlap between the short- and long-term strategies we’ll outline below, but even when the actions are the same, the reasons behind it may be different.

Short-Term Battery-Stretching Strategies
If you’re in a tough spot right now, there are things you can do to extend the battery life immediately. None of these actions will actually increase the amount of power left in the battery, but instead will reduce the amount of power the laptop is using, letting you squeeze in a few more precious minutes before the battery goes kaput. The name of the game in these instances is power consumption, and you need to reduce yours to as little as possible.

1. Activate Your Laptop’s Battery Saver Mode or Eco Mode
Designed with these sorts of circumstances in mind, most Battery-Saver or Eco modes will engage a number of automatic changes to lengthen usable battery life—many of the same changes we’ll be making here. This saved profile will adjust your laptop’s settings and shift components into low-power states to help you ration your remaining juice a bit longer.

Once you’ve turned on the automatic battery-saver tool, there are still plenty of steps to take to eke out even better efficiency. This is done by turning off unnecessary devices, adjusting settings to reduce power consumption, shutting down unwanted apps and processes, and adjusting your activities to use less power.

2. Disable Unused Devices and Ports
The easiest way to reduce power consumption is to simply turn stuff off. Every component in your laptop needs power to function, but that doesn’t mean you need to power all of those components all the time. Start by disconnecting any unneeded peripherals (like a USB mouse or external drive) and turning off the biggest power hogs, like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth radios, graphics processors, and unused optical drives.

WARNING: Before disabling any component or device, stop and make sure that this device is not in use, and that it is not essential to continuing operation of the laptop. For example, you DO NOT want to disable the hard drive that houses the operating system, or the processor the runs the entire laptop. Only disable those devices you are comfortable turning off.

To disable unused devices on a Windows system, open up your system’s Control Panel and find the Device Manager. In the Device Manager, individual components are grouped by category. For example, Network Adapters will often include both the LAN adapter, which provides Ethernet connectivity, and Wi-Fi, for wireless networking.

9 Tips for Longer Laptop Battery Life

The four standard candidates for saving power are the graphics card (found under Display Adapters), the optical drive (found under DVD/CD-ROM Drives), and the Ethernet and Wi-Fi adapters (under Network Adapters). Find the device you want to shut down within the relevant category. Right click on the device name, and select “Disable” from the drop down menu.

While you’re in the Device Manager, you can also turn off any unused ports. Just like an extension cord left plugged into an outlet, these unused plugs still have power going through them, and losing some in the process. The actual impact on battery life will be minimal, but if you need to eke out another minute or two of life, this will help. Take a quick glance at your ports, and turn off anything that’s not being used, like USB ports with nothing connected to them.

While you can disable USB ports on a Mac using the terminal program, it’s something that IT administrators would use to lock down Macs for security purposes. We don’t recommend doing it as an end user because it may make your system act up. You can, however, disable Bluetooth and Wi-Fi from the Menu bar at the top of the screen.

3. Adjust Your Settings
While you’ll still have to use the display and the keyboard, you can adjust the settings for each to reduce power consumption. One often overlooked power drain is keyboard backlighting. Unless you’re in the dark, and need the backlight just to make out each key, turn the backlight off entirely. You can typically assign a hotkey for this function.

The next power drain is your screen. While you need to keep the up and running to use the laptop, you don’t necessarily need it running at 100-percent brightness or full resolution. Many laptops will have hotkeys for increasing and decreasing the screen brightness, but if not, it can be adjusted in the control panel. Reducing the display to 50 percent when you’re running on battery power can add a significant amount of time.

Additionally, if you’re simply typing up a document, you don’t need all of the detail offered by a 1080p or higher display. Dialing down the screen resolution to a basic 1,366-by-768 resolution or lower reduces the amount of power used in graphics processing without negatively impacting your ability to work, letting your laptop a bit longer than at full resolution.

Finally, turn off or turn down the sound. If you need to hear, drop the sound down as low as you can, and consider switching from the laptop’s larger speakers to a set of tiny earbuds to get the audio piped right to your ears. Whenever possible, just mute the laptop altogether. That way, the speakers won’t be getting any power, and you’ll buy yourself some more precious time.

4. Turn Off Apps and Processes
It’s not just the hardware that’s stealing your battery juice. Multiple apps and processes running on your system will also chew through battery life more quickly. As with the hardware, start by turning off anything that isn’t being used.

In Windows, start by taking a look in your System Tray, the collection of icons in the lower right corner of the desktop, next to the clock. On the left end of the System Tray, select the icon to display hidden icons. Take note of which apps are running in the background.

Open up the Task Manager by pressing Ctrl+Shift+Esc, or use Ctrl+Alt+Del and select Task Manager from the menu. Once in the Task Manager, look at the open apps—you may find that a program or two have been left running simply because you forgot to close a window instead of minimizing it.

Next, go to the Processes tab. This shows you what processes are currently running on your machine. While some of these are needed, some, like those associated with music and video players or cloud storage services (like Dropbox or Google Drive) can be disabled without causing any problems.

For MacBooks, the process is a little different. Take a look at System Preferences > Users&Groups for a menu called Login Items. Delete any power-hungry programs that you don’t need anymore, or disable things like Google Chrome’s automatic launch at startup. You can also see programs that are using a lot of power at any given moment by holding down the Option key, then clicking on the battery indicator in the Menu bar. Alternately, you can open the Activity Monitor utility to see a list of all the programs and processes you currently have open , and which of these are using the most power. You can stop these processes by selecting the program and then clicking the Stop icon. Power Nap is an Apple OS X feature that checks your email and twitter feeds for activity while the system is asleep. If you are trying to maximize battery life, it would be wise to turn that feature off.

5. Simplify
You can also stretch your battery life by simplifying your own activities. Multitasking is nice when you have full power, but running several programs at once puts a greater load on the processor and draws more power. Adjust your computer use by sticking to one application at a time and avoiding resource-intensive programs.

Start by single-tasking—if you need to type up a document, close any additional programs. You’ll get longer battery life by not running Spotify in the background. If you need to keep some tunes going, switch from streaming media to locally stored songs—you’ll still be using some extra power to play them, but streaming media over Wi-Fi also uses the laptop’s wireless radio.

You might also benefit from switching to simpler tools for the same tasks, like opting for a simple text file instead of a Word document. With fewer features and none of Word’s automatic actions (like Spell Check and Autosave), you can do all the writing you need without using quite so much power. Some activities you’ll want to avoid entirely, like photo and video editing tools, which place a significant load on the processor and graphics card, and are real power hogs.

By eliminating unnecessary power uses, you should be able to extend the life of your battery in those moments that you find yourself high and dry.

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How to Maximize Your Apple MacBook Pro Laptop’s Battery

There are several factors that contribute to an Apple MacBook Pro battery life and lifespan. These primarily revolve around the way you have it configured and your habits when using it. Following these steps should help you get the most from your laptop’s battery and optimize its performance.

1. Adjust Screen Brightness

Perhaps the easiest way to extend your battery life is to set the brightness of your screen to the dimmest setting that’s still comfortable. According to Apple, “compared to any other setting on your computer, your screen brightness can have the greatest impact on battery life.” To adjust the brightness, simply tap F1 to make it dimmer and F2 to make it brighter until you find a setting that works for you. Remember that the dimmer it is, the longer your battery will last.

2. Utilize Energy Saver

Energy Saver is a feature that allows you to control the length of time your MacBook Pro sits idle before it sleeps and whether or not your display is dimmed when battery power is on. Making a few tweaks to this can help your laptop minimize the amount of power it draws off the battery and extend its life. To access this feature, click on the apple menu and “System Preferences.” Then click on “Energy Saver” and “Battery.” Start by making sure that the “Automatic graphics switching” box is checked.

3. Adjust Sleep Settings

From there, adjust the “Computer sleep” and “Display sleep” settings to a time that works for you. The less amount of time that passes until your computer and display sleeps will maximize the life of your battery and vice versa. So choose a short period of idle time before sleeping and you should be able to get the most from your MacBook battery.

4. Allow Hard Disks to Sleep

Underneath the “Computer sleep” and “Display sleep” settings, you will see three more features:

  • Put hard disks to sleep when possible
  • Slightly dim the display while on battery power
  • Enable Power Nap while on battery power

Ideally you will check the first box so that your hard disks sleep whenever possible.

5. Dim the Display

You will also want check the second box so that your display is slightly dimmed while on battery power. Using these two features will help your battery go further and won’t waste its power.

6. Disable Power Nap Updatesr

At the same time, it’s best to disable the “Enable Power Nap while on battery power feature.” That’s because when it’s enabled, it will perform functions like checking email and making updates that can reduce your battery life. Disabling it will help preserve your MacBook battery life.

7. Keep Your Laptop in the Comfort Zoner

Besides the settings on your laptop, your usage habits can affect the battery considerably. For starters, you will want to keep your MacBook in the “comfort zone,” which is between 50 to 95 degrees. Otherwise, extreme temperatures can have an adverse affect on battery life, battery lifespan and performance.

8. Store Under Right Conditions

If you store your laptop long-term, you want to do so under the right conditions. When it comes to percentage of battery charge for storing, it’s recommended that you leave it around 50 percent. According to Apple, “if you store a device when its battery is fully discharged, the battery could fall into a deep discharge state, which renders it incapable of holding a charge. Conversely, if you store it fully charged for an extended period of time, the battery may lose some capacity, leading to shorter battery life.” You should also leave it in a moisture-free location that’s no more than 90 degrees during storage.

9. Turn off Wi-Fi When Not in Use

For your Wi-Fi settings, it’s recommended that you turn it off if you’re not connecting to a network. That’s because leaving it on will consume power. To turn it off, click on the Wi-Fi icon on the top menu bar and click on “Turn Wi-Fi Off.”

10. Disconnect Peripheral Devices While on Battery Power

You should disconnect peripherals when you’re away from a power source. Because USB and Thunderbolt carry power, they will draw it from your battery and drain its energy.

11. Close Processor Intensive Apps

Certain apps force your processor to work hard, which can quickly eat up battery life. If you’re running your laptop solely on battery power, then you want to make sure that you’re not using processor intensive apps. Less apps equals less power being consumed and a longer battery life.

12. Close Background Apps

Finally, you should make it a point to close any background apps like Dropbox if you’re not using them and your laptop isn’t plugged in. These too can make your MacBook Pro battery life short.

Choosing the right settings and being smart with how you use your laptop should help you get the most from your MacBook Pro battery. That way your laptop can run on battery power for longer and you can prolong its lifespan.

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How to Extend Battery Life With These Windows Tips

It’s easier than you might think to give your laptop’s battery a longer life. Although I can’t help you transform older batteries that have already been through the mill, I can say that you will be able to stockpile power by performing a few simple housekeeping tasks on your laptop.

It’s important to look after your laptop battery. Even though the latest Lithium Ion batteries can be recharged and discharged at will, we still find it’s worth putting them through a full charge cycle regularly.

Should your battery be completely shot, it’s worth looking around for a replacement. Ebay is a good place to look, but make sure you get a new battery – you don’t want somebody else’s cast-offs. The tips here are mainly for Windows 7, but you can perform similar measures if you’re using an older version of Windows, too.

How to save battery power

Your battery power

The amount of life left in your battery is shown by the icon in your Windows 7 notifications area, or your system tray if you’re using an older version of Windows. By clicking on the icon you can see the exact length of time your battery has left as well as your current power plan – I’ll be looking at that next.

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View Power Options

When you left-click on the battery icon, you’ll be able to see this menu. I’ll look at the Windows Mobility Center shortly but for now, just select Power Options. Coincidentally, the other option on this menu enables you to turn system icons on or off in the notifications area.

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Select a power plan

The Power Options window enables you to change settings that affect how your laptop consumes power. That means you can conserve energy when you need to be frugal and give your machine a boost when you need more performance. Click on ‘Change Plan Settings’ next to the High Performance label.

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Power computing

As you can see, the default settings for this power plan always leave the display on and never put the computer to sleep, regardless of whether it has its power adapter plugged in or not. Now go back out of this plan by clicking Cancel, then select ‘Change Plan Settings’ next to the Power Saver label.

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Frugal computing

This plan has a much reduced power consumption: as you can see, the display will turn off after a short time, and the laptop will sleep after just 10 minutes of non-use if it’s on battery power – ideal when

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Edit a plan

You can choose any of the plans shown or create your own using the option provided in the main window. Your laptop might also have a bespoke power plan created by the manufacturer that isn’t necessarily the best for conserving power. You can change any of these settings; just click ‘Save changes’ after doing so. you’re not plugged in. We’ll now look at editing your current plan, so leave of this plan and go to your default.

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Restore defaults

Many laptops also include a Balanced power plan, which should offer a good trade-off between frugality and performance. If you’ve made changes to one of the standard power plans such as Power Saver or High Performance, you can always undo these by clicking ‘Restore default settings’ in the plan window.

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Advanced settings

There is also a Change Advanced Power Settings option. This enables you to change other power options normally micro-managed by Windows, such as the time after which it rests your hard disk. Tweaking such things may affect performance, but if battery life is your priority, you may find it worthwhile.

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Advanced mobility

While the Power Options windows are something to take  a look at every so often, the Windows Mobility Center (also accessed by clicking on the battery icon) might be something you keep open whenever you’re not plugged in. It enables you  to rapidly change settings that affect your power consumption.

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Turn off wireless

As well as changing your power plan and seeing at a glance how much power you have left, you can also use Windows Mobility Center to turn your wireless networking on and off.  Wi-Fi is great, but if you’re not using it then you can save a lot of juice by turning it off completely.

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Wi-Fi switches

Some laptops have hardware switches that turn off the wireless card completely, while others, such as this Dell Inspiron, use Function keys to do the same thing – this usually turns off Bluetooth, too. You’ll be able to tell if it’s still on by the relevant LEDs at the top of your keyboard.

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Stop your DVD drive

Your DVD drive is a major consumer of battery life – even if you’re not using it. Discs can spin at strange moments, so if you have anything in your drive, take it out. And if you absolutely have to use the drive while on battery power, it can be worth copying the files to your desktop to reduce disc use.

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Stop scanning

If your laptop has any security software installed on it, ensure that it isn’t set to scan when you’re running on batteries – this can rapidly consume power and needs to be nipped in the bud. This also goes for Windows Defender, which you can see scanning my machine here.

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Mute your volume

This might seem like just a small thing to change, but it can make a big difference to the life of your battery. The sound systems built into some laptops are quite substantial, so don’t play music at high volume or you’ll drain your power. Turn the sound down or, better still, use the function key shortcut to mute your system completely. That way you won’t get taken unawares by websites playing their own annoying soundtracks – and it’s a great way to avoid upsetting other people if you’re using your laptop in a cafe or on the train.

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Dim your screen

This is probably the most important step of the lot – your display is responsible for a lot of the power drawn from your laptop. Some laptop screens have been known to account for up to 40 per cent of the power used at any one time. Dim your screen using the keyboard shortcuts shown.

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Longer life

You’ve now learned how to increase your laptop’s battery life and reduce your power consumption. If you only remember one thing, take heed of the effect of bright screens. If you’ve only got a few minutes power left, drop the brightness right down and you’ll be able to use your system for longer.