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Linux Rescues Battery Life On Vista Notebooks From Dell

nerdyH writes "Dell is preparing to ship two enterprise-oriented Windows Vista notebooks with an interesting feature — a built-in TI OMAP (smartphone) processor that can power instantly into Linux. The 'Latitude ON' feature is said to offer 'multi-day' battery life, while letting users access email, the web, contacts, calendar, and so on, using the notebook's full-size screen and keyboard. I wonder if someday we'll just be able to plug our phones into our laptops, switching to the phone's processor when we need to save battery life? Or, maybe x86 will just get a lot more power-efficient. Speaking at MontaVista's Vision event today, OLPC spokesperson and longtime kernel hacker Deepak Saxena said the project is aiming for 10-20 hours of battery life during active use, on existing hardware (AMD Geode LX800 clocked at 500MHz, with 1GB of Flash and 256MB of RAM)."

4 of 200 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I don't think it's the Linux by Gewalt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You ever try to get windows vista running on a AMD Geode LX800? You are correct in saying that its the processor saving the power, not the OS, but without the OS, the processor wouldn't be an option.

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    Modding Trolls +1 inciteful since 1999
  2. Re:eh by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Funny

    You guys need to slow down a bit. I don't know what kind of job requires you to access your email within 5 seconds, but I get a stomach ache just thinking about it.

    Seriously, nobody wants to wait two minutes or even one minute. But I have to chuckle when I think of any apple laptop user that "needs" his laptop to boot in 5 seconds. By the time he stirs his soy latte, brings out his iPhone ostentatiously, and makes sure someone's noticed the logo on the lid, that's 15 seconds right there.

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    You are welcome on my lawn.
  3. Re:eh by cayenne8 · · Score: 5, Funny
    "I actually saw a guy in Starbucks time his MacBook on boot. Went something like this:

    "Uno, Dos, Tres, Catorce!"

    I don't get it.....1, 2, 3, 14 ??

    So, you're saying people in Starbucks don't know how to count in any language?

    I suppose that explains how they get away with selling coffee at those prices.....

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    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  4. Re:For some people this may be enough by pandrijeczko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I lost one user from Kubuntu to XP Cracked Edition because she _needed_ to read those forwards that her friends with boring jobs send her.

    But presumably she didn't need it enough to go buy a proper licensed copy of XP?

    I don't intend bleating on about piracy and I really don't want to play the Linux zealot here, but I do wish people would compare "like for like". Far too many people seem to forget that XP and MS Office are commercial products that they *should* be paying for whereas Open Office and Linux are obtainable freely.

    If it was impossible to run cracked copies of Windows, MS Office and other Windows software and everyone had to pay for proper licenses, I'm sure a lot more people would take the trouble to actually try free software, rather than staying in a comfort zone and just assuming it cannot do what they need it to.

    As another poster has already said, I've never seen a PPT that I couldn't import in Open Office. Sure, I don't use all of Powerpoint's features but, in my experience, the compatibility seems quite good.

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    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.