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Asus Promises 12-Hour Battery Life In New High-End Laptop

Asus' new high-end laptop could finally be the traveler's best accoutrement, touting twelve-hour battery life thanks to intelligent, second-by-second switching between the two GPUs and automatic, on-the-fly re-clocking of the Intel Core i7 CPU. All this also comes in with a price tag of just over $1,000. "ASUS's solution is different because it's user-transparent; even a novice user will get the fullest possible benefit because the laptop itself is deciding when to switch. The same principle applies to the dynamic CPU clocking. ASUS includes a desktop widget to track CPU clock speed. While using the UL80JT, I could see it moving up and down with what I did; up with program openings and CPU-intensive processes, and way down at idle. Between the GPU switching, dynamic clocking, and ASUS's other power management features, the UL80JT manages to consume less than half as much power as the unibody Macbook while browsing."

7 of 190 comments (clear)

  1. Looks nice. by Hazelfield · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why hasn't anyone come up with this before? Or if they have, where are the others?

  2. Vendor promises by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Vendors promise all sorts of things. That doesn't make them true. I'll believe it when I see Tom's Hardware or someone equally competent test one of these things and they actually get 12 hours.

    Until then, I'll file this one under "vendors promise the world".

    1. Re:Vendor promises by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Vendors promise all sorts of things. That doesn't make them true. I'll believe it when I see Tom's Hardware or someone equally competent test one of these things and they actually get 12 hours.

      Until then, I'll file this one under "vendors promise the world".

      If you want competency, you might check with Anand instead of Tom. My 1005HA EEEPC has more battery life than Asus claimed (I get 11 hours just typing in notepad with the radio off), so I wouldn't be surprised if the 12 hour claim were true. Keep in mind that the quoted number is always for minimal usage.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
  3. Re:The Most I'd Pay For a High-End Laptop Is: by nschubach · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can't be the only one that laughed when I read:

    "High-end laptop ... with a price tag of just over $1,000."

    Maybe I'm just still used to Laptops being well over $1000. The last one I bought was a Lenovo T61 with an Intel graphics card and it was over $1K. I wouldn't consider it "high-end."

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  4. Re:CPU downclocking is not news by btcoal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This thing is as old as my beat up Pentium III Inspiron 5000. Varying GPU clocks is also old.

    What is interesting is seamless switching between GPUs. Everything else is just marketingese for "we do what everyone else does and we actually bothered to put some extra effort into power optimization".

    But enabling non-expert users to look under the hood and moderate behavior accordingly is new. Healthy skepticism aside, Asus has built up mad street cred recently and deserves the BOTD to some degree.

  5. Bloatware? by meustrus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Looks to me like the software to accomplish this is one of those programs the manufacturer bundles on your computer, not an architectural change. If I have to tolerate a 6 month trial of MS Office, Norton Antivirus, several dozen casual games distributed as adware, and whatever other "productivity" software they decide I want, then no thanks. Bundled software should be possible to separate from each other.

    Another important question: will it run Linux?

    --
    I sometimes ask revealing, often ignorant-seeming questions. Maybe they're harder to answer than you think.
  6. Re:Dynamic Clocking vs Two GPUs by robot256 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My Thinkpad T400 has two GPUs. One is an Intel GMA4500, the other is an ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3400. Running with the Intel GPU cuts off a full third of my power consumption because it uses the main CPU and main memory instead of dedicated chips. But switching between the two GPUs is iffy at best and usually requires a reboot. If I get stuck on the Intel GPU then I can't play games until I reboot and switch to the ATI GPU, so I usually stay on the ATI unless I really need battery life.

    What is significant about what ASUS is doing is the PC will *automagically* switch to the high-performance GPU when you start up a game or a flash video, then switch back when you go back to word processing. This is something that has never been done before and is a major step towards making "switchable graphics" truly useful.

    That is, of course, assuming that the ASUS power management app doesn't crash all the time leaving your system in an unstable state.