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"Subconscious Mode" Could Boost Phone Battery Life

cylonlover writes "University of Michigan researchers have proposed a new power management system for smartphones that could dramatically improve battery life. The system, known as E-MiLi, or Energy-Minimizing Idle Listening, addresses the energy waste that occurs when 'sleeping' phones are looking for incoming messages and clear communication channels. E-MiLi slows down the clock of a phone's WiFi card by up to 1/16 its normal frequency in order to save power, but then kicks it back up to full speed when information is coming in. The phone uses the header of the incoming message to wake itself up from its 'subconscious mode,' so the clock is at full speed to receive the main message. For users on the busiest networks, it could extend battery life by up to 54 percent."

5 of 85 comments (clear)

  1. Old ideas live again by dtmos · · Score: 5, Informative

    Patent 4,893,271, issued in 1990 and expired, covers an implementation of this idea in which the slow clock is a crystal oscillator, and the high-speed clock is synthesized, using the crystal oscillator as the reference of a phase-locked loop. It was used in tens of millions of Motorola radio pagers for exactly the reason stated in the article -- lower power consumption in sleep mode, while retaining the ability to process fast once a signal appears.

    1. Re:Old ideas live again by dtmos · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes -- the trick is doing it without keeping the high-speed oscillator running all the time. In these kinds of embedded applications, the oscillator can draw a significant amount of power. Implementations that have a high speed oscillator running all the time, but divide it down while in sleep mode, draw more power than the invention, which has a low speed oscillator running all the time, and only generates high frequencies when they are needed.

    2. Re:Old ideas live again by dtmos · · Score: 3, Informative

      I am pretty sure I worked for AT&T on digital pagers that did this well before 1990.

      I went on to work on "selective call radios" (cellphones) for Motorola which did the same thing in about 1988.

      Quite possible -- the priority date for the patent is 7 November, 1983.

    3. Re:Old ideas live again by V!NCENT · · Score: 3, Informative

      While funny, SMS is being send over GSM, in the same package that is being exchanged with cell towers to maintain GSM (/2G) connectivity, irregardless. That package has empty space, so SMS (that's why it's limited by an amount of characters; so it can fit in that package) can be send without extra load on the cell tower buffer.

      What we are talking about here is stuff like Watsapp and Ping and that shit, which is stored on a central server anyway, so when cellphone asks server "What's up, man?" it then gets send without having to fill up the buffer, which is once per 1,5 minutes.

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  2. Just like the owners by Mike+Mentalist · · Score: 3, Informative

    Some of the text messages I receive read as if the sender was only subconscious.

    hw r u 2day? batt rnning low lol

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