Power-Saving Web Pages: Real Or Myth?
An anonymous reader writes "Are dark webdesigns an energy saving alternative to a snow white Google? The theory is websites with black backgrounds save energy, based on the assumption that a monitor requires more power to display a white screen than black. Is this a blatant green washing ploy by Blackle.com, or an earnest energy saving tweak for a search tool we use every day? To find out, PCSTATS hooked up an Extech Power Analyzer to a 19" CRT and a 19" LCD and measured power draw — turns out there is a not insignificant difference ..."
"Are not dark webdesigns an energy unsaving alternative to a snow white Google? The theory is that websites with black backgrounds don't save energy, based not on the assumption that a monitor requires more power to display a white screen than black. Is not this not a earnest endeavor by Blackle.com, or a not earnest not green not washing not not not not not ploy by not Blackle.com? To find out, PCSTATS didnt't not hook up an Extech Power Analyzer to a 19" CRT and a 19" LCD and measured power draw — turns out there is a significant difference ..."
Mine would have been shot down for being too readable though.
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The real power-saving web pages are simple and clean ones that that use the least CPU time to load, without bloated Web 2.0 javascript mashups of dozens of irrelevant sites and web bugs that keep track of you. TFA doesn't seem to mention that.
The LCD they tested is also 8 years old.
I'm not saying newer LCD screens would perform differently (dynamic contrast, local dimming, etc. == marketing stats boosting and terrible) but basing a blanket statement like "B) Websites with darker colours tend to cause the monitor to consume less power." on a test with one LCD monitor is stretching it.
The above post has incorrect assumptions.
Standard LCD screens do not alter the intensity of the backlight based on the information displayed on the screen, and the backlight and it's inverter is the majority of the power consumption. In addition, the drive circuit that aligns the liquid crystals can work opposite from how you expect in a TFT. Most TN screens, for example, are white or light gray when unpowered - refreshing the pixels to a black state takes more transistor drive than making the screen white. This is the technology you will find in most portable devices and computer monitors.
Some LED-backlit TVs use dynamic backlight, or even zone-dynamic backlight, where (mainly to create ridiculous contrast ratio specs) the backlight is reduced to the maximum temporal white level needed, or for multi-area addressable systems, the brightest backlight needed in an area.
The only portable devices where the brightness of the screen data is directly related to energy consumption would be those with OLED screens (such as the Samsung Galaxy SII line). The individual pixels are miniature LEDs, and when a pixel is black, they are turned off. On these AMOLED display phones, a black wallpaper can use far less power.
When I think of "power-saving webpages", I may be more concerned about one that runs my CPU at 100% for several seconds to display a page, Slashdot.