Originally posted by glasen
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Ubuntu 10.04 Is More Power Hungry Than Windows 7
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Michael Larabel
https://www.michaellarabel.com/
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Originally posted by Michael View PostThat was recorded when running off battery power, which is when the LVDS panel brightness dims down, etc.
The main reason I feel the power consumption difference is less between both is my C2DT6670, 4GB ram, Nvidia 102M, 320gb HDD, Atheros Wifi consumes only 12 Watts with lowest brightness, Wifi on and HDD not set to spin down when idle
I am sure there will be another watt or little more power saving if I set spin down hdd when idle. The power consumption reading is taken from the power outlet similar to your setup.
I hope my feedback will help you to benchmark more accurately
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Whatever discussion there is about the numbers, it is still generally somewhat unfair.
Originally posted by BillyOne thing I find myself wondering about is wether we shouldn?t try and make the "ACPI" extensions somehow Windows specific.
If seems unfortunate if we do this work and get our partners to do the work and the result is that Linux works great without having to do the work.
Maybe there is no way Io avoid this problem but it does bother me.
Maybe we couid define the APIs so that they work well with NT and not the others even if they are open.
Or maybe we could patent something relaled to this.
Besides: Was it a clean install of W7 or a preinstalled system? Often Preinstalled Windows systems come tuned for the very laptop, while any Linux distribution has to work everywhere.
Furthermore: What exactly were the environments, like compositing, daemons running etc.? That will also make some difference. I guess kicking out hald should bring some improvement.
And: Isn't there any distribution besides Ubuntu around here?Stop TCPA, stupid software patents and corrupt politicians!
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Originally posted by BlackStar View PostDon't wish to derail this thread, but my ears disagree with this assessment. Ondemand is quite trigger-happy and causes the fan to ramp up more frequently than conservative. Scrolling a webpage shouldn't require more than 800MHz(*) in most cases - and with conservative it doesn't. Move to ondemand and the CPU will ramp up to 1.2GHz while scrolling, which is wholly unecessary and thoroughly annoying (fan noise).
(*) on a mobile Core 2.
It's like in real life: you get your work done fast to have more time afterwards to do what ever you want (save power).
that your fan ramps up more is possible (more heat is generated in short time, which doesn't mean that this is true in overall time) ... if it disturbs you, you could change the spinning up and down values a little to avoid that.
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Originally posted by fewt View PostMr. Garrett is wrong. Reducing the clock speed reduces power output which in addition to lowering the amount of power used per clock cycle, it also allows your BIOS to reduce FAN speed due to reduced heat. Intel themselves (who wrote the powertop utility) recommend down clocking a CPU to further reduce power output. "C" states ABSOLUTELY reduce power consumption by idling functions within the processor essentially shutting down a core if you will, but reducing the clock rate in addition lowers power utilization even further.
The rule of 'do everything as fast and possible and iddle as much as possible' seems to be an oversimplification only valid when compared to the performance governor. However, I remember seeing some CPU benchmarks where the performance and power consumption was measured; they found that the more power hungry CPUs in the iddle state were much more power efficient under heavy load.
Originally posted by BlackstarDo note that Ubuntu boots into performance and reverts to ondemand after 60 seconds or so. This is done to improve boot times and does impact power consumption.
(I disabled this feature today in favor of using the "conservative" governor everywhere. My mobile Core 2 doesn't really need the extra performance to boot).
I too hate the laptop fan. It's not particularly noisy, but it makes no sense that it has to kick in while scrolling a website or pdf document. To avoid this I used to limit the maximum CPU frequency, but that's suboptimal and requires manual intervention. However, it was the only way I had to avoid hearing the fan while playing some flash games or even MAME, which don't need all the cycles my CPU is capable of. I made some trials using the conservative governor and I'm sold. For starters, it doesn't go straight away to the highest frequency, but sequentially increases it until it doesn't reach the value specified in some tunable parameter.
I highly recommend the following article, which not only explains the different power saving policies and options you can set up, but also shows benchmarks and explains how to slightly tweak them to maximise power efficiency while keeping performance almost intact and latency to a minimum:
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Originally posted by Ragas View Postsure. but bgamari is right either way. the philosophy is to ramp up the processor fast and do as much work as possible to be able to sleep longer after that, wich saves much more power, than running the processor slowly.
It's like in real life: you get your work done fast to have more time afterwards to do what ever you want (save power).
that your fan ramps up more is possible (more heat is generated in short time, which doesn't mean that this is true in overall time) ... if it disturbs you, you could change the spinning up and down values a little to avoid that.
Changing the fan is not an option (I tested), because with ondemand core temperature simply rises to the point where the fan triggers again (tried up to 64 degrees - anything over that is uncomfortable, both physically (it burns!) and conceptually (nvidia bumpgate, better not push it)).
In other words, I don't really care if ondemand would save me 1WHr on average: I'm only interested in silent operation.
Btw, I find the results of this article very strange. My D830 (65nm Core 2 mobile 1.8GHz, Quadro NVS135M, 15.4'' 1680x1050 S-PVA monitor) consumes 27W on idle at full brightness (both Windows and Ubuntu). My Atom netbook (Lenovo S10-2) consumes 12W on idle on Ubuntu and 11W on Windows. 25W for a netbook is way, way too high.
Wild guess: was the battery connected during those tests? Maybe it was recharging at the time, invalidating the results?
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Hi Micheal,
the numbers of your energy meter really seem a bit off, for example take a look at [1].
[1http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-...k.24498.0.html]
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Originally posted by BlackStar View PostWild guess: was the battery connected during those tests? Maybe it was recharging at the time, invalidating the results?
Sorry for the offense, but this test is typical for Phoronix :
A netbook that consumes as much energy as a far more powerful mobile workstation aka Thinkpad T61, is not plausible.
Numbers are generated and are never checked for plausibility. And if there is prove that the numbers are incorrect, they will never be corrected and the flawed article stays online forever.
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