2006-10-19, 06:28 AM
I primarily use a laptop (college, you know how it is) and I've found Linux to be far superior to Windows in many areas. Gaming aside (I generally keep a Windows install just for this purpose, as I'm too lazy to monkey with Cedega), my main issue with Linux is my laptop's battery life.
Specifically, my battery life is approximately half what it would be in Windows. I've tried using Ubuntu/Kubuntu and Gentoo (I run it on my home box happily, so I figured I'd be able to do it properly on my laptop as well) and I couldn't get battery life to be anything close to what I'd like and what I require.
My laptop is an HP Compaq nc8430 with an Intel Core Duo T2500 2.00 GHz processor. I know there's an implementation of SpeedStep or equivalent that the processor uses, and I watched the frequency change with the performance monitor in Kubuntu, so I know that distribution at least uses the scaling properly. But even with the freq. knocked down to 1 GHz, my battery kept draining twice as fast as windows.
I'm generally horrible at using google to search for things, so if this sort of issue has been addressed elsewhere, I haven't found it.
Any suggestions?
p.s. I hope this is an acceptable place to post this topic.