...
>
> So I think this is something else. I'll contact HP and see if they're
> willing to help.
>
yup, might be a bios update (if available) could help
OR
esp. in case it's an Intel CPU with Performance- and Efficient cores a newer
kernel might help.
IIRC, kernel developer have screwed at the
On Tue, 2023-10-10 at 09:19 +1030, Tim via users wrote:
> One of things that pained me when I got into Linux about 20 years ago
> was CUPS continually polling and logging something every few seconds.
FYI, the most recent update has finally fixed that:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2
On Mon, 2023-10-09 at 11:06 -0400, Matt Morgan wrote:
> I really appreciate this. But when I run Powertop, almost everything
> is marked as good. The few that were marked bad all had to do with
> power to USB devices upon suspend, which sounds like it wouldn't be
> relevant while the computer is ru
On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 5:23 PM old sixpack13 wrote:
> > On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 10:56:42AM -0400, Matt Morgan wrote:
> >
> > IIRC powertop shows the current status of things.
>
> - start powertop as root
> - use the TAB key/shift+TAB key to move to tab "Tunables" and/or "Wakeup"
> - use the curs
> On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 10:56:42AM -0400, Matt Morgan wrote:
>
> IIRC powertop shows the current status of things.
- start powertop as root
- use the TAB key/shift+TAB key to move to tab "Tunables" and/or "Wakeup"
- use the cursor and enter key to switch the settings
cause the above setting wi
On Thu, Sep 28, 2023 at 10:56:42AM -0400, Matt Morgan wrote:
On Sun, Sep 10, 2023 at 3:17 PM old sixpack13 wrote:
...
>
> What else can I do to get Fedora not to eat up the battery life so fast?
>
one answer might be "powertop"; it's in the fedora repo's
Thank you--that was a great suggest
On Sun, Sep 10, 2023 at 3:17 PM old sixpack13 wrote:
> ...
> >
> > What else can I do to get Fedora not to eat up the battery life so fast?
> >
>
> one answer might be "powertop"; it's in the fedora repo's
>
Thank you--that was a great suggestion and seemed super promising, but when
I ran it, it
...
>
> What else can I do to get Fedora not to eat up the battery life so fast?
>
one answer might be "powertop"; it's in the fedora repo's
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El vie, 25-01-2013 a las 09:12 +1100, Roger escribió:
>
>
> > > Thanks guys,
> > >I don't know what you did, but after upgrading my laptop
> > > FC17->FC18 I
> > > saw a 5 hr battery life being quoted - I never saw that long before.
> > >
> >
> > Hello!
> >
> >
Thanks guys,
I don't know what you did, but after upgrading my laptop
FC17->FC18 I
saw a 5 hr battery life being quoted - I never saw that long before.
Hello!
It happened to me too. Now I have 4 hours of battery
life, when in Fedora 17 used to have around of
El lun, 21-01-2013 a las 18:35 +0100, William Murray escribió:
> Thanks guys,
>I don't know what you did, but after upgrading my laptop
> FC17->FC18 I
> saw a 5 hr battery life being quoted - I never saw that long before.
>
> It may be something to do with optimus? My nvidia
Check in command line too, the acpi/bat0 available in cli either. If
it says the same, then you win. But ordinary laptops average is not
more just 3-4 hours (or with huge battery longer, but thats rare),
some netbooks more, and smartbooks (ARM) logically has the longest
cca. 5-10 hours. Are you sur
On 01/21/2013 05:35 PM, William Murray wrote:
> Thanks guys,
> I don't know what you did, but after upgrading my laptop FC17->FC18 I
> saw a 5 hr battery life being quoted - I never saw that long before.
watch out.
it may well be that you found a bug in battery monitor.
--
peace out.
tc.hago
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