Microsoft just demonstrated how bad Chrome is for your laptop's battery
If you feel like your
laptop might as well be a PC because of how entirely codependent it is with its
power cord, don’t worry, we get it. The struggle is real.
But as we wait for
wireless charging to actually become a thing (please be a thing), we have to
make do with what we have, and it looks like shutting Chrome down and firing up
something more economical is the first thing you should be doing at times of need.
As you can see in the
demonstration from Microsoft below, when identical laptops were left to run
four different browsers - Mozilla Firefox, Chrome, Opera, and Microsoft Edge -
in a lab-controlled environment, Chrome absolutely hammers that battery.
In this experiment,
which had the four laptops run typical browsing behaviour on a number of
popular websites until the battery ran dry, the Chrome computer lasted just 4
hours and 19 minutes, the Firefox computer lasted 5 hours and 9 minutes, and
the Opera battery-saving mode computer tapped out at 6 hours and 18 minutes.
As you can see in the
graph below, the collective telemetry - an automatic measurement of wireless
data transmission - from millions of users found that Edge uses up 465 mW,
while Chrome needs more than 719 mW. They recorded 493 mW for Firefox.
"[W]e measure
aggregated telemetry from millions of Windows 10 devices around the world. The
billions of data points from these devices are consistent with the lab results,
demonstrating that Microsoft Edge is more efficient in real-world, day-to-day
use than the competition," Microsoft writes on its blog.
Of course, this is all
just one giant ad from Microsoft to get you using Edge instead of Chrome,
Firefox, or Opera, and what they’re not telling you is that Chrome can do a lot
of things that Edge can’t, such as allowing for browser extensions.
Microsoft says it’s
working on improving Edge’s efficiency and versatility in time for the Windows
10 Anniversary update, and Peter Bright explains the details over at Ars
Technica:
"Flash content
that is not deemed to be central to a page's content will become click-to-play,
which is something that other browsers also do. Background tabs will also use
fewer resources by making their JavaScript timers fire less frequently and by
using coalescing to ensure that they all fire together and hence reduce the
number of times that the processor must be woken up.
This shouldn't
interfere with listening to music or, say, checking for mail in a background
tab, but it should reduce the overhead due to spurious animations and so
on."
But hey, don’t let
Microsoft tell you what to do. If you like Chrome, keep using Chrome... until
you're on your last 10 percent and really don't want to get up and find the
power cord. And that 70 percent extra battery life could definitely come in
handy on long flights.
There's no way of
knowing at this stage if the improved Edge will keep up its power savings, but
as Bright points out, it might actually be a really good option for mobile
right now.
If you switch over to
Edge when you need the extra juice, and follow some of these tips, maybe you
won't feel like such a cord slave anymore.
Source -http://www.sciencealert.com/
Source -http://www.sciencealert.com/


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