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2007-05-16
, 23:54
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Posts: 3,220 |
Thanked: 326 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
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#2
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Chaps,
I'm a bit perplexed : what is the difference between "Soft PowerOff" and letting the device go into standby? Or "Lock screen and keypad" for that matter?
I understand the difference in how you enter those modes and how you come out of them, but what is the effect on power consumption, particularly if Opera is still running?
My feeling is that "Soft PowerOff" uses less power than just letting the device go into standby, but what have other people found ?
TIA
-- Ian
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2007-05-17
, 01:25
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Posts: 1,245 |
Thanked: 421 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
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#3
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Since Nokia's latest "update" of the N800 firmware, softpoweroff no longer automatically locks keys and screens. This "improvement" has made the softpoweroff setting next to useless.
I do get the distinct impression that softpoweroff (which I used before Nokia s-c-r-e-w-e-d it up) tended to consume less battery juice than the "lock screen and keys" option, which I'm forced to use now (and which I think is identical to letting the device go into standby on itself).
Still, it could very well be that my blind hatred towards the Nokia software "engineers" has clouded my powers of guesstimation.
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2007-05-17
, 07:57
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#4
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Did I miss a firmware update? I'm running 10-7, and softpoweroff does the same thing for me now that it did before 10-7, which is turn off the screen and lock the screen/keys.
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2007-05-17
, 10:27
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Posts: 3,220 |
Thanked: 326 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
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#5
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Did I miss a firmware update? I'm running 10-7, and softpoweroff does the same thing for me now that it did before 10-7, which is turn off the screen and lock the screen/keys.
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2007-05-17
, 12:15
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#6
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I have linked softpoweroff to longkeypress on the power switch. With the original N800 firmware, this would also lock screen and keys, even if I hadn't selected that option in Control Panel. A longkeypress would bring the N800 immediately back to operation, with screen and keys enabled.
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2007-05-17
, 14:47
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Posts: 3,220 |
Thanked: 326 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
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#7
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2007-05-17
, 15:10
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Posts: 2,152 |
Thanked: 1,490 times |
Joined on Jan 2006
@ Czech Republic
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#8
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2007-05-17
, 15:16
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Posts: 1,245 |
Thanked: 421 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
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#9
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I have linked softpoweroff to longkeypress on the power switch. With the original N800 firmware, this would also lock screen and keys, even if I hadn't selected that option in Control Panel. A longkeypress would bring the N800 immediately back to operation, with screen and keys enabled.
After upgrading to the new firmware, longkeypress would no longer lock screen and keys, unless I checked that option in Control Panel. If I now longpress to turn the N800 back on, I still have to go through the shortpress power switch and shortpress Enter key to reactivate screen and keys. This kinda makes the whole idea of a quick on-and-off routine moot.
So maybe it works as expected to some, it sure doesn't to me.
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2007-05-17
, 17:20
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Posts: 3,220 |
Thanked: 326 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
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#10
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I'm a bit perplexed : what is the difference between "Soft PowerOff" and letting the device go into standby? Or "Lock screen and keypad" for that matter?
I understand the difference in how you enter those modes and how you come out of them, but what is the effect on power consumption, particularly if Opera is still running?
My feeling is that "Soft PowerOff" uses less power than just letting the device go into standby, but what have other people found ?
TIA
-- Ian