Reply
Thread Tools
Posts: 78 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on May 2008
#11
Originally Posted by DrWilken View Post
As Wikiwide says, turn down the brightness.

Install Simple Brightness Applet if You haven't already (or just change it in Settings - Display).

I'm only using 2 (of 5) bars and it's enough for me....
I second that and would like to add that turning down the brightness can make reading a lot more comfortable on a pc too.
 
quingu's Avatar
Posts: 271 | Thanked: 124 times | Joined on May 2006 @ Aperture Science, Inc.
#12
My own findings after intensive testing with a thinkpad notebook are that a completely white LCD consumes measurably less power than a completely black screen.
Measurable, but far from being significant. If at all, it would result in maybe <5mins difference in runtime, with the screen running all the time. Any actual cpu work would have a far bigger impact.

If you really want to save power that way, choose a high-contrast theme that allows viewing the screen with lower backlight.
__________________
Handcrafted Ambient / Chillout Music, free to download: nomoton
 

The Following User Says Thank You to quingu For This Useful Post:
Posts: 22 | Thanked: 7 times | Joined on Jul 2010
#13
Originally Posted by quingu View Post
My own findings after intensive testing with a thinkpad notebook are that a completely white LCD consumes measurably less power than a completely black screen.
Measurable, but far from being significant. If at all, it would result in maybe <5mins difference in runtime, with the screen running all the time. Any actual cpu work would have a far bigger impact.

If you really want to save power that way, choose a high-contrast theme that allows viewing the screen with lower backlight.
I would agree. Since to make black, an LCD has a backlight then applies current to all the LCD pixels to block the backlight and produce black, (rather than their usual transparent state)

It does get rather complicated though when you consider some LCDs automatically dim the back light when showing dark images to artificially increase their contrast ratio. And others are black when no voltage is applied to the pixels, and go clear when voltage is applied (eg VA LCDs). Seems like the N900 doesn't fall into one of these catagories though.

So basic advice would be use a high contrast theme so you can turn down your backlight which uses most of the LCDs power anyway.
 

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to fraz For This Useful Post:
Reply

Thread Tools

 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 03:41.