Dqkata
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2008-06-05
, 07:40
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ Bulgaria
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#1
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2008-06-05
, 07:47
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Posts: 2,142 |
Thanked: 2,054 times |
Joined on Dec 2006
@ Sicily
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#2
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2008-06-05
, 08:24
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Posts: 14 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#3
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2008-06-05
, 08:57
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#4
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The Following User Says Thank You to geneven For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-06-05
, 09:33
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Posts: 40 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
@ Bulgaria
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#5
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2008-06-05
, 10:09
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Posts: 14 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#6
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2008-06-05
, 11:12
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Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Mar 2008
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#7
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2008-06-05
, 12:03
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Posts: 225 |
Thanked: 81 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
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#8
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Many people get an exaggerated idea of the battery drain by relying on the battery status statistics. They look at the status and it says that the battery is "almost full". Five minutes later the battery is empty, and they say "man, what a drain!"
The battery status statistics are basically worthless. In order to talk about battery drain, you need to measure how long the battery lasts from fully charged to almost empty. And even that is not so good, because wise techs here recommend against discharging your battery that far.
I'm not criticizing the posts above, just adding one fact to help put seeming incidents of rapid battery drain into perspective. It's like having a speedometer that goes from 0-60 in 1 second. It could be that your car is really powerful. Or it could be that the speedometer is broken.
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2008-06-05
, 15:57
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#9
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Originally Posted by BensonSorry for bodering you again. I made the 'kill process' through the 'osso-statusba-cpu' app but all I got was a white screen for couple of seconds and than it showed me the desktop and everything was exactly like before (no restart, nothing) I restarted it myself but nothing happened. It is still over there and it is still eating my CPU. Did I do something wrong? or is there some other way of killing it?Originally Posted by DqkataFirst, not apps; only applets show up through hildon-desktop... Try removing them one at a time; or look to see if anyone else has reported grief with any you are using; RSS reader and some GPE stuff, I think are known.Originally Posted by BensonThank you so much. Than I'll kill the hidon-desktop. But lets say there is really an app that is cousing the battery to go down so fast. How do I find which one exactly it is?Originally Posted by Dqkataxomap is the X server; it handles the display. Kill that, and your tablet shuts down... so not it.Hi. Nice to meet you. My name is Delcho and I'm from Bulgaria. I've seen alot of your posts and I noticed that you understand alot from internet tablets so I decided to write you and see if you could help me. I have this bad problem with battery drain on my n800. I read probably every topic here that someone had written but I can't fix it. I checked CPU usege of my programs and noticed that two things are using quite alot of CPU ALWAYS - 'hildon-desktop' and 'xomap'. I have no idea what these two are?? Do you think that if I make the ''kill process'' on the osso-statusbar-cpu application, on both of them, I will get back my battery life to normal again?? Thank you in advance. Delcho
hildon-desktop, on the other hand, is only the user interface on top of X, and it'll be restarted if you kill it. (You may have to reset all your applets how you want them afterwards.) It has all desktop applets inside it, so if one of them is taking too much CPU, it shows up there. Sometimes when you kill it, and it restarts, it takes care of the trouble temporarily, but if you've got an applet running that habitually goes into a busy-loop, you'll need to find out which one and stop using it, and also report it to the maintainer of that applet as a bug.
The Following User Says Thank You to Benson For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-06-05
, 18:32
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Posts: 1,540 |
Thanked: 1,045 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
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#10
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What happens to me fairly regularly is I'll have charged up my N800 at home overnight. I'll then use it on the train on the way to work for 30 minutes or so. I then lock the screen, and put it away for a few hours. Then if I'm heading out to lunch, or heading home and pick up the tablet it will have switched itself off and won't turn back on until I charge it.