Battery Question... hotswap?

T4x series specific matters only
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MaloventEvil
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Battery Question... hotswap?

#1 Post by MaloventEvil » Fri Feb 17, 2006 3:19 am

Are the batteries in the T4x hotswappable? IE if you sleep the computer, can you pull the battery out, put it back in, and reawaken the computer like you can on a mac?

Thanks.

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#2 Post by hoya » Fri Feb 17, 2006 5:29 am

no, you have to use hibernate in order to swap the battery.

as for the Powerbook, are you referring to the new high-res model? I know that particular machine includes a software feature whereby the contents of RAM are written to the disk so that no data is lost in case a user unplugs and loses battery power during sleep mode.

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#3 Post by Aroc » Fri Feb 17, 2006 8:59 am

You need to hibernate, not stand by.

hibernate is suspend to disk
stand by is suspend to RAM.
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#4 Post by christopher_wolf » Fri Feb 17, 2006 1:45 pm

That feature on the Powerbook, I think, is akin to Hibernate, not Suspend. Suspend does just that, it suspends the active contents in RAM; Hibernate justs images the RAM onto a portion of the disk, so Suspend draws more power during the sleep state than does Hibernate which draws as much as the Thinkpad does when it is off. Resuming simply mounts the last image back into RAM for Hibernate.
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Re: Battery Question... hotswap?

#5 Post by davidspalding » Sat Feb 18, 2006 9:47 am

MaloventEvil wrote:Are the batteries in the T4x hotswappable? IE if you sleep the computer, can you pull the battery out, put it back in, and reawaken the computer like you can on a mac?
No, but if you have your AC adapter handy.... ;)

I have an Ultraby Slim battery, I haven't tried swapping the main while the Ultrabay battery is in. I doubt it would work, but then, THIS IS an ThinkPad. 8)
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#6 Post by Aristotle11 » Sat Feb 18, 2006 11:25 am

I hotswap with my AC in all the time. Hibernate works just like the mac feture.

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#7 Post by asiafish » Sat Feb 18, 2006 11:49 am

christopher_wolf wrote:That feature on the Powerbook, I think, is akin to Hibernate, not Suspend. Suspend does just that, it suspends the active contents in RAM; Hibernate justs images the RAM onto a portion of the disk, so Suspend draws more power during the sleep state than does Hibernate which draws as much as the Thinkpad does when it is off. Resuming simply mounts the last image back into RAM for Hibernate.
Actually the PowerBook does it with a small capacity that holds power for about 20 seconds so you can switch the battery. PowerBooks didn't have a hibernate function until last year, though older ones can be activated for it in the Unix terminal.
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#8 Post by Champ » Sat Feb 18, 2006 12:34 pm

yah I think some other computers also have that capacity. A small lithium battery support RAM for a few seconds. Considering that takes next to no electricity at all.

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#9 Post by christopher_wolf » Sat Feb 18, 2006 3:35 pm

asiafish wrote:
christopher_wolf wrote:That feature on the Powerbook, I think, is akin to Hibernate, not Suspend. Suspend does just that, it suspends the active contents in RAM; Hibernate justs images the RAM onto a portion of the disk, so Suspend draws more power during the sleep state than does Hibernate which draws as much as the Thinkpad does when it is off. Resuming simply mounts the last image back into RAM for Hibernate.
Actually the PowerBook does it with a small capacity that holds power for about 20 seconds so you can switch the battery. PowerBooks didn't have a hibernate function until last year, though older ones can be activated for it in the Unix terminal.
That would akin to using the Ultrabay Slim Battery; however, I haven't found a way to get it to deplete the Slimbay battery last so I can use it as a hotswap buffer. It might be a nice feature, but if your suspend/hibernate times are close together, why not just hibernate then swap the batteries?

Oh, a device swap whilst a system is in the suspend state is called a warm-swap, instead of a hotswap if I remember correctly.
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#10 Post by davidspalding » Sun Feb 19, 2006 12:19 am

A: I just pulled my main 6-cell and am replying with only the Ultrabay battery providing power. 8)

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#11 Post by asiafish » Sun Feb 19, 2006 12:38 am

As long as something is in there, you're good to go.
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#12 Post by christopher_wolf » Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:18 am

Thanks; but I was talking about using the main battery to depletion then having the ultrabay battery kick in and power the system until another main battery is connected. It always seems to run down the Ultrabay first.
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#13 Post by Tiger » Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:26 am

Came across this how battery swapping will occur in Vista.

"Sleep state. The new Sleep state in Windows Vista combines the speed of Standby mode with data protection features and low-power consumption of Hibernate. The Sleep state also allows users to change or remove a battery with little risk to open applications and data, since memory is safely written to the hard disk. Startup from the Sleep state requires just seconds, meaning fewer shutdowns and restarts are necessary, which helps improve power management. "

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#14 Post by Champ » Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:28 am

basically a quick hiberate???

I don't understand what you can do in between hibernate and suspend.

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#15 Post by christopher_wolf » Sun Feb 19, 2006 1:31 am

Tiger wrote:Came across this how battery swapping will occur in Vista.

"Sleep state. The new Sleep state in Windows Vista combines the speed of Standby mode with data protection features and low-power consumption of Hibernate. The Sleep state also allows users to change or remove a battery with little risk to open applications and data, since memory is safely written to the hard disk. Startup from the Sleep state requires just seconds, meaning fewer shutdowns and restarts are necessary, which helps improve power management. "
That doesn't mean much, IMO; you can't power the RAM without a battery or AC unless you utilize a piece of hardware inside the computer that is physically capable of powering it. To me, that just sounds like they are preparing any laptop with Vista OS on it to have a safe warm-swap of the main battery if indeed all the required hardware in that laptop actually supports a battery warm-swap. It looks as if they backup the data in RAM with a partial hibernate and have reduced the resume time for that partial hibernate (most likely by putting it on a quickly accessed portion of the disk and an instant goto instruction that runs a check against it and the data in RAM while it resumes.)
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#16 Post by own6volvos » Sun Feb 19, 2006 2:01 am

Champ wrote:yah I think some other computers also have that capacity. A small lithium battery support RAM for a few seconds. Considering that takes next to no electricity at all.
If by none at all you mean a few AA's might last an hour doing it, then yes :)

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#17 Post by asiafish » Sun Feb 19, 2006 3:13 am

The hibernate function on the PowerBook is MUCH faster than Windows, I believe because the hibernate file is constantly cached as the machine is used, making the time required to write any changes to it at any given instant far shorter than writing the entire contents of RAM as Windows currently does.

This could be what is coming in Vista, I hope. I just know that My PowerBook goes into sleep (standbye) instantly, and by the time I turn it over and remove the battery, it is fully in hibernation. If the computer is plugged in, it wakes from sleep (standbye), but if not, and all power is cut, then it resumes from hibernation, which takes approximately 15 seconds (768MB RAM).

The larger PowerBooks have a capacity to maintain the contents of RAM, but the smaller 12" model (like mine) and the iBooks do not. Still, it is at least twice as fast as Windows, perhaps more.
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#18 Post by davidspalding » Sun Feb 19, 2006 2:23 pm

Well, Mac OS 9 and earlier shut down lickety-split, much faster than *any* Windows, on *any* machine ... so hibernating quickly is not surprising at all. Not sure about Os X, bet it's the same. It's just something that I've taken for granted with Macs - shut down is all of 10 seconds, tops.

Aside to Chris: if you were answering me, I know, I really wish I could do that, since I have a new 9-cell coming.... But it occurs to me that you can just slide out the Ultrabay batt, and slip it in when the main batt is down to 3%. Not exactly what you and I are thinking of, but.... But. ,:}

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#19 Post by asiafish » Sun Feb 19, 2006 2:33 pm

Actually OSX shuts down a lot slower than OS9, its a Unix system and has a lot more overhead.
"An atheist is just somebody who feels about Yahweh the way any decent Christian feels about Thor or Baal or the golden calf. As has been said before, we are all atheists about most of the gods that humanity has ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further."

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