Dead1nside wrote:Thanks for providing some reference to your comments astro, I guess I'm still quite astounded at the claims of poor battery performance. Especially the large difference between integrated Intel and X1400, at least an hour of battery life.
That's why some competitors, such as Sony, have introduced a dual chip GPU system.
If you need battery life, you select "stamina" which activates the integrated Intel GPU, otherwise choose "performance" and activate the NVidia chip. With regard to a price increase of merely $5 for the integrated Intel GPU vs. the non-integrated chipset I am really puzzled why no other manufacturer than Sony has chosen this innovative approach.
In my opinion Intel, again (!), is losing the customer's interests. Of course, many folks demand "power" system, just because the brochures and adverts tell them that that is needed. On the other hand they hardly use any power. Most systems are just idling away during web surfing and typing the email.
If Intel would realy "innovate" they would develop such a dual GPU core system and one that can set the CPU down to 300MHz at idling, while turning off all unnecessary components (peripherals, memory banks, etc.)
Right now I have the impression that Intel and AMD are in the GHz Power race again. All they do again is: bigger, faster, better!
Look at the Overall System Power Consumption. We are back at 30-50 Watts. Right?
That's back to the Pentium 4 Hotcore era. But now we have dual core, quad-core. Super duper turbo cache and all other wheelchair-like aids to have a Vista system running smoothly in a way that we were used to run older systems in previous days.
In 7 years actually nothing has changed. Still working on Lotus Notes and Office and still 3-4h battery time. That's innovation?
It's like I have 2000 horsepowers now under the hood instead of the 100. But most of the time we need the car to go to the mall.