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Dual-core vs. Your Battery Life

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Old 01-21-2011, 12:39 PM
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As a new and already, loyal android user, I was very excited to hear about future devices going to dual core processors, the days of lag and latency, it seems are limited.

But one thing I have noticed on my device, (as im sure everyone else has as well), is that the battery life on a lot of these new phones are getting slimmer and slimmer, since manufacturers are opting for dual core processors, and other hardware elements being incorporated into their handsets, I don't foresee them expanding the battery and getting a bigger better one in any new devices.

Which ponders the question as to whether or not these new processors and bigger/better displays will wreck more havoc on your battery life. There are a few articles about it in a few of the other forums but nothing concise. What is the general consensus on this?

(apologies for any grammar/spelling errors)
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Old 01-21-2011, 03:08 PM
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The Atrix is coming with a 1950mh battery sothat shoould at least help. Its my understanding that dual core could actually be better on battery life because the workload is split instead of one core working at max speed. Time will tell.
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Old 01-21-2011, 04:21 PM
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But you can bet on UI's getting more complex, more intuitive and larger apps/widgets/games.

Inflation.

We shall see, id like to hear more opinions.
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:20 PM
 
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I think it's interesting that battery life is such an after thought with manufactures. HTC doesn't even hide it, either. The incredible is a joke as far as battery life, but that didn't even stop it from selling like crazy. People hold a device for a minute, and decide they want it. And HTC is right, people will adjust to cool things if they want it bad enough. I think it's so weird.

Now, it's no question that the device will run cooler and work less. It's analogous to one really really strong guy lifting a boulder or 2 strong people sharing the load. They just don't get as tired as quickly because they can lean on one another. This, however, is generally optimized by the OS and it's built in intelligence (mac computers, for example, will essentially partition duties to certain different parts of the processor, so it will never have to think about sharing the load). Android's OS isn't optimized for this technology yet, and won't be for a long time, so the dual core processor won't be as battery effecient as it could be. It will still be more efficient, mainly in temperature, and it will of course be faster (though it won't be hugely noticeable, despite all of the hype).

As I've said in other posts in other forums, this round of updates is fairly small in the world of technologies. In my opinion, the OG droid to the Droid X was a HUGE advancement in technology, and really showed Android was a serious contender with the iPhone. This round of phone updates introduces some interesting things, the dual core chip being the biggest advancement, but if you have a droid x or dinc, I really wouldn't have an issue waiting til next year for something more advanced. Technologies like this really come up big every two years (look at the iphone for the perfect example). Also, let's not forget that the hardware only matters if the software is ready to handle it. Android fans need to be patient, as there are so many devices on so many different levels, I personally think a rooted droid x is better then anything stock coming out this year.


One guys opinion.
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:34 PM
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I personally think that battery life is the most important thing to have on a smartphone. If we can have large capacity batteries that are smaller or the same size as standard batteries now. Then that is what we should have.
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:35 PM
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Haven't read thread, but I am sure someone posted this, dual cores run at lower volts, much better battery life At least the Tegra does
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:37 PM
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Battery life will get better with dual core. They are made on a smaller process, so they are inherently more efficient. SMP also has the possibility of improving battery life by decreasing the amount of time the CPU works, but that depends quite a bit on how well it's implemented in the software.

Big screens are killer though for sure.
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:37 PM
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by onixblack View Post
I personally think that battery life is the most important thing to have on a smartphone. If we can have large capacity batteries that are smaller or the same size as standard batteries now. Then that is what we should have.
Well, that's the problem. Heavy research for longer battery life from the same form factor has been going on for decades, but it's still only so good. The last big advance in the technology was lithium ion batteries, but that was more an advance in recharging than capacity.

Last edited by eain; 01-21-2011 at 07:38 PM. Reason: quoting
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Old 01-21-2011, 08:03 PM
 
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Manufacturers will size the battery to give most users one day of run time.

Heavy users (games, streaming video, yakitty yakers) will have to charge after 8 or 10 hours, but most users, browsing, email, texts, calls, etc) will get about a day.

My Nexus One gives me 27 hours.
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Old 01-21-2011, 08:05 PM
 
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I believe it's the screen that eats battery the most.
Thanked by BleezyD
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