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Does Ubuntu reduces battery life?


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This questions is loosely related to Does dual boot harm a laptop battery or reduce its life? .In that question i have asked if Dual boot decrease battery life.Here i have asked does Ubuntu decreases battery life.



Does Ubuntu decreases life of battery ?I dual-booted my laptop with Ubuntu 17 and Windows 10 one year back.After one year, my laptop battery backup has reduced to 40 minutes.Answer provided in above link says dual boot does not harms battery .Hence i suspect that if might be possible that Ubuntu decreases life of battery.I don't know but i have experienced that Ubuntu drains battery faster than windows ?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 4





    No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

    – GabrielaGarcia
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

    – Ronaldo
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

    – Nobody
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

    – davidgo
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

    – user1068838
    45 mins ago




















2















This questions is loosely related to Does dual boot harm a laptop battery or reduce its life? .In that question i have asked if Dual boot decrease battery life.Here i have asked does Ubuntu decreases battery life.



Does Ubuntu decreases life of battery ?I dual-booted my laptop with Ubuntu 17 and Windows 10 one year back.After one year, my laptop battery backup has reduced to 40 minutes.Answer provided in above link says dual boot does not harms battery .Hence i suspect that if might be possible that Ubuntu decreases life of battery.I don't know but i have experienced that Ubuntu drains battery faster than windows ?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • 4





    No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

    – GabrielaGarcia
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

    – Ronaldo
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

    – Nobody
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

    – davidgo
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

    – user1068838
    45 mins ago
















2












2








2








This questions is loosely related to Does dual boot harm a laptop battery or reduce its life? .In that question i have asked if Dual boot decrease battery life.Here i have asked does Ubuntu decreases battery life.



Does Ubuntu decreases life of battery ?I dual-booted my laptop with Ubuntu 17 and Windows 10 one year back.After one year, my laptop battery backup has reduced to 40 minutes.Answer provided in above link says dual boot does not harms battery .Hence i suspect that if might be possible that Ubuntu decreases life of battery.I don't know but i have experienced that Ubuntu drains battery faster than windows ?










share|improve this question









New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











This questions is loosely related to Does dual boot harm a laptop battery or reduce its life? .In that question i have asked if Dual boot decrease battery life.Here i have asked does Ubuntu decreases battery life.



Does Ubuntu decreases life of battery ?I dual-booted my laptop with Ubuntu 17 and Windows 10 one year back.After one year, my laptop battery backup has reduced to 40 minutes.Answer provided in above link says dual boot does not harms battery .Hence i suspect that if might be possible that Ubuntu decreases life of battery.I don't know but i have experienced that Ubuntu drains battery faster than windows ?







ubuntu laptop battery






share|improve this question









New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 27 mins ago







user1068838













New contributor



user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 12 hours ago









user1068838user1068838

671 silver badge5 bronze badges




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user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




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user1068838 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • 4





    No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

    – GabrielaGarcia
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

    – Ronaldo
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

    – Nobody
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

    – davidgo
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

    – user1068838
    45 mins ago
















  • 4





    No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

    – GabrielaGarcia
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

    – Ronaldo
    11 hours ago






  • 1





    I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

    – Nobody
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

    – davidgo
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

    – user1068838
    45 mins ago










4




4





No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

– GabrielaGarcia
11 hours ago





No, Ubuntu does NOT decrease the battery life, even if it drains it faster when used instead of Windows. It seems you selectively understood what was answered. No, dear, your battery is OLD, end of story. It happens to all batteries sooner or later. There are no software culprits here no matter how hard you're trying to find a scape goat.

– GabrielaGarcia
11 hours ago




1




1





I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

– Ronaldo
11 hours ago





I think a more reasonable cause of batery degradation would be related to the fourth topic (Don’t leave your laptop on permanent charge) in this article: link.

– Ronaldo
11 hours ago




1




1





I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

– Nobody
10 hours ago





I downvoted because you are ignoring what people write and repeat your question all over the place.

– Nobody
10 hours ago




4




4





@nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

– davidgo
8 hours ago





@nobody And I upvoted because the actual answer is a nuanced, and its valuable to the community! (I also disagree with both you and GabrielaGarcia - and Ive done a significant amount of testing and research here.)

– davidgo
8 hours ago




1




1





@Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

– user1068838
45 mins ago







@Nobody I am not repeating my question .That question was related to dual boot , here i am just asking about ubuntu .If on that place would have edited my question after i accepted the answer then it would have been unfair .Also i am not asking this question just for self benefit since my battery is already dead.It will help others too .Also you can see the answer provided by davidgo is different from the answers provided on the link .Hence my question is bit different .

– user1068838
45 mins ago












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















7














Without extra care, yes, although this can be mitigated/avoided, and the main cause is just wear and tear. The problem is not Linux per-se, but the vendors focus on Windows optimizations for battery life, and heavier power draw kills a battery faster.



The main things which degrade a rechargeable Lithium based battery are:




  • Heavy discharge

  • Full charge, particularly keeping full charge.

  • Number of charge/discharge cycles

  • Heat

  • Storing battery fully charged/Discharge.

  • Age - maximum capacity of a perfectly maintained battery still decreases with age.


Because Linux is heavier on battery then Windows, the amount of heat is higher, causing faster wear. Similarly you likely have more charge/discharge cycles because battery us used more.



Some mitigations/trade-offs to improve battery -




  1. If your BIOS supports it, set maximum charge to less the 80% (or even 70%) - shorter work time, much longer battery life in net terms.

  2. Use powertop to reduce power draw.

  3. If you are a road warrior, try charging when you are not using laptop to reduce heat. Likewise a slower charger will do less damage.
    3a. It seems discharging from 80-40% once is less stressful then discharging 80-60% twice.

  4. Don't let your battery level fall below 20%

  5. Try keep the laptop comfortably cool. Leaving it on in a backpack causes heat buildup.

  6. Slow charging and/or using a larger battery causes less wear for a similar amount of usage because it helps with the above.


(Where numbers are used above they are indicative only)






share|improve this answer



































    4














    Good answer by davidgo, and that should be your starting point for understanding and minimizing the issue. But the wording of the question implies that you're thinking about this in a slightly wrong way, and I'll focus on that aspect.



    You keep referring to Ubuntu "decreasing" battery life, and that's not really an appropriate way to look at it. Say one OS is better than another at optimizing battery life. If you use the better one as a baseline, the other OS won't be as good in that respect, so it kinda looks like battery life is "decreased" in relative terms.



    But really, "batteries decrease battery life". When batteries are a source of power, any battery is a disposable item. Everything you do or don't do affects battery life a little. davidgo's answer lists the major factors.



    If one OS uses a little more power than another, that might lead to recharging more often. So some factors can affect other factors. But if you get the daily run time you need even with the OS that uses more power, you might recharge at the same frequency and from a discharge level that, for practical purposes, is in the same range. So your usage pattern may be a bigger factor than the OS.



    The point is that batteries have a finite life. There are things you can do to optimize and extend the life a little. To the extent it's practical to do those things, they can't hurt. But finite battery life is a characteristic of operating from batteries. In the scheme of things, a few months difference in battery life doesn't represent a big cost. It doesn't make sense to let it drive important decisions.



    You own the computer because it is a tool to help you accomplish things important to you. People spend extra money to get a keyboard or mouse that they can use more efficiently, or a high-resolution monitor so they can see more of their work at once. The same applies to the OS. You pick an OS because of what it allows you to do, and things like the user interface that make it easier for you to get your work done. You don't pick it because one will save you a few dollars every couple of years on battery replacement. For that matter, if you are comparing Windows and Ubuntu, Windows costs money and Ubuntu is free. So if Windows saves you a few dollars on battery replacement, you've already paid money for that.



    Ubuntu doesn't "reduce" battery life. It might yield a slightly different life. But as they say, "that's life".






    share|improve this answer


























    • You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

      – user1068838
      35 mins ago



















    0














    No.



    How fast the capacity of a battery drops over usage cycles is largely independent of the software running on the laptop. It mostly depends on amount of charge cycles, average relative charge amount, temperature, battery controller (which is not part of the operating system) and a bunch of other factors.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 3





      This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

      – davidgo
      8 hours ago














    Your Answer








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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    7














    Without extra care, yes, although this can be mitigated/avoided, and the main cause is just wear and tear. The problem is not Linux per-se, but the vendors focus on Windows optimizations for battery life, and heavier power draw kills a battery faster.



    The main things which degrade a rechargeable Lithium based battery are:




    • Heavy discharge

    • Full charge, particularly keeping full charge.

    • Number of charge/discharge cycles

    • Heat

    • Storing battery fully charged/Discharge.

    • Age - maximum capacity of a perfectly maintained battery still decreases with age.


    Because Linux is heavier on battery then Windows, the amount of heat is higher, causing faster wear. Similarly you likely have more charge/discharge cycles because battery us used more.



    Some mitigations/trade-offs to improve battery -




    1. If your BIOS supports it, set maximum charge to less the 80% (or even 70%) - shorter work time, much longer battery life in net terms.

    2. Use powertop to reduce power draw.

    3. If you are a road warrior, try charging when you are not using laptop to reduce heat. Likewise a slower charger will do less damage.
      3a. It seems discharging from 80-40% once is less stressful then discharging 80-60% twice.

    4. Don't let your battery level fall below 20%

    5. Try keep the laptop comfortably cool. Leaving it on in a backpack causes heat buildup.

    6. Slow charging and/or using a larger battery causes less wear for a similar amount of usage because it helps with the above.


    (Where numbers are used above they are indicative only)






    share|improve this answer
































      7














      Without extra care, yes, although this can be mitigated/avoided, and the main cause is just wear and tear. The problem is not Linux per-se, but the vendors focus on Windows optimizations for battery life, and heavier power draw kills a battery faster.



      The main things which degrade a rechargeable Lithium based battery are:




      • Heavy discharge

      • Full charge, particularly keeping full charge.

      • Number of charge/discharge cycles

      • Heat

      • Storing battery fully charged/Discharge.

      • Age - maximum capacity of a perfectly maintained battery still decreases with age.


      Because Linux is heavier on battery then Windows, the amount of heat is higher, causing faster wear. Similarly you likely have more charge/discharge cycles because battery us used more.



      Some mitigations/trade-offs to improve battery -




      1. If your BIOS supports it, set maximum charge to less the 80% (or even 70%) - shorter work time, much longer battery life in net terms.

      2. Use powertop to reduce power draw.

      3. If you are a road warrior, try charging when you are not using laptop to reduce heat. Likewise a slower charger will do less damage.
        3a. It seems discharging from 80-40% once is less stressful then discharging 80-60% twice.

      4. Don't let your battery level fall below 20%

      5. Try keep the laptop comfortably cool. Leaving it on in a backpack causes heat buildup.

      6. Slow charging and/or using a larger battery causes less wear for a similar amount of usage because it helps with the above.


      (Where numbers are used above they are indicative only)






      share|improve this answer






























        7












        7








        7







        Without extra care, yes, although this can be mitigated/avoided, and the main cause is just wear and tear. The problem is not Linux per-se, but the vendors focus on Windows optimizations for battery life, and heavier power draw kills a battery faster.



        The main things which degrade a rechargeable Lithium based battery are:




        • Heavy discharge

        • Full charge, particularly keeping full charge.

        • Number of charge/discharge cycles

        • Heat

        • Storing battery fully charged/Discharge.

        • Age - maximum capacity of a perfectly maintained battery still decreases with age.


        Because Linux is heavier on battery then Windows, the amount of heat is higher, causing faster wear. Similarly you likely have more charge/discharge cycles because battery us used more.



        Some mitigations/trade-offs to improve battery -




        1. If your BIOS supports it, set maximum charge to less the 80% (or even 70%) - shorter work time, much longer battery life in net terms.

        2. Use powertop to reduce power draw.

        3. If you are a road warrior, try charging when you are not using laptop to reduce heat. Likewise a slower charger will do less damage.
          3a. It seems discharging from 80-40% once is less stressful then discharging 80-60% twice.

        4. Don't let your battery level fall below 20%

        5. Try keep the laptop comfortably cool. Leaving it on in a backpack causes heat buildup.

        6. Slow charging and/or using a larger battery causes less wear for a similar amount of usage because it helps with the above.


        (Where numbers are used above they are indicative only)






        share|improve this answer















        Without extra care, yes, although this can be mitigated/avoided, and the main cause is just wear and tear. The problem is not Linux per-se, but the vendors focus on Windows optimizations for battery life, and heavier power draw kills a battery faster.



        The main things which degrade a rechargeable Lithium based battery are:




        • Heavy discharge

        • Full charge, particularly keeping full charge.

        • Number of charge/discharge cycles

        • Heat

        • Storing battery fully charged/Discharge.

        • Age - maximum capacity of a perfectly maintained battery still decreases with age.


        Because Linux is heavier on battery then Windows, the amount of heat is higher, causing faster wear. Similarly you likely have more charge/discharge cycles because battery us used more.



        Some mitigations/trade-offs to improve battery -




        1. If your BIOS supports it, set maximum charge to less the 80% (or even 70%) - shorter work time, much longer battery life in net terms.

        2. Use powertop to reduce power draw.

        3. If you are a road warrior, try charging when you are not using laptop to reduce heat. Likewise a slower charger will do less damage.
          3a. It seems discharging from 80-40% once is less stressful then discharging 80-60% twice.

        4. Don't let your battery level fall below 20%

        5. Try keep the laptop comfortably cool. Leaving it on in a backpack causes heat buildup.

        6. Slow charging and/or using a larger battery causes less wear for a similar amount of usage because it helps with the above.


        (Where numbers are used above they are indicative only)







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 7 hours ago

























        answered 9 hours ago









        davidgodavidgo

        47.1k7 gold badges60 silver badges97 bronze badges




        47.1k7 gold badges60 silver badges97 bronze badges




























            4














            Good answer by davidgo, and that should be your starting point for understanding and minimizing the issue. But the wording of the question implies that you're thinking about this in a slightly wrong way, and I'll focus on that aspect.



            You keep referring to Ubuntu "decreasing" battery life, and that's not really an appropriate way to look at it. Say one OS is better than another at optimizing battery life. If you use the better one as a baseline, the other OS won't be as good in that respect, so it kinda looks like battery life is "decreased" in relative terms.



            But really, "batteries decrease battery life". When batteries are a source of power, any battery is a disposable item. Everything you do or don't do affects battery life a little. davidgo's answer lists the major factors.



            If one OS uses a little more power than another, that might lead to recharging more often. So some factors can affect other factors. But if you get the daily run time you need even with the OS that uses more power, you might recharge at the same frequency and from a discharge level that, for practical purposes, is in the same range. So your usage pattern may be a bigger factor than the OS.



            The point is that batteries have a finite life. There are things you can do to optimize and extend the life a little. To the extent it's practical to do those things, they can't hurt. But finite battery life is a characteristic of operating from batteries. In the scheme of things, a few months difference in battery life doesn't represent a big cost. It doesn't make sense to let it drive important decisions.



            You own the computer because it is a tool to help you accomplish things important to you. People spend extra money to get a keyboard or mouse that they can use more efficiently, or a high-resolution monitor so they can see more of their work at once. The same applies to the OS. You pick an OS because of what it allows you to do, and things like the user interface that make it easier for you to get your work done. You don't pick it because one will save you a few dollars every couple of years on battery replacement. For that matter, if you are comparing Windows and Ubuntu, Windows costs money and Ubuntu is free. So if Windows saves you a few dollars on battery replacement, you've already paid money for that.



            Ubuntu doesn't "reduce" battery life. It might yield a slightly different life. But as they say, "that's life".






            share|improve this answer


























            • You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

              – user1068838
              35 mins ago
















            4














            Good answer by davidgo, and that should be your starting point for understanding and minimizing the issue. But the wording of the question implies that you're thinking about this in a slightly wrong way, and I'll focus on that aspect.



            You keep referring to Ubuntu "decreasing" battery life, and that's not really an appropriate way to look at it. Say one OS is better than another at optimizing battery life. If you use the better one as a baseline, the other OS won't be as good in that respect, so it kinda looks like battery life is "decreased" in relative terms.



            But really, "batteries decrease battery life". When batteries are a source of power, any battery is a disposable item. Everything you do or don't do affects battery life a little. davidgo's answer lists the major factors.



            If one OS uses a little more power than another, that might lead to recharging more often. So some factors can affect other factors. But if you get the daily run time you need even with the OS that uses more power, you might recharge at the same frequency and from a discharge level that, for practical purposes, is in the same range. So your usage pattern may be a bigger factor than the OS.



            The point is that batteries have a finite life. There are things you can do to optimize and extend the life a little. To the extent it's practical to do those things, they can't hurt. But finite battery life is a characteristic of operating from batteries. In the scheme of things, a few months difference in battery life doesn't represent a big cost. It doesn't make sense to let it drive important decisions.



            You own the computer because it is a tool to help you accomplish things important to you. People spend extra money to get a keyboard or mouse that they can use more efficiently, or a high-resolution monitor so they can see more of their work at once. The same applies to the OS. You pick an OS because of what it allows you to do, and things like the user interface that make it easier for you to get your work done. You don't pick it because one will save you a few dollars every couple of years on battery replacement. For that matter, if you are comparing Windows and Ubuntu, Windows costs money and Ubuntu is free. So if Windows saves you a few dollars on battery replacement, you've already paid money for that.



            Ubuntu doesn't "reduce" battery life. It might yield a slightly different life. But as they say, "that's life".






            share|improve this answer


























            • You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

              – user1068838
              35 mins ago














            4












            4








            4







            Good answer by davidgo, and that should be your starting point for understanding and minimizing the issue. But the wording of the question implies that you're thinking about this in a slightly wrong way, and I'll focus on that aspect.



            You keep referring to Ubuntu "decreasing" battery life, and that's not really an appropriate way to look at it. Say one OS is better than another at optimizing battery life. If you use the better one as a baseline, the other OS won't be as good in that respect, so it kinda looks like battery life is "decreased" in relative terms.



            But really, "batteries decrease battery life". When batteries are a source of power, any battery is a disposable item. Everything you do or don't do affects battery life a little. davidgo's answer lists the major factors.



            If one OS uses a little more power than another, that might lead to recharging more often. So some factors can affect other factors. But if you get the daily run time you need even with the OS that uses more power, you might recharge at the same frequency and from a discharge level that, for practical purposes, is in the same range. So your usage pattern may be a bigger factor than the OS.



            The point is that batteries have a finite life. There are things you can do to optimize and extend the life a little. To the extent it's practical to do those things, they can't hurt. But finite battery life is a characteristic of operating from batteries. In the scheme of things, a few months difference in battery life doesn't represent a big cost. It doesn't make sense to let it drive important decisions.



            You own the computer because it is a tool to help you accomplish things important to you. People spend extra money to get a keyboard or mouse that they can use more efficiently, or a high-resolution monitor so they can see more of their work at once. The same applies to the OS. You pick an OS because of what it allows you to do, and things like the user interface that make it easier for you to get your work done. You don't pick it because one will save you a few dollars every couple of years on battery replacement. For that matter, if you are comparing Windows and Ubuntu, Windows costs money and Ubuntu is free. So if Windows saves you a few dollars on battery replacement, you've already paid money for that.



            Ubuntu doesn't "reduce" battery life. It might yield a slightly different life. But as they say, "that's life".






            share|improve this answer













            Good answer by davidgo, and that should be your starting point for understanding and minimizing the issue. But the wording of the question implies that you're thinking about this in a slightly wrong way, and I'll focus on that aspect.



            You keep referring to Ubuntu "decreasing" battery life, and that's not really an appropriate way to look at it. Say one OS is better than another at optimizing battery life. If you use the better one as a baseline, the other OS won't be as good in that respect, so it kinda looks like battery life is "decreased" in relative terms.



            But really, "batteries decrease battery life". When batteries are a source of power, any battery is a disposable item. Everything you do or don't do affects battery life a little. davidgo's answer lists the major factors.



            If one OS uses a little more power than another, that might lead to recharging more often. So some factors can affect other factors. But if you get the daily run time you need even with the OS that uses more power, you might recharge at the same frequency and from a discharge level that, for practical purposes, is in the same range. So your usage pattern may be a bigger factor than the OS.



            The point is that batteries have a finite life. There are things you can do to optimize and extend the life a little. To the extent it's practical to do those things, they can't hurt. But finite battery life is a characteristic of operating from batteries. In the scheme of things, a few months difference in battery life doesn't represent a big cost. It doesn't make sense to let it drive important decisions.



            You own the computer because it is a tool to help you accomplish things important to you. People spend extra money to get a keyboard or mouse that they can use more efficiently, or a high-resolution monitor so they can see more of their work at once. The same applies to the OS. You pick an OS because of what it allows you to do, and things like the user interface that make it easier for you to get your work done. You don't pick it because one will save you a few dollars every couple of years on battery replacement. For that matter, if you are comparing Windows and Ubuntu, Windows costs money and Ubuntu is free. So if Windows saves you a few dollars on battery replacement, you've already paid money for that.



            Ubuntu doesn't "reduce" battery life. It might yield a slightly different life. But as they say, "that's life".







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 7 hours ago









            fixer1234fixer1234

            21.4k14 gold badges53 silver badges87 bronze badges




            21.4k14 gold badges53 silver badges87 bronze badges
















            • You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

              – user1068838
              35 mins ago



















            • You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

              – user1068838
              35 mins ago

















            You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

            – user1068838
            35 mins ago





            You are right .My most of work is on Ubuntu and i like it .I will not remove it for saving few dollars :)

            – user1068838
            35 mins ago











            0














            No.



            How fast the capacity of a battery drops over usage cycles is largely independent of the software running on the laptop. It mostly depends on amount of charge cycles, average relative charge amount, temperature, battery controller (which is not part of the operating system) and a bunch of other factors.






            share|improve this answer





















            • 3





              This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

              – davidgo
              8 hours ago
















            0














            No.



            How fast the capacity of a battery drops over usage cycles is largely independent of the software running on the laptop. It mostly depends on amount of charge cycles, average relative charge amount, temperature, battery controller (which is not part of the operating system) and a bunch of other factors.






            share|improve this answer





















            • 3





              This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

              – davidgo
              8 hours ago














            0












            0








            0







            No.



            How fast the capacity of a battery drops over usage cycles is largely independent of the software running on the laptop. It mostly depends on amount of charge cycles, average relative charge amount, temperature, battery controller (which is not part of the operating system) and a bunch of other factors.






            share|improve this answer













            No.



            How fast the capacity of a battery drops over usage cycles is largely independent of the software running on the laptop. It mostly depends on amount of charge cycles, average relative charge amount, temperature, battery controller (which is not part of the operating system) and a bunch of other factors.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 10 hours ago









            NobodyNobody

            1778 bronze badges




            1778 bronze badges











            • 3





              This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

              – davidgo
              8 hours ago














            • 3





              This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

              – davidgo
              8 hours ago








            3




            3





            This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

            – davidgo
            8 hours ago





            This is wrong because Typicsl Linux (but not Android) is way heavier on battery then Windows because vendors optimise for Windows and ignore Linux. This is well documented, and unsurprisingly the experience of the OP as stated.

            – davidgo
            8 hours ago










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