5 Ways Windows 8 will help apps cut power consumption

The Windows 8 beta will be available by the end of February, and Microsoft has given much thought into optimizing it to run well not just on desktops and laptops, but also on tablets and even smartphones. Part of making an operating system friendly for mobile devices is making it power-conscious, able to do everything you want while using as little power as possible.

Earlier this week, Microsoft’s Building Windows 8 blog detailed how Windows 8 will accomplish this. Here are five ways the OS is being optimized so your apps use less power and you can get more work done.

If you’ve ever taken your laptop on a long flight hoping to get some work done, then you’ve probably gone through a traveler’s ritual.

1. Background apps

To extend your battery life, you shut down all unneeded apps, and disable all the services running in your task or menu bar. In my experience, doing this can often extend your run time by 25 per cent.

When you travel all day with your phone, you generally don’t need to do this. Phones and tablets have been designed with a closer eye on energy efficiency. Background apps are less likely to have an impact on your battery. Windows 8 will take a similar approach; if you can’t see the app, then it shouldn’t use power.

2. Low footprint

Desktop apps that you’re currently running on your work PC will still run as they always have, and besides some minor benefits due to operating system improvements, they’ll use as much power as they have in the past. The Building Windows 8 blog details how Metro-style apps written for Windows 8, however, will have options to reduce their power footprint, extending battery life.

Metro-style apps will be suspended when moved to the background, with the Windows Scheduler no longer giving them CPU cycles.

3. Background-friendliness

The app is ready to work instantly when pulled to the foreground, but until then sits idle, using no power.

There are some tasks that still need to happen, even while an app is in the background.

4. Background actions

Microsoft has accommodated this by defining key scenarios that are supported in the background for Metro-style apps:

    • Playing music
    • Downloading or uploading a file
    • Keeping live tiles alive with fresh content
    • Printing
    • Receiving a VoIP call, instant message, or email
    • Sharing content
    • Synchronizing content with a tethered device

Windows 8 includes APIs that allow Metro-style apps to complete these actions in the background in a way that is power-efficient.

5. Connected standby

Phones and tablets rarely get turned off. Instead, they generally sit in a standby mode, using little power. Windows 8 accommodates this functionality by supporting a “Connected Standby” state on new hardware that supports it. A “Desktop Activity Moderator” will enable apps that otherwise only understand awake and sleep modes to work in connected standby mode. The moderator will allow select processes to run, while preventing unnecessary background tasks from draining your battery.
Metro Envy

Windows 8 is making a dramatic transformation from a desktop OS to a mobile OS. With over three-fourths of the PCs currently sold being battery-powered, the emphasis on power efficiency is well-placed.

One thing that’s apparent in seeing these new power-saving techniques is that much of the software your business currently uses will need to be rewritten to take advantage of these improvements. Running power-hungry desktop apps on a Windows 8 mobile device will make users quickly desire a Metro-style version to extend their devices’ run time and increase the amount of work they can get done.

Joseph Fieber has 25 years of experience as an IT pro, with a background in computer consulting and software training. Follow him on Google+, Facebook, or Twitter, or contact him through his Web site, JosephFieber.com.

Topics: Software, Operating systems, Windows

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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