compared to this 5 per hour battery drain while in sleep, I've found a maximum battery drain of 2-3% independent of sleep time when the 9365 runs Windows.
I assume they have a mechanism in place that changes the state to 'hibernate' after a certain time. For example when I wake up the 9365 after half an hour from sleep, it comes back very quickly, and when I wake it up after one hour from sleep it goes through a booting process that takes much more time.
If this is true, I am asking whether we could have a similar behavior running Linux on this machines.
To me such a procedure looks very sensible: Having it waking up very quickly within half an hour or so and limiting the battery drain to a couple of percents.
This is exactly what I would wish.
So I am asking whether we could have a similar behavior running Linux on this machines?
By the way: Is this the right location to ask such a question?
Hi,
compared to this 5 per hour battery drain while in sleep, I've found a maximum battery drain of 2-3% independent of sleep time when the 9365 runs Windows.
I assume they have a mechanism in place that changes the state to 'hibernate' after a certain time. For example when I wake up the 9365 after half an hour from sleep, it comes back very quickly, and when I wake it up after one hour from sleep it goes through a booting process that takes much more time.
If this is true, I am asking whether we could have a similar behavior running Linux on this machines.
To me such a procedure looks very sensible: Having it waking up very quickly within half an hour or so and limiting the battery drain to a couple of percents.
This is exactly what I would wish.
So I am asking whether we could have a similar behavior running Linux on this machines?
By the way: Is this the right location to ask such a question?
Best regards