Wireless Web Browsing Battery Life Test

For our final test I wanted to provilde a snippet of our 2013 web browsing battery life test to show what its power profile looked like. Remember the point of this test was to simulate periods of increased CPU and network activity, that could correspond to more than just browsing the web but interacting with your device in general.

 

Those bursts of power consumption are the direct result of our battery life test doing its job. That the tasks should take roughly the same time to complete on both devices, making this a good battery life test by not penalizing a faster SoC with more work.

Note that the W510's curve ends up lagging behind Surface RT's curve a bit by the end of the chart. This is purely because of the W510's garbage WiFi implementation. I understand that a fix from Acer is on the way, but it's neat to see something as simple as poorly implemented WiFi showing up in these power consumption graphs.

I always think about GPU power consumption while playing a game, but going through this experiment gave me a new found appreciation for non-gaming GPU power efficiency. Simply changing what's displayed on screen does burn an appreciable amount of power.

GPU Power Consumption Final Words
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  • dc77gti - Tuesday, December 25, 2012 - link

    Looking forward to 22nm Bay Trail-T. Hopefully Intel can get this out before 2014.
    That's half the battle. The other half lies with Google Android. We'll have to wait and see. With Intel's hardware might and Android's open source project, things will get more exciting.
  • kyuu - Wednesday, December 26, 2012 - link

    *sigh* Everyone seems to have forgotten about AMD's Temash which should be out by mid-2013... hopefully. Hell, I'd even take a Hondo tablet over Clover Trail, if anyone actually made one.
  • thebeastie - Tuesday, December 25, 2012 - link

    I don't know about this.. all of a sudden the tables have turned against ARM?
    Mythbusters do a pretty thorough job on testing, I want them to do the same round of testing on these chips and see what THEY come up with.

    Apples A6 still reams the Atom so its not really that great.

    Anyway ARMs real kryptonite has been price. Intel might sell thee chips cheap as a last ditch stand one off or two off but they can't do it forever before what matters to them most falls apart.... and thats making a lot of money.
  • puppies - Wednesday, December 26, 2012 - link

    I think most of us realise that intels biggest problem right now is that in the desktop environment (their main source of income from the public) a 3 or 4 year old chip is more than adequate for 99% of tasks that the average pc user wants to perform. Software just isn't being developed (or is there much need for it) that requires a quad core 3.5ghz cpu with turbo and HT when a 2.5ghz dual core will more than suffice.

    If however they can push the performance envelope of these ultra low voltage parts to a point where software starts being developed that can utilise those chips to their potential then ARM will not be a viable option for anyone who needs that performance.

    Most tablet reviews state something along the lines of "it is ok for a few last minute corrections to a presentation but you might want something more powerful for when you aren't on the train/plain etc". If intel changes that to "This ultra portable tablet has enough grunt for all your word/powerpoint/excel creation needs" and ARM can't keep up then Intel becomes the required CPU for business users, intel really doesn't care about $200 tablet sales. They are generally bought as presents for kids and there just isn't the profit available that intel seems to desire.

    Combine this with the fact that no company is going to want to deal with the headache of trying to sync workloads between X86 office pcs and ARM based ultra portables and intel suddenly has a reason to charge the big bucks again.
  • FunBunny2 - Friday, December 28, 2012 - link

    I expect the reality is: for consumers, the need for anything much more than a 486 is, well, past. Not much computation outside of Excel. Pretty pixels, on the other hand...

    If M$ could write a yet more bloated OS, then the old Wintel symbiotic monopoly might return. Fact is, we're still where Xerox PARC put us 3 decades ago. The hardware isn't much different, save for touch, either. There was a time when PCs shipped with monochrome tubes, by default. And the OS was a command line ark.
  • war59312 - Wednesday, December 26, 2012 - link

    Hey,

    This image as linked on page 5, the very last image appears to be broken:

    http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/SoC/Intel/CTvT...

    Thanks,

    Will
  • Veteranv2 - Wednesday, December 26, 2012 - link

    Reading this review, it makes me realize how websites are abused as a marketing gimmick.

    Keep this in mind:
    - It is all teste on Win8.
    - Win8 is primarely Win7 but with ARM support
    - Windows has been optimized for X86 in any way, they just recently added support.
    - Who says ARM support on Win8 is any good for ARM performance? It is compatible, but x86 has enjoyed +20 years of optimization

    If anandtech would have wanted to do this right they would have used this:
    - A6X or A15 ARMcores

    What has anandtech proven:
    - Win8 is bad for ARM
    - Tegra3 on 40nm has worse power consumtion then a 32nm part
    - It is a marketing tool for intel which is struggling in the tablet market and needs positive things like this
    - That it cannot objectively make differences clear between architectures, cause this review has nothing to do with architectures...

    A sad day for anandtech...
  • thebeastie - Wednesday, December 26, 2012 - link

    I guess I could agree with this, Anandtech is my absolute favorite tech site for the truth but some times he just seems to be a little bit too much of an Intel fan. But alternatively I do see that he is ready to hand out credit where it is due, and Intel is all too often the company to beat.

    Ultimately I think his heading was a poor choice of words and is just as much appeared to be skewed towards headline grabbing as much has being an accurately balanced review.

    I guess that will always be part of the game with "the press"
  • CeriseCogburn - Friday, January 25, 2013 - link

    You guys missed the bucket of fudge, and forgot the nvidia hate.

    Thus the Tegra3. you've missed the bias boat, bros.

    Anand got screwed on nVidia gpu's a long while back, and they AND Tom's have never forgotten the slight.

    It was the (made notorious) "rebranded" nVidia 9800x, where Anand just reused another of the nVidia gpu's they had in house and adjusted the clocks and claimed they thus tested the "new" nVidia release.

    The deep hatred has been seething here ever since, in every article, pumping up the amd fanboys, and only recently has that latter group somewhat receded, due to continual epic fails by amd.
  • powerarmour - Friday, December 28, 2012 - link

    Agreed

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