Tue Apr 8, 2008 6:22PM EDT
See Comments (17)
Reader Evan writes: I am going on a trip to Hawaii next week, and I will be taking my laptop and some movies with me. Would it help save battery life if I were to rip the movies and play them back from the hard drive or a USB thumbdrive instead of playing them back as DVDs?
Notebooks use a lot of power, but by isolating which components use it, you can add substantial run time to a machine without sacrificing utility.
To answer this question I performed three experiments on a Dell Inspiron notebook, playing back a movie file as a DVD, as an AVI ripped to the hard drive, and as the same AVI ripped to a USB thumbdrive and played back from there. All other settings on the machine were identical.
The results were interesting. Playing back a DVD, I got battery life of 2 hours, 36 minutes. As expected, when playing back from the hard drive, battery life climbed to 3 hours, 5 minutes. I expected even higher numbers from the USB thumbdrive playback but was in for a surprise: Run time plummeted way down to 2 hours, 33 minutes, the worst of the bunch. Quite interesting.
The hard drive vs. DVD isn't a big shock. A spinning optical drive uses about 5 watts of power, while an active hard drive uses just 2 to 3 watts. So naturally battery life will rise when you're not using the optical drive (especially since Windows likes to access your hard drive periodically anyway, whether you're using it or not).
The USB thumbdrive results were surprising, though, as USB devices have a reputation for not using a lot of power. I did a little research I found that power consumption can be erratic for USB devices, which likely explains the discrepancy (there is also a random component to any battery test, but not 30 minutes of randomness). One thumbdrive may only draw half a watt of power, but another may draw several watts. The USB interface itself draws power, too. Alas, there are no good studies of power consumption among different brands of thumbdrives, and I only tested using a single thumbdrive. The results could have been different had I used a different brand drive, but you'd have to experiment to find the right one.
Putting USB aside for now, one thing is clear: You can get substantially better battery life if you rip your DVDs to your hard drive before you take that trip. Not only that, you'll have to pack less (and DVDs are fragile), and you'll find switching between movies much more convenient, too.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Why would you want to watch movies on your laptop..You're going to Hawaii..get out of the hotel and fry in the SUN...
Where do you find handbrake?
If you are purely concerned about battery life then the DVD drive uses most power and the USB would use least. However for conveince the DVD would probably win. http://www.trilogicuk.co.uk
Very interesting information and results I wouldn't have guessed. I have an HP laptop with the "QuickPlay" feature which supposedly will run your DVD without powering up your computer. I haven't actually tried it yet but can anyone tell me if this is true and what the power consumption on that would be since you aren't running the hard drive?
I'd have thought that running it off the hard drive would be best and I was right. I just didn't expect a USB drive to be as intensive as a DVD drive.
The website for handbrake is: http://handbrake.fr/ Be warned, for a windows box you will a second program to read the dvd, read the instructions and you'll be fine. For a Mac you just need handbrake itself. good luck.
usually, I connect my desktop via HDMI with my 32' Toshiba LCD to enjoy the movies.
Post 13, zhouyian, say I'd like to see that 32 foot Toshiba LCD you got! Biggest darn TV I ever heard of. Just joshin' ya, believe you meant to key 32".
Commercial DVD's are copy protected. Isn't it impossible or illegal to rip them?
I DIDN'T UNDERSTAND EXACTLY WHY THAT USB IS LESS THAN THAN TWO OTHER DEVICES IN POWER CONSUPTION COULD YOU EXPLAIN WHY PLEASE?
Intriguing results!!!! I was under an impression that using a USB drive saves my laptop's battery power. Anyway, nice observation!!
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6 Posted by justknutts on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:45PM EDT Report Abuse
what website would I find handbrake on?