121
submitted 7 months ago by KarnaSubarna@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml
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[-] barbara@lemmy.ml 108 points 7 months ago

power-profiles-daemon is used by GNOME and KDE yet the article reads as if this was ubuntu only.

[-] elevenh@lemmy.world 42 points 7 months ago
[-] oo1@kbin.social 1 points 7 months ago

As a non unbuntonion it did make me go "omg, wtf?"

I thought the whole point of these debian variants was to add useful stuff like that - faster then debian.

[-] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 25 points 7 months ago

It's an article about Ubuntu 24.04 on an Ubuntu-centric blog. It's looking at that particular OS and whatever the OS uses. It doesn't use KDE and it doesn't use vanilla GNOME. As an Ubuntu 22.04 user who's considering upgrading to 24.04 and is curious what's in it, the fact that PPD is used elsewhere is a mere coincidence. 😊

[-] rollingflower@lemmy.kde.social 10 points 7 months ago

Yeah Fedora uses that since forever and will even switch away from it in half a year or so, to tuned.

But a users reported way better batterylife on Ubuntu than on Fedora. So maybe they do something better?

[-] Blisterexe@lemmy.zip 6 points 7 months ago

what are they switching to?

[-] rollingflower@lemmy.kde.social 5 points 7 months ago
[-] Blisterexe@lemmy.zip 1 points 7 months ago

i get its parts of the systemd suite but thats such a stupid name lmao, seo on that is garbage

[-] rollingflower@lemmy.kde.social 3 points 7 months ago

tuneD is a daemon, systemD is the init daemon that is the first process to start. Not the same.

[-] Blisterexe@lemmy.zip 1 points 7 months ago

i know, but its the same branding i mean

[-] rollingflower@lemmy.kde.social 1 points 7 months ago

Yeah for sure. That can go to

  • GIMP
  • LibreOffice (vs. OpenOffice)
  • OpenSuse

and other projects with dumb names

[-] iancurtis@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 7 months ago

Yeah I'm pretty sure this has been in debian for a while now

[-] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 16 points 7 months ago

Good change. Balanced mode being battery-unaware prior to this isn't ideal.

[-] kadu@lemmy.world 12 points 7 months ago

Still far from ideal, though. My 2017 MacBook Air with a severely degraded battery lasts 4 hours on macOS, but only 2.5h on Ubuntu 24.04 using the power saving profile - and that's with less intensive usage, as macOS keeps rendering gaussian blurs everywhere and launchpad and spotlight and all those annoying services.

[-] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 14 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Well this change can't improve anything about Power Saver. It only affects Balanced which now should be a bit less of a gas guzzler.

And yes, even the most aggressive power saving we have at the moment isn't anything to write home about. If we paid 10 developers to hunt down power drain issues and submit fixes for a few years we may get closer to macOS. 😂

[-] Blaster_M@lemmy.world 8 points 7 months ago

The great irony is, when I ran Windows native on those Intel Macbooks, I was getting better battery and performance than with macOS.

[-] kadu@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

Not sure why your comment was downvoted, you're actually correct, Windows is got better battery life. The only reason I'm not running it on this MacBook is an unpatched bug in the Intel HD Graphics driver that prevents it from working with newer Windows versions on MacBooks with this specific display adapter.

[-] penquin@lemm.ee 11 points 7 months ago

Breh, I thought they had a new battery saving technology breakthrough. Lol Power profiles daemon? So they didn't have it in the distro before?

[-] mfat@lemdro.id 7 points 7 months ago

Would be great if we could see a benchmark vs auto-cpufreq.

[-] roux@hexbear.net -1 points 7 months ago

Finally 30 full minutes!

[-] Oisteink@feddit.nl -4 points 7 months ago

Fake news….

this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
121 points (90.6% liked)

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