Report: Mobile Reporting Kit #12

Posted on 09 September 2013, Last updated on 03 January 2014 by

P1150034

I’ve been using the Mobile Reporting Kit V12 over the last 5 days and it’s been working well. The challenge was to work through a day without any cables. No charging! The Harris Beach Ultrabook, Nokia Lumia 925 plus a  backup phone (Nokia 808) and a camera (Lumix FZ150) worked together to give me my best mobile media studio yet.

 

Firstly I have to admit that I took one micro USB cable with me; I was too worried that the Lumia 925 would run out of juice during the event because I only had the Nokia 808 with me as a backup phone. Oh yes, there’s that to admit too. In the end I left the Lumia 620 at home and replaced it with the Nokia 808 and it was all because of an audio interview I had planned. The Lumia and 808 worked side-by-side as good quality audio recording devices (although the 808 wins that by a long shot!)

On to the main challenge though. I can report that the Harris Beach Ultrabook did the business averaging well over 6hrs of screen-on working time in addition to 5-6 hours of connected standby time (connected) during the 8am-11pm period of an IFA day and a 100% charge.

The Ultrabook was connected to WiFi and 3G (sometimes both) and was used for, on average, 6 video edits, renders and uploads per day (10 on the first day.) about 4 articles, a lot of social activity,  photo editing and uploading, emails and the usual web distractions. Screen brightness was kept at comfortable levels in the brightly lit areas I was working in.

Video editing and rendering speed was impressive to the point that it was beating most solutions around me. No import shadow file time was needed and rendering was 6 times faster than real-time in my 720p YouTube case. Intel Quick Sync on Haswell is really fast!

It’s interesting to look at the powercf report from Windows 8 (more info) too. Before I went to IFA I was averaging 9hrs usage per charge. At IFA, because of the work load and screen brightness that was down to about 6.5hrs.

 

2013-08-31 ‘On’ Battery life. (Screen on, active) Connected Standby (Wifi on)
2013-09-02 9:26:42 8:29:19
2013-09-03 N/A N/A
2013-09-04 9:43:47 8:44:40
2013-09-05 6:34:04 5:54:09
2013-09-06 6:37:53 5:57:36
2013-09-07 6:00:25 5:23:55

Total weight for everything, including a fairly rugged backpack, was 5KG. (Glasses, wallet 2 phones, USB WiFi, SD cards, Lumix FZ150 camera and other bits and pieces.

I didn’t take the W510 at all during the day (in fact I’m using it for the first time on the flight out of Berlin to San Francisco with 88% of last weeks original charge still available. )

12-hour Computing

I’ve proven that an Ultrabook can have all-day battery life with 6hrs hard working usage during that period. The challenge now would be to get the weight down. Hello Sony Vaio Pro 13 or Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro or even, and I’m very tempted, the amazing Sony Vaio Tap 11 with Y-Series Haswell at about 1KG total weight with a very compact size.

Reporting kit V12 will stay with me this week as I cover IDF in San Francisco where we’re expecting Bay Trail news. We’re also expecting to see the first devices from manufacturers. The Toshiba Encore could be one of them.

Video: Battery Life at IFA 2013

2 Comments For This Post

  1. Perry says:

    Chippy,

    Thanks for the very interesting information.
    You mentioned in your video that the active ‘up time’ is actually extrapolated. Does this mean that the roughly 9.5 hour values during your normal use is actually, say, 4 hours of activity that, should you continue the activity, would deplete the battery to 0 in 9.5 hours?
    If not, can you explain the extrapolation-remark?
    Regards,
    Perry

  2. Tom says:

    Did you end up needing to use the USB WiFi adapter?

Find ultra mobile PCs, Ultrabooks, Netbooks and handhelds PCs quickly using the following links:

Acer C740
11.6" Intel Celeron 3205U
Acer Aspire Switch 10
10.1" Intel Atom Z3745
HP Elitebook 820 G2
12.5" Intel Core i5 5300U
Acer Aspire E11 ES1
11.6" Intel Celeron N2840
Acer C720 Chromebook
11.6" Intel Celeron 2955U
ASUS Zenbook UX305
13.3" Intel Core M 5Y10a
Dell Latitude E7440
14" Intel Core i5-4200U
Lenovo Thinkpad X220
12.5" Intel Core i5
Acer Chromebook 11 CB3-131
11.6" Intel Celeron N2807
Lenovo Ideapad Flex 10
10.1" Intel Celeron N2806