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Switch power profile based on which program is active in windows

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patteo:
Does anyone know of a program to switch power profile based on which program is active in windows.

For example, if I'm running a graphics program like Corel Draw in the currently active windows, I may want to Switch to full power.

But if I'm just reading a long text file in Notepad, I may want to switch to a much lower power profile.

Toshiba has a Toshiba Power Saver Properties that does this.

It allows the Profile to switch automatically.

What I'm looking for is a generic software that is not tied to a particular brand of laptop.

Alternatively, I'm looking for something similar that will work for an IBM (Lenovo) Thinkpad

VideoInPicture:
You would probably want a program that would switch the power profiles based on the average level of CPU usage over a given time period instead of basing it on the program running because I think you would need a database to track all the programs if you did it by program.

I don't know of any off hand, but doesn't the Power Saver option in Vista automatically adjust power usage based the amount of system resources you are using?

4wd:
For example, if I'm running a graphics program like Corel Draw in the currently active windows, I may want to Switch to full power.

But if I'm just reading a long text file in Notepad, I may want to switch to a much lower power profile.

What I'm looking for is a generic software that is not tied to a particular brand of laptop.
-patteo (October 01, 2008, 02:52 AM)
--- End quote ---

In XP, the recommended Power Option is normally Minimal Power Management - this lets the CPU driver handle all power management for the system.  You still set monitor, HDD, Standby and Shutdown timeout yourself.

eg. My 5000+ X2 runs at 1000MHz and 1.1V pretty much all the time - when I start video encoding or playing a game it kicks back up to 2600MHz @ 1.325V - happens within milliseconds.

And actually, most programs that I'd have thought would kick it into high-gear, don't cause a high enough CPU load to do so but I don't notice any difference.  In fact, the only way I can tell whether it's running at high/low load settings is to run the AMD Power Monitor which tells me the frequency and voltage it's currently running at.

ie. Why would you need the CPU running flat out when in Corel Draw if all you're doing is drawing lines and circles with a mouse?

wreckedcarzz:
I use Notebook Hardware Control on my laptop for this purpose, and it works well. A simple right click of the tray icon (any of the 1-6 or so that it can show, via settings) gives you quick access to your settings for Max Performance, Batery Optimized, Max Battery, and other options. Great tool, but it looks like the support/development has stopped for it - nonetheless, it gives such a host of options that I plan on using it until it is no longer compatible with my version of Windows (my laptop is going to hold with me for the long haul, Vista upgrade soon :)).

Works with 2k-Vista I believe (tested on XP SP2, XP SP3, Vista, Vista SP1 personally, on desktops and laptops). It runs with all settings enabled on laptops (unless you have some weird hardware), and with some options enabled for desktops. Useful for both types of systems (tablets too I assume, but untested personally).


4wd:
I use Notebook Hardware Control on my laptop for this purpose, and it works well.-wreckedcarzz (October 05, 2008, 07:06 PM)
--- End quote ---

Apart from the hardware monitor aspect of it, how is that different from just creating different profiles in Power Options and the clicking on the Battery Icon in the systray to switch between them?

Some interesting links regarding XP's "Max Battery" profile:

Confusing Power Profiles
Using POWERCFG.EXE

Actually, I would have thought that running a program to do what the OS is already doing would be counter-productive.  You're creating a CPU load that otherwise would not be there, thereby using a small amount of energy, thus reducing the battery life by a small, (probably negligible) amount.

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