Hi guys,
I bought recently a Lenovo Ideapad Y510, which is a monster of a laptop, with 16GB of RAM, 1TB HDD + 24GB SSD cache (unused in Kubuntu ATM), and a SLI of Nvidia 750M.
So far, the installation went great, with no effort on my side even on the tricky things such as UEFI and protected boot. Ah well it wanted to install by default on the SSD, but after correcting the installation path that was all.
I just have this question: Is there a way to enable additional battery options such as the ones supported in Windows? This laptop can stop charging the battery once it reaches a certain threshold, which in Windows is 60%. Since most of the time the laptop is plugged, this is a great option to make your battery life much longer. Do you guys know if there's a similar option on Ubuntu to be enabled? I saw there was in the past the tp_smapi_kernel kdms module you could install on your kernel, but apparently it is said not to work on newer CPUs.
Any ideas, insight knowledge?
Thanks a lot!
I bought recently a Lenovo Ideapad Y510, which is a monster of a laptop, with 16GB of RAM, 1TB HDD + 24GB SSD cache (unused in Kubuntu ATM), and a SLI of Nvidia 750M.
So far, the installation went great, with no effort on my side even on the tricky things such as UEFI and protected boot. Ah well it wanted to install by default on the SSD, but after correcting the installation path that was all.
I just have this question: Is there a way to enable additional battery options such as the ones supported in Windows? This laptop can stop charging the battery once it reaches a certain threshold, which in Windows is 60%. Since most of the time the laptop is plugged, this is a great option to make your battery life much longer. Do you guys know if there's a similar option on Ubuntu to be enabled? I saw there was in the past the tp_smapi_kernel kdms module you could install on your kernel, but apparently it is said not to work on newer CPUs.
Any ideas, insight knowledge?
Thanks a lot!
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