Originally posted by: pm
Originally posted by: LOUISSSSS
lets talk about the ATOM
can someone with any netbook post your numbers of idle/load with the following information:
1. specs of the netbook
2. power draw from wall a few minutes of idling after boot up
3. power draw from wall while browsing internet/downloading/listening to music/watching video (tell us which)
thank you!
Using an Acer Aspire One (Atom N270 1.6GHz, 9" LCD, Intel 945GSE chipset, 512MB, 8GB SSD - this one:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/...x?Item=N82E16834115530 )
I read:
11W in BIOS
15W booting (peak)
13W idling about 2 minutes after boot
13-14W browsing the web while playing an MP3 (it bounced back and forth, but mostly was at 13W)
By the way, to avoid confusion, when I mentioned that my Atom motherboard was reading 54W, it was this board (
http://www.newegg.com/Product/...x?Item=N82E16813121359 ) not an Atom Netbook. I have both - I bought the Atom to use as a HTPC/file server (it's waiting to be Ebay'd - I switched to the Pentium M system that I mentioned above), and then I bought the Netbook for my daughter to use for her schoolwork.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Actually I do, and you know for the life of me I can't recall whether I plugged the KWA into the circuit upstream or downstream my active APC unit...
When the results matched the utility company (I love them, they log power consumption by the hour on my webaccount so I can easily isolate power consumption by running simple tests at night when the background load is essentially unchanging) I rapidly jumped to the conclusion portion of my studies

Could be I was fooling myself the whole time, I've been wronger than wrong before.
I'm just asking to try to figure out if it's in apples to apples with what Zap was posting. If your kill-o-watt matches the company meter(that's really cool that they do that by the way... wish mine did), but your power supply isn't active PFC then it's not the same as the case that he was describing. What's an APC? You have an active power factor correction gizmo that can be plugged in in front of the power supply? I thought that active PFC was a capability of the power supply going from AC -> DC.