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Posted by Spunjji
 - July 01, 2020, 16:57:28
How did an 8% battery life deficit in the most relevant real-use test for a business notebook translate into "10-15%" for the headline, thanks to a 14% deficit in video? :|
Posted by iUser
 - June 30, 2020, 09:59:11
QuoteBacklight consumption should scale with surface area. If a display has 20 % larger diagonal, it has 44 % larger surface area (assuming the same aspect ratio) so you need 44 % more light to achieve the same luminance. 1.56" doesn't tell you anything.
1) 15.6" display have only 11.43% larger diagonal and only 24.16% larger area in comparison to 14".
2) Backlight consumption of modern LEDs is very low.
You can compare idle power consumption of E14(i5) and E15(i7+dGPU): 3.01W vs 3.2W.
0.19W will not reduce battery life from 16h to 9h.
Posted by _MT_
 - June 30, 2020, 07:15:42
Quote from: iUser on June 29, 2020, 17:20:17
I really don't get it, why it can be so big difference between Swift 3 and ThinkPad E15 in terms of battery life with the same CPU and almost identical battery. 1,56" display size difference can't affect so heavily.
Acer have ~55% longer battery life.
It should be something wrong with BIOS/firmware/drivers/Windows.
Backlight consumption should scale with surface area. If a display has 20 % larger diagonal, it has 44 % larger surface area (assuming the same aspect ratio) so you need 44 % more light to achieve the same luminance. 1.56" doesn't tell you anything.

Yes, there could very easily be something wrong with firmware or drivers. Or it could simply be a stray background process. And if you do it just once, you've got no clue how repeatable your numbers are.
Posted by 123
 - June 30, 2020, 04:20:25
Where is the full review?
Posted by Jimmydoesnotlivehere
 - June 30, 2020, 02:46:23
So what are we looking at in terms of U.S release? From what I recall these were supposed to release in June but that was before CV19. No coming soon or any info on Lenovo's site although these there is a page on their Egypt site about the t14s and they seem to be available for pre-order on Bhpoto.
Posted by john2962020
 - June 29, 2020, 19:35:07
Quote from: FrostyPenguin on June 27, 2020, 01:23:46
Quote from: DeepskyScorpion on June 26, 2020, 09:19:41
Nice laptop, no SMT means no purchase. I'll be looking forward to either a 4800U model or a T14/T15 with the Pro 4750U option. They're really forcing me to look into true business laptops as those use the Pro line which is all SMT enabled.

You're shooting yourself in the foot by going out of your way to look for laptops with SMT, because in hindsight, it turns out to be a huge security liability. For a deeper discussion, see "Is Hyper-Threading a Fundamental Security Risk?" on ET.

Granted, it may turn out that AMD CPUs aren't vulnerable enough to justify turning off SMT, but I would still think twice before going out of the way and paying more in order to get a system that has it.

Not "may turn out". IT'S NOT. AMD's Multithreading is fine, Intel's CPUs are like a cheese, full of security holes in every feature they implement. Don't spread Intel propaganda.
Posted by iUser
 - June 29, 2020, 17:20:17
Quote from: Andreas Osthoff on June 29, 2020, 12:49:49
The Lenovo Vantage App does not have separate power modes anymore, it is now controlled by the Windows settings (also explained in the Vantage app).
Ok! In that case, what mode was in Windows settings?
Do different performance modes make any difference in power efficiency?

I really don't get it, why it can be so big difference between Swift 3 and ThinkPad E15 in terms of battery life with the same CPU and almost identical battery. 1,56" display size difference can't affect so heavily.
Acer have ~55% longer battery life.
It should be something wrong with BIOS/firmware/drivers/Windows.
Posted by Anonym
 - June 29, 2020, 15:31:54
Quote from: FrostyPenguin on June 27, 2020, 01:23:46You're shooting yourself in the foot by going out of your way to look for laptops with SMT, because in hindsight, it turns out to be a huge security liability. For a deeper discussion, see "Is Hyper-Threading a Fundamental Security Risk?" on ET.
Because I am yet to come across a CPU with SMT that does not allow disabling that feature, I would say that price sensibility is the deciding factor here. SMT exists for a reason, and it does have significant performance advantages that should not be disregarded. As long as the OP is informed and is fine with the price difference, it is hardly like shooting himself in the foot -- it's an useful *option* to have, that can be turned on or off according to the threat model at that time.
Posted by Andreas Osthoff
 - June 29, 2020, 12:49:49
The Lenovo Vantage App does not have separate power modes anymore, it is now controlled by the Windows settings (also explained in the Vantage app).
Posted by iUser
 - June 29, 2020, 11:54:15
QuoteThe battery runtime of the AMD model is a bit shorter compared to the Intel SKU. We see a deficit of ~14% in the video test (9h vs. 10.5h) and ~8% in the Wi-Fi test (7h vs. 7.5h). We performed both tests at a brightness of 150 nits.
Very strange results.
Acer Swift 3 SF314-42-R4XJ with 48Whr battery with the same 4700U have 16h 08min in video test.
I don't believe that 3Whr and 1,56" display size difference can give so much difference in power consumption.
What power mode was in Lenovo Vantage app?
You already had unrealistic low results with G14 before and retested it.
Posted by itdev13
 - June 29, 2020, 11:47:10
It blows my mind that people do judge AMD based on the lowest tier model. Wait at least for Thinkpad L for uncompromised performance.
Posted by jidassda
 - June 29, 2020, 11:15:26
Even if Tiger Lake laptops aren't yet on the market, at the pace Renoir laptops are released and especially available, I think we can safely say Renoir and Tiger will fight out this round. Lets see what Intel brings, hopefully they will step up their game.
Posted by FrostyPenguin
 - June 27, 2020, 01:23:46
Quote from: DeepskyScorpion on June 26, 2020, 09:19:41
Nice laptop, no SMT means no purchase. I'll be looking forward to either a 4800U model or a T14/T15 with the Pro 4750U option. They're really forcing me to look into true business laptops as those use the Pro line which is all SMT enabled.

You're shooting yourself in the foot by going out of your way to look for laptops with SMT, because in hindsight, it turns out to be a huge security liability. For a deeper discussion, see "Is Hyper-Threading a Fundamental Security Risk?" on ET.

Granted, it may turn out that AMD CPUs aren't vulnerable enough to justify turning off SMT, but I would still think twice before going out of the way and paying more in order to get a system that has it.
Posted by peter j connell
 - June 26, 2020, 15:04:44
"The old Vega 10 iGPU is about 40 % slower"

as a amd fan, thats good to know. It was looking like Intel's igps were becoming a match for amd apuS, but Renoir  seems to retake that important crown.

If AMD, w/ a little help from similarly motivated game developers, can crack the magic playable games at 1080p on affordable general purpose mobile devices, amd will be farting through silk.
Posted by _MT_
 - June 26, 2020, 11:16:21
Quote from: Tov on June 26, 2020, 08:27:53
It's TSMC who is producing.
And AMD is the one who is booking capacity. It's their job to book enough.