File size vs. battery life

Kerry Newman

New Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2018
Messages
19
Office Version
  1. 365
  2. 2019
Platform
  1. Windows
Is there any correlation between file size and eating up lots of battery life on a small portable PC? Some of our sales reps are experiencing battery life shortages and someone said it was the size of one the files they use, around 15M. I googled around a bit and found nothing to confirm this "theory". Any thoughts?
 

Excel Facts

Which lookup functions find a value equal or greater than the lookup value?
MATCH uses -1 to find larger value (lookup table must be sorted ZA). XLOOKUP uses 1 to find values greater and does not need to be sorted.
In Mythbusters style, I would say that is plausible. Anything that causes your computer to 'think' more makes it use more power. This is especially true in computers that have older spinning harddrives.


However -- and this is a big however. While large file sizes could be eating up their battery power, the usual suspects are outdated computers/outdated batteries -- neither of those are power efficient forever.
 
Upvote 0
In Mythbusters style, I would say that is plausible. Anything that causes your computer to 'think' more makes it use more power. This is especially true in computers that have older spinning harddrives.


However -- and this is a big however. While large file sizes could be eating up their battery power, the usual suspects are outdated computers/outdated batteries -- neither of those are power efficient forever.
Thanks, good points.
 
Upvote 0
The only direct correlation between file size a power consumption would be related to the time spent reading/writing the file from/to disk. Of far more consequence is the number & complexity of the formulae in the workbook (more complex workbooks also tend to have larger file sizes) and how often the user does something that causes it to recalculate. Lots of scrolling around will also consume more power.
 
Upvote 0
The only direct correlation between file size a power consumption would be related to the time spent reading/writing the file from/to disk. Of far more consequence is the number & complexity of the formulae in the workbook (more complex workbooks also tend to have larger file sizes) and how often the user does something that causes it to recalculate. Lots of scrolling around will also consume more power.
Thanks Paul!
 
Upvote 0

Forum statistics

Threads
1,214,636
Messages
6,120,666
Members
448,977
Latest member
moonlight6

We've detected that you are using an adblocker.

We have a great community of people providing Excel help here, but the hosting costs are enormous. You can help keep this site running by allowing ads on MrExcel.com.
Allow Ads at MrExcel

Which adblocker are you using?

Disable AdBlock

Follow these easy steps to disable AdBlock

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Pause on this site" option.
Go back

Disable AdBlock Plus

Follow these easy steps to disable AdBlock Plus

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the toggle to disable it for "mrexcel.com".
Go back

Disable uBlock Origin

Follow these easy steps to disable uBlock Origin

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Power" button.
3)Click on the "Refresh" button.
Go back

Disable uBlock

Follow these easy steps to disable uBlock

1)Click on the icon in the browser’s toolbar.
2)Click on the "Power" button.
3)Click on the "Refresh" button.
Go back
Back
Top