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£10 Battery Upgrade For UK Eee PC 900 Owners

Posted by kdawson on Sat May 31, 2008 09:16 PM
from the doing-the-rght-thing dept.
Ken E. writes "Asus has backed down in the face of complaints from UK Eee PC 900 owners about the ultra-portable's low-capacity battery. Confusing statements posted in online reviews led buyers to believe that they would get a larger capacity battery than they actually did — and they weren't happy. Asus has, however, made a conciliatory gesture by extending a £10 high-capacity battery upgrade offer. Mobile Computer has the full announcement, plus quite a bit of background on how this fuss all got started. The batteries will be available June 10 and in the meantime Eee PC owners can download a BIOS update that Asus claims will add half an hour to battery life."
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  • genius. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Brian Gordon (987471) on Saturday May 31 2008, @09:22PM (#23614209)
    unlimited [wikipedia.org] battery life.. just keep downloading BIOS updates to add half hours to your battery life..
  • by Jon Abbott (723) on Saturday May 31 2008, @09:34PM (#23614251) Homepage
    I caught the RSS title of this story and it appeared that Asus is making a 10 pound heavy battery! I thought for a second that luggables were making a comeback!
  • by hkmarks (1080097) on Saturday May 31 2008, @09:44PM (#23614297)
    Can you just buy a second battery for a discounted price? That would be a not-terribly-crazy alternative.
  • by wildem (1267822) on Saturday May 31 2008, @09:45PM (#23614311)
    I've no business attachment with Asus, but I have to say I couldn't be happier about the battery life of my Eee PC. Just today, I was using it for more than 3 hours for surfing the net, mplayer music playback, and occasional web video. I still had 30% juice left according to Ubuntu's battery state widget.
    • by Shadow-isoHunt (1014539) on Saturday May 31 2008, @10:01PM (#23614355) Homepage
      I've got a 1.2ghz p3(latitude c610) that gets 14+ hours on two 66whr batteries w/ a 1500x1050LCD, so color me unimpressed.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        If you want something that's just a step up from an Eee PC, get a Latitude C610. I had a C600 whose hinge broke after ages and got a broken C610 and did a transplant. And being able to have two batteries in there in place of the CD/DVD-drive slot is just badass. The C600 was free and the broken eBay C610 cost $50. Just over 1 kg, 14-inch screen. Some of the stuff is showing its age, like the single USB1 port, but with a PCMCIA card, that's no problem either. But one thing baffles me, I've never been able
        • The batteries are 8 cell 66whrs intended for the c640(the p4 version of the c610), the screen was on it's lowest brightness level during that time and was left alone a few times so I could use the bathroom and do some other things. At the time I was running speedswitch XP w/ it set to dynamic switching. I've never done a full drain running linux, but being that it's simple speedstep I've got a feeling linux would do fine. Backtrack was running in vmware at this time, and winamp was playing(I have it set to
          • Oh, and, i8kfangui to keep the big fan on low at all times.
          • It might not get so hot if you didn't turn the fan all the way down all the time. I'd rather lose a little bit of battery life than a little bit of CPU life...
            • No, you don't get it. The c610 will keep it's fan off until like 160f, and then turn 1 and 2 on high until like 130f, then they go off. Using i8kfangui I keep the big fan (2) on at all times, so I idle at 140 instead of reaching that 160f idle. If the temperature increases, the fan speed increases(as I8K allows you to set thresholds) and I kick on the second fan.
        • And being able to have two batteries in there in place of the CD/DVD-drive slot is just badass.
          I did the same, but in use the first battery was constantly being used whilst the second was just idle. Eventually the second battery became an overcooked brick. I could have got round this by swapping the batteries between slots now and again, but unless you intend running both batteries down completely between recharge it can end up as a waste of a battery.
      • I hear the 8-cell battery gets up to 4 hours on these latitudes, so how can you get 14 + while doing any real work on it?
        • You redefine 'real work'.
          It's a '1+1=3, for sufficiently large values of 1'- type of thing
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        And what does that computer weigh, including both batteries?
        • Typo. 1960 grams without CD drive or battery. Batteries weigh 410 grams, CD-ROM drive is 266 grams. I've got an eee PC here, and it is a lot lighter at just under a kg. :(
          • by debatem1 (1087307) on Sunday June 01 2008, @01:59AM (#23615173)
            1960 + 410 = 2370g
            eee pc = 990g
            I'm guessing that the eee pc battery weighs ~250g.
            Given that each battery gives the eee pc ~3 hours of battery life, that gives the eee pc about 18 hours of battery life before it exceeds those weight specifications.
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          Well, the original iBook had an advertised battery life of 6 hours. And I'd really like to know shadow-isohunt's OS if he can get 7 hours of battery life. To convert, that's 9.2 Watts of Power that shadow-isohunt's laptop draws. I've never managed to get it much below 11 Watts. What I'd like to know is where he can get 2 less Watt on the same Hardware with mostly the same software.

          For reference, 12 Watt is standard under light use. With a bit of Googling I see that the Eee PC draws up to 22-or-so Watt, wi

          • Well, my full sized laptop, with actual spinning platter hard drive, and 14 inch screen only draws around 18 watts. And on a single battery lasts about 2.5 hours. The biggest advantage of the eeePC is the size, and the fact that it's solid state. You could easily get a laptop with a lot more battery life.
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      But is yours a 900 with a 4400mAh battery?

      People living elsewhere got higher-capacity batteries.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I've no business attachment with Asus, but I have to say I couldn't be happier about the battery life of my Eee PC. Just today, I was using it for more than 3 hours for surfing the net, mplayer music playback, and occasional web video. I still had 30% juice left according to Ubuntu's battery state widget.

      I guess it's subjective. I looked at the Eee PC but the battery life was a deal-breaker. I know the Eee PC is excellent value and Toughbooks [panasonic.com] aren't, but Panasonic's ultraportable options of 7 (CF-W7), 9 (CF-T7) or 12 (CF-T5 - discontinued) hours set the benchmark that the subnotebooks will need to meet before I buy one.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      From my personal experience, the battery widget on Ubuntu is not a completely reliable source... it's more of a ballpark guestimate at best. In particular, the drain it reports doesn't appear to be particularly linear, especially once you get to 20% and below, at that point it starts to "drain" faster and faster.
  • by JohnBailey (1092697) on Saturday May 31 2008, @10:18PM (#23614445)
    It seems that Asus have been mucking about with the pricing and spec on the 900 in different countries. The higher price for Australian Eee users who want Linux defended as a charge for the extra capacity drive, but the same price for both models elsewhere, the lower battery power in the UK being justified by the two year warranty, who knows what is next.

    Perhaps they do this with all their products, and the Eee is just so carefully watched that it gets much more attention. But it looks like they have a product they haven't quite figured out how to price.
  • Kudos to Asus (Score:5, Interesting)

    by capnkr (1153623) on Saturday May 31 2008, @10:22PM (#23614463)
    ...for hearing what the customers and public are saying, and...

    Paying Attention to us.

    It's a win-win situation; we get happy, they get good street cred - we stay happy, they keep making money.

    Refreshing, when most manufacturers like to backpedal and deny.

    Kudos to Asus.
  • I think they've done a pretty good job in general with the Eee. I would be happy to get 2 hours of battery life on my shitty hp laptop with Linux on it.
    • I'd be happy to get 2 pages of printing out of my battery.

      It's four years old, and spends most of its time plugged into AC, which can't be doing good things for the battery.
  • by advocate_one (662832) on Sunday June 01 2008, @01:40AM (#23615103)
    is just how many of those little beauties they've actually sold... after all, there has to be some real reason why Microsoft suddenly blinked and allowed the OEMs to carry on making devices with XP on them...
    • I cannot see why Asus don't simply ask the 900 owners to send in proof of purchase (receipt or whatever) and £10 to get the new battery pack. What is the idea behind requesting owners to send back their original battery to get an exchange? It would end up with Asus having a stockpile of old, "pre-used" batteries which they then need to dispose of. Or are they planning to re-sell these in "refurbished" machines at some point?
      At the moment, Asus have a great lead in the market - the other cheap UMPCs a