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Lenovo 3000 V100 Battery

Opera's developer channel version is available for laptops running OS X, Windows and Linux.That is, does Opera and its Power Saver feature provide enough of a boost to battery life that it's worth switching browsers?To answer this question, I've been using the developer version of Opera for the past couple of weeks to put Opera's claims of 50 percent longer battery life to the test.With only Chrome running, my old MacBook Pro provides roughly 2 hours and 20 minutes of battery life on average. When I use Opera instead with Power Saver turned on, I get about 3 hours and 15 minutes of runtime on a single charge. In both tests, I had two windows open with multiple tabs open in each window.While these figures do not measure up to Opera's claims of 50 percent longer battery life, they do represent a not insignificant 39 percent increase in battery life on my admittedly unscientific tests. No matter how you slice it, Opera is giving me nearly an extra hour of battery life.In addition, I have found the developer version of Opera to be stable and have not witnessed any negative side effects to using Power Saver. Capping video playback at 30 frames per second, for example, produced no ill effects in my experience; Netflix and YouTube videos appear no different with Power Saver enabled as they do without it.

Given that Opera's Power Saver gives me nearly an extra hour of battery life, I have begun to use Opera as my secondary browser when I know I'm going to be away from an outlet for a good portion of the day. Since I'm a creature of habit, however, I continue to use Chrome when seated at my desk or otherwise running on AC power.If Microsoft could go back in time, I've a pretty good idea what would happen. CEO Satya Nadella would hand his younger self the code for Microsoft's new Win32 on ARM emulator.It's the missing piece of the puzzle that could finally let Microsoft build Windows phones, razor-thin tablets and tiny laptops that people might actually want to buy. It could have maybe saved Microsoft billions of dollars and thousands of jobs, if the company had had it just a few years ago.See, Win32 refers to the traditional Windows desktop apps you know and love, like Office and Photoshop, VLC and Steam. Thing is, the versions of Windows that ran on phones or thin tablets never could use those all-important Win32 apps -- because the energy-efficient ARM processors that powered those devices weren't compatible.

Target: iPhone 7 or 7 Plus deal. If you buy either an iPhone 7 or 7 Plus, you'll receive a $250 Target gift card. This is an in-store exclusive. iPhones need to be bought on an AT&T Next, Verizon Device or Sprint 24-month installment or lease plan. For more information, check out Target's Black Friday ad.Walmart: deal on lots of iPhones. Walmart gives you a $250 store gift card for any iPhone you buy in-store on an AT&T Next or Verizon Device installment plan. This includes the iPhone 6S, 6S Plus, 7, 7 Plus and SE. For more information, check out Walmart's Black Friday ad.Target is selling the Series 1 Apple Watch, which has a faster processor but isn't fully swimproof and lacks the GPS of Series 2. At $198, it's $70 less than Apple's $269 starting price. This is a good Apple Watch model, and the best deal out there we've seen.Target is selling the 9.7-inch iPad Pro starting at $449, although it isn't clear which models will be sold. Still, for the base 32GB model, that would be $150.99 savings. Best Buy is offering a slightly less attractive deal of $125 off all 9.7-inch iPad Pros.You can save $70 off the normal $269 price of the 32GB iPad Mini 2. Target and Walmart are both offering the Mini 2 for $200. The Mini 2 is getting long in the tooth with an older processor, but it's a serviceable mini iPad for kids and travel.

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If you're shopping for a larger-screened more affordable iPad, the iPad Air 2 (which also has a much better A8X processor versus the A7 on the Mini 2) will be on sale at Target starting at $274. For the 32GB base model, that's a good deal.The 13-inch, 128GB model of the MacBook Air is on sale for $799 at Best Buy, the lowest price we've seen yet for a MacBook. The 256GB model is $999, also not a bad deal: both save a couple hundred dollars, but remember that the Air doesn't have a Retina Display. It does, however, has phenomenal battery life (and normal USB ports).I've never said that about a laptop before, but the Dell Inspiron 7000 2-in-1 series is truly exceptional. For just $750, these 13- and 15-inch laptops don't merely punch above their price bracket, they do it without removing any of the features you'd want and expect from a PC in 2016.As I write this blog post, I have ten tabs open in Chrome and no other apps running on my five-year-old MacBook Pro. Despite this low workload, my MacBook Pro's cooling fan whirs loudly. This is not a rare occurrence. It seems that with each passing day, the fan spins more and rests less. And should I do something as audacious as open iTunes and Photos at the same time, my MacBook sounds like a jet engine during take off. Same thing should I remove my MacBook from a desk or table where the air flows freely and rest the laptop atop my lap. Its whir is the worst.

Because I write about technology, I pulled the trigger on a new 13-inch MacBook Pro because I wanted to get my hands (well, fingertips) on the innovative Touch Bar. But, really, I was in the market for a new MacBook because I desire a quieter computing experience. If I wasn't a tech blogger, however, I might have opted for a model other than the new MacBook Pro with the Touch Bar.Apple's pricing rarely, if ever, make it easy on your wallet, but $1,799 for the cheapest Touch Bar MacBook Pro is steep even by Apple's standards. You can ditch the Touch Bar and get a new 13-inch MacBook Pro for $1,499, but where's the fun in that?If I didn't write about technology and wasn't curious about the new Touch Bar -- Is it useful? Is it a gimmick? Is it a little of both? -- I would have skipped the new MacBook Pro lineup altogether and gone with the 12-inch MacBook. At $1,299, it costs $500 less than the MacBook Pro I just purchased and offers the same amount of memory (8GB), the same size SSD (256GB) and a Retina Display with nearly the same pixel density.

The biggest difference between the two models is the processor. The 12-inch MacBook has an efficient Core m3 processor, while the 13-inch MacBook Pro has a Core i5. While you undoubtedly sacrifice performance with the Core M, you also gain a golden benefit: silence. Utter, blissful silence.The 12-inch MacBook is the only MacBook that doesn't require a cooling fan to keep its thermals in check. Like the Pro models, MacBook Air features a Core i5 processor and a cooling fan. If your computing needs are basic, then I would steer you to the 12-inch MacBook and its silent, fanless design.Patrick Holland's already written an excellent breakdown of Apple's MacBook and MacBook Pro lines. He doesn't mention the cooling systems of the machines but otherwise hits on all other features and includes a stellar comparison chart. Here are a few more things you'll want to look out for.Other than the cooling system and optional Touch Bar, I count five big differences between the 12-inch MacBook and the new 13-inch MacBook Pro models:The 12-inch MacBook saves you a pound of carrying weight, coming in at a hair over 2 pounds compared with the 13-inch model, which is a hair over 3 pounds.

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The 12-inch MacBook introduced the slim butterfly keyboard, which has a different feel from previous MacBooks with its flat keys and shallow travel. The new MacBook Pro models have adopted this butterfly keyboard, but it's the second-generation that tweaks the design. In his review of the 13-inch MacBook Pro, Dan Ackerman found the typing experience to be slightly improved compared with the first-generation butterfly keyboard on the 12-inch MacBook and said, "The keys have a little more bite to them, and appear to rise up from the keyboard tray just a hair more."You'll need to make do with a lone USB-C port on the 12-inch MacBook. The 13-inch MacBook Pro gives you four such ports, any one of which you can use to charge your laptop. With either model, you'll likely need a USB-C to USB-A dongle or Apple's big multiport dongle.If you regularly use video conferences then you might want to shell out for the 13-inch MacBook Pro. It features a 720-pixel FaceTime camera compared with the 12-inch MacBook's 480-pixel camera.Apple claims the 12-inch MacBook will run for 11 hours and the 13-inch MacBook Pro for 10 hours. We're still testing the new models, but the 12-inch MacBook ran for 10.5 hours on CNET Labs' streaming video playback battery drain test. I'd wager the new MacBook Pro will come in roughly an hour short of that figure, giving the battery edge to the 12-inch MacBook and its efficient Core M processor.

Some people will argue that it's better to choose a MacBook Pro over a MacBook as you're likely to outgrow the more powerful Core i5 processor in the MacBook Pro more slowly than the MacBook and its Core M processor. I would counter this lifespan argument by saying that main reason I've decided to move on from my old MacBook Pro is not its slowing performance but its loud cooling fan. I could better tolerate the occasional lags I experience if they weren't accompanied by the loud whir of the fan. What really makes me crazy is the fan engaging for long stretches for seemingly no reason at all. With the fanless MacBook, I'd need to find another reason to upgrade.Following this logic, perhaps the MacBook model that offers the longest lifespan would be the step-up MacBook model. At $1,599, it adds $300 more than the baseline MacBook but upgrades the Core m3 processor to a Core m5, while also doubling the SSD to 512GB.I'm not the only one with warm feelings for the 12-inch MacBook. Read why it has become Dan Ackerman's favorite laptop.

If you read Dong Ngo's excellent primer on solid-state drives (SSDs) and how to extend their lifespan, then you might be wondering where you and your SSD stand. As Dong explained, SSDs have a finite number of program/erase cycles. That is, you can write data to and erase data from an SSD only so many times before it begins to wear out.That's the bad news. The good news is the amount of data you need to write to an SSD before it begins to wear out is enormous. In its months-long SSD endurance test, TechReport tested six SSDs and they all made it past the 700TB mark, three topped the 1PB mark and two topped the 2PB mark -- that's PB as in petabytes!To write that much data to a disk takes a long time -- it took more than 18 months of constant, tortuous writing before TechReport killed all six drives. If you wrote 100GB of data a day, which I doubt you do, it would take you 10,000 days or 27.4 years to write 1PB of data to your SSD.

All of this is to say you probably don't need to worry about the lifespan of your SSD. Your laptop's CPU or its battery will die long before its SSD does. If you are curious to see how much data you've written to your laptop's SSD, however, there is a way to do so on both Windows and MacOS machines.The value listed under MB is the total number of megabytes that you have written to your drive from when it was first installed to now. I have written 1,076,395.35MB of data to the SSD I installed in the spring of 2015 on my MacBook Pro. That's just over 1TB of data in about a year and a hsalf.Sadly, my early-2011 era MacBook Pro will soon be retired because the battery can't hold a charge for much longer than an hour, the spinning beach ball makes frequent appearances and the loud cooling fans spin more often than they rest idle.Windows doesn't have a built-in way to check the amount of data you've written to disk, so you must instead turn to a third-party application. I use CrystalDiskInfo, a free program that's easy to use.So, deal with it: there's no new MacBook Air. But Apple really, really wants you to consider the cheapest MacBook Pro as your alternative.

There's just one problem: it costs $1,499. You do get 256GB of storage and 8GB of RAM in that configuration. But it also only promises 10 hours of battery life, versus 12 on the Air.The Air was a perfect little laptop, with an amazing battery life. It never got the Retina Display everyone wanted. Apple's smaller and more limited 12-inch MacBook was one alternative to the Air, but it lacked ports and had less beefy performance.The entry-level 13-inch MacBook Pro, announced today, is different. But, as Apple took great pains to explain, it weighs the same as the 13-inch Air (3 pounds). It's not as wedge-shaped, but it's technically smaller and has a tinier footprint. It also has a Retina Display, and a faster processor.It lacks a few things, though. MagSafe, that nice easy-disconnect power cable we've taken for granted, is gone: instead, you'll need to charge via one of two USB-C-like Thunderbolt 3 ports. Also, the SD card slot is gone. So are standard USB ports. The headphone jack remains.The entry 13-inch MacBook Pro also lacks Touch ID, and the bold new OLED Touch Bar, the touchable screen-strip that stole the show at the Apple event. To get those features, you'll need to pay up to at least $1,799 (with a faster Core i5 processor, and two more Thunderbolt 3 ports).

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