Confusing dual-mode operating system, no Start button, counterintuitive swipe gestures? None of these things spells doom for Windows 8. What will kill Microsoft’s newest operating system is the abysmal battery life of the systems on which it’s supposed to perform the best.
For all of Windows 8′s strengths, its one major weakness might be something no one saw coming; significantly worse battery life than the previous generation of PCs. Laptop Mag’s Michael Prospero breaks down the drain in detail.
Leading up to the launch of Windows 8, we saw progressively longer endurance on the two most-portable categories of notebooks. As of September, the average ultraportable (a notebook with a screen size of 11 to 13 inches and weighing less than 1.8kg) lasted 6 hours and 52 minutes on the LAPTOP Battery Test (Web surfing via Wi-Fi, screen at 40 per cent brightness). The average thin-and-light (12 to 14 inches, less than 2.7kg) was right behind, at 6 hours and 40 minutes.

However, when we started adding Windows 8 notebooks to the mix, those averages receded faster than Steve Ballmer’s hairline. By November, the ultraportable average dropped by half an hour, and the average thin-and-light decreased by 10 minutes.
[More: Windows 8 OS Full Review]

Of the first 11 Windows 8 laptops/sliders we tested, most of which were ultraportables, six lasted fewer than 5 hours on a charge, and only two made it past 6 hours. The average of all these systems: 5 hours and 8 minutes. That’s hardly what I’d call all-day endurance.
Even our favourite Windows 8 notebooks had sub-average endurance. The Dell XPS 12 lasted 5 hours and 46 minutes, and the Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga died after 6 hours and 18 minutes.
The cause, of course, could have been a number of reasons: Windows 8, touch screens or both.

Let’s compare the Toshiba Satellite P845t-S4310 and the Toshiba Satellite P845-S4200. Both notebooks have the same CPU, RAM and hard drive, but only the former has a touch screen and Windows 8. And guess what? The non-touch, Windows 7 version lasted 1 hour and 24 minutes longer.
Next, there’s the HP Envy 4-1030US Ultrabook and the Envy TouchSmart Ultrabook 4, which also have identical specs. Battery life: 6:18 for the Envy 4 versus 5:36 for the TouchSmart. How about the Acer Aspire V5-571P versus the Acer Aspire V5-571, which also have the same CPU? Interestingly, both have an equally poor endurance of about 4 hours and 10 minutes.
The worst offender is the Acer Aspire S7, a 13-inch ultraportable that costs £1,000+ and weighs a mere 1.3kg, but lasted just 4 hours and 10 minutes. For that much money, I expect at least twice the endurance. There’s an optional £100 sheet battery for the S7 (which adds to its size and weight, natch) that Acer should consider including for free.
To be sure, this is a fairly small sample size, but these are the notebooks that are supposed to get consumers excited about Windows 8. You would think that notebook-makers would want to put their best foot forward, no?
Microsoft isn’t helping matters, either. Their just-announced Surface Pro tablet, the flagship Windows 8 device, will have an expected battery life of just 4 hours. I’ve heard the company boast that the Surface is the first tablet you can actually do work on. Not if it’s out of juice, you can’t!
A number of challenges face OEMs and Microsoft when it comes to the adoption of Windows 8, from design to pricing. But solving all those issues will be moot until they fix the most basic requirement for any laptop – good battery life.
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Windows 8 is a bloatware that takes 8 GB out of 16 GB surface tablet. It’s a joke, a bad joke.
It knackered my computer. Completely.
Looks like its downhill for Windows from here, more and more users will be using Android and iDevices. Windows will survive on corporate level for the time being, specially SQL Server 2012.
No! Windows will always exist.
I really hope so
Is it just Win8, or the hardware needed to support the constantly active touchscreen as well?
How do the non-touch devices fair with Win8 installed?
I, no means any expert, but my assumption would be Win8, having said that, assumptions are the cause of all major F ups!
It’s the engineer in me – Have to test everything before drawing conclusions.
That was exactly what I was thinking. Although like all things, it is probably a combination of both
We just need the tens of breakthroughs in battery technology that have been made in the past 3/4 years or so to make it into one single product!
My Dell E4310 laptop has been running Win 8 for the last three months, and the battery life on Win 8 has beaten Win 7′s by a good hour or so.
I can comfortably run this system for 7+ hours (and did only yesterday in a meeting), when my Win 7 toting colleagues were all reaching for their power bricks.
Then I smell a rat – either these touch screens are drawing an inordinate amount of power, or while the basic config of these devices may be the same (CPU, RAM, HDD, GFX) the underlying chipsets and power management aren’t.
I’d personally point the finger at the touchscreen or the associated graphics controller. This system is kitted out with an i7, a reasonable amount of DDR3 and a discrete intel graphics chip (because I’m not -MEANT- to be playing 3d games on it…)
Considering this is a major release of a major operating system, I’m unlikely to let what I consider launch window hardware to sway my opinion in any which way.
Come back with some graphs in a year or so’s time when manufacturers have gotten to grips with things and we’ll see if Win 8 is going to be the next Vista or the next XP.
It will be interesting to see if this improves with updates from MS as well..
i have noticed a decrease in battery life i run an i5 laptop with 8gb ram
i reckon i have lost about 40mins usable time when running on battery i get just over 4hrs now when i used to get about 5
You’ve used classic Fox News tactics on that first graph to create a story of plunging battery life. 30 mins lost on nearly seven hours is a 7% drop. Not completely insignificant, but plotting the graph with the zero at about 6 hours makes it look far worse than it is.
your right, and all the lazy articles recently on Giz has stopped me from logging on everyday for my gadget fix and going elsewhere instead.
Incidentally though, Windows 8 knackered my laptops battery life & performance. Agree with your point, but Win8 truly does muck up battery life.
i can only add to this fire, upgrading my laptop from 7 to 8 lost me 2 hours of battery, i have a 9cell thing that gave me 6/7 for standard stuff on win7, if i watch a blu-ray on 7 it would pretty much just make the end of the film on 8 its about half way.. lol
Not surprised, Also windows 8 sucks for desktops, it’s so damn annoying.
I’m keen to know why you think it sucks on desktop? I’ve been running Win 8 on my laptop and home desktop for a while now and I’ve not found a single down side as yet.
I guess i’m just used to windows xp/7, I couldnt figure out how to shutdown the pc (had to google it) i guess it is a learning curve but i do miss windows 7 it’s quite expensive though!!!
Windows 8? Expensive?! Whooowhat?
He said he misses 7, and 7 is expensive. Not 8.
you should have gone to specsavers
They messed it up.
Nice to see that this shoddily written article with terrible data presentation has made its way over from the US version of Gizmodo. Nothing quite like spreading quality journalism and reporting.
The only thing that makes me leave a comment on here is articles like this… This is completely blown out of proportion, 7% is nothing, and that graph is entirely misleading… it saddens me to see Gizmodo shifting from a great source of tech insight, to a greedy view count seeking pile of rubbish…
Here is a more fair graph:
http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=p7llu&s=6
Completely agree. The scale of the first graph is utterly ridiculous! And the differences in the others are so minimal that I can barely see many people slamming it on battery life alone.
Is It just me? Or did anyone see the tile as this, at first glance?
Short Battery Life Shanks First Windows 8 Notebooks
I don’t have a coat by the way