The internet links I looked into were inconclusive, so giving it a shot here in case we happen to have a computer wiz lurking around.
Basically I've got a Sony Vaio (specifically the model VGN-NR11S/S) and it works perfectly well apart from the battery.
The longevity of the battery power has shrunk to ridiculous levels, I just tested it before this post and it lasts for about 15 minutes (appliances disconnected, no CD running, network off, screen fully dimmed, sound muted, and just letting it run on the desktop without doing anything) as opposed to the 4-5 hours it lasted upon purchase about a year and a half ago. Okay, batteries deteriorate, but this is well beyond going down to lasting for 1-2 hours.
I think the issue is related to vista, basically I found information on how the OS misreads the battery levels and shuts down at the critical battery level notification despite that plenty of power remains. While it works in XP it doesn't seem to be possible to disable the critical battery level notification in vista, nor instruct it to not shut down, so I'm looking for a way to circumvent this.
I know that going beyond the safety threshold is bad for the battery (that it's not really empty at 0%, but keeps some to keep the battery safe), but really the battery just acts as a safety measure if the plug gets pulled when Im working with it and is otherwise useless, so it's worth the risk if it means that I can actually use it properly.
So, does anyone know how to go around the "critical battery level" response to hibernate/shut down in windows vista home?
Cheerio.