2011年1月4日星期二

Click the laptop battery icon for detailed information on the Dell 1525 Battery

Nothing is worse than when working, but your laptop does not work. However, one of the worst things that can happen frequently while working all the time is that the battery dies halfway through the project. How do I prevent this? It is useful to know how much battery life left, so you can decide if you have to buy a new replacement in advance. Here comes several ways to check your Dell 1525 Battery laptop life.Most offer a couple of ways to do this, and there are several free downloads that will put a large monitor battery life on the screen, which means never be caught with a dead battery again unexpectedly.



1.Look in the computer's system tray, which is in the right corner to the bottom of the screen where the clock. You should see a battery icon. If not automatically, click the arrows on the left side of the system tray, which will expand and show the tray icons.



2. Click on the icon of the laptop battery for detailed information on the battery. The "Power Meter" tab displays the same information as the icon in the system tray, the detailed information that tells you what type of battery is, and whether it is currently charging (connected) or discharge.



3.Place your mouse over the battery icon, but do not click. The icon will be more or less how much battery life (half, three quarters full), but you mouse over it, you will have a label showing exactly how much life left in the dell battery type gd761.



4.Plug in the AC adapter when the battery needs charging. The state in the control panel or system tray will show that the computer is running on AC power and battery charging.



5.Go Control Panel if there is an icon in the system tray, or if you want more detailed information on laptop batteries. Click "Power Options" and "Power Meter" tab.



Many sources recommend letting the battery drain fully, not to shorten the "memory." However, lithium-ion batteries, the most common type of battery in modern laptops, this is not the case. This process is specific to Windows XP. Other Windows systems can be slightly different.