Microsoft: IE 9 is Best On Your Battery Too

Microsoft has a number of reasons it feels that IE 9 is superior to the competition, but here's an unexpected benefit, according to the software giant: It's easier on your PC's battery life than the competition.

The more efficiently a browser uses power the longer the battery will last in a mobile device, the lower the electricity costs, and the smaller the environment impact. While power might seem like a minor concern, with nearly two billion people now using the Internet the worldwide implications of browser power consumption are significant.

With Internet Explorer 9 we followed several principles to guarantee industry leading power consumption. We focused on making IE fast - the quicker a browser can perform an action the less power the browser will consume. We focused on using modern PC hardware to accelerate IE - natively using the specialized hardware decreases power consumption. We focused on idle resource usage - the browser shouldn’t be doing work and consuming power when the user isn’t interacting with the browser. And we focused on following device power management guidance - the browser should respect the guidance of the hardware manufactures.

Long story short, IE for the win. But check out the post for a ton of data. And then prepare from the inevitable backlash from the Anyone But Microsoft crowd.

Discuss this Article 4

ashuvashu
on Mar 29, 2011
IE 9 is superior to it's competitors what a joke, let me explain you why. First when I read about the web technologies I got to know that web technologies are the one which enables applications to run on different platforms. How many platforms does IE 9 is available? answer is 1 and 2 versions of same platform. IE 9 lost the war when MS didn't release it for windows XP.
heran
on Mar 29, 2011
Ashutosh Singh clearly doesn't understand the difference between web tech and a browser. Web tech e.g. flash, silverlight are cross-platform. A browser is just a software to implement these technoligies. Why on earth does IE9 need to support all platforms? As for XP, come on, it's a dying OS. Who cares about it.

And Paul is right. The Anyone But Microsoft crowd are just so silly and childish.

TuneUpUtilities
on Mar 30, 2011
Thanks for blogging about this, Paul. This was definitely information that other blogs didn’t pick up on about IE9 yet. Power management is definitely important; this added benefit will be really helpful for PC users.
Mustang17
on Mar 31, 2011
I agree with Heran, XP has been out a long,long time and as sucessful as it has been, the crown will surely now be taken over by the new technologies employed in Windows 7. IE 9 is a browser befitting of that OS, its slick, gets out of the way and intergrates beautifully with the taskbar etc. If you have XP and I use it at work (sigh..) IE 8 is just fine.

Someone has to push to get people to move on.

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