The following tests were conducted with my three-week old Surface Pro 4, with an I7 chip, 256 GIG of storage space and 8 GIGS of RAM. The Surface had gone through fewer than ten battery cycles at the time. The unit had all the latest updates and I was running the latest version of iTunes, VLC Media Player, and Windows Media Player. WIFI was off. I performed the tests both with Bluetooth on, streaming to my headphones, and with Bluetooth off. Disabling Bluetooth didn’t improve the battery life—the battery drainage was exactly the same as when I was streaming the sound. No other applications were running while I was watching the videos. The tests were all performed with the default “Balanced” power plan, without adjusting the brightness.
I am posting to share the results, and to ask Microsoft to explain how to configure the Surface settings to get the battery to last the advertised nine hours while watching a video. In addition, if anybody from Apple is reading this post, please improve iTunes for Windows, so watching movies on Microsoft Surfaces with future versions of the software will drain the battery at a much slower rate, as burning through a fresh battery after watching only 90 minutes of a video is unacceptable!
The internet is replete with posts where people complain about the short battery life of various Surface models, but I can’t find any web pages where people complain that a 100% charged battery nearly runs out after watching only an hour and a half of a video. This was my initial experience which nearly prompted me to turn the unit into my local Microsoft Store for a battery performance check. Doubting that a brand new Surface would come with a defective battery, I investigated myself and found the culprit:
I had been renting movies with iTunes and watching them with the iTunes application. After Watching 4 different videos, the result was always the same: I would always start with a fully charged battery, however, after 90 minutes of viewing, the battery would be down to 6% or less power. I replicated the test by playing a number of non-DRM protected movies with VLC Media Player. In each instance, after 90 minutes of viewing, the battery had only drained 40%. This equates to 3 hours and 45 minutes of video playback on a fully charged battery. Windows Media Player was able to play 90 minutes of the same movies, consuming only 25% of the battery. We have a winner and I am now happier that I can get 6 hours of video playback from a fully charged battery.
To repeat two of my earlier statements:
Apple – Please fix your app as 90 minutes of playback on a fully charged device is disgusting! If you are unwilling to fix the app, then you are admitting that the Microsoft programmers are much better than your programmers, since Windows Media Player is 4X more battery efficient than iTunes for Windows.
Microsoft – Please advise on how to configure my Surface Pro 4, so I can get the advertised 9 hours of video playback on a fully charged battery. I want to be able to watch the video in full screen mode, streaming the sound to my Bluetooth headphones, without having to dim the default brightness or lower the volume. Your answer will help countless other Surface owners.
Thank you
I am posting to share the results, and to ask Microsoft to explain how to configure the Surface settings to get the battery to last the advertised nine hours while watching a video. In addition, if anybody from Apple is reading this post, please improve iTunes for Windows, so watching movies on Microsoft Surfaces with future versions of the software will drain the battery at a much slower rate, as burning through a fresh battery after watching only 90 minutes of a video is unacceptable!
The internet is replete with posts where people complain about the short battery life of various Surface models, but I can’t find any web pages where people complain that a 100% charged battery nearly runs out after watching only an hour and a half of a video. This was my initial experience which nearly prompted me to turn the unit into my local Microsoft Store for a battery performance check. Doubting that a brand new Surface would come with a defective battery, I investigated myself and found the culprit:
I had been renting movies with iTunes and watching them with the iTunes application. After Watching 4 different videos, the result was always the same: I would always start with a fully charged battery, however, after 90 minutes of viewing, the battery would be down to 6% or less power. I replicated the test by playing a number of non-DRM protected movies with VLC Media Player. In each instance, after 90 minutes of viewing, the battery had only drained 40%. This equates to 3 hours and 45 minutes of video playback on a fully charged battery. Windows Media Player was able to play 90 minutes of the same movies, consuming only 25% of the battery. We have a winner and I am now happier that I can get 6 hours of video playback from a fully charged battery.
To repeat two of my earlier statements:
Apple – Please fix your app as 90 minutes of playback on a fully charged device is disgusting! If you are unwilling to fix the app, then you are admitting that the Microsoft programmers are much better than your programmers, since Windows Media Player is 4X more battery efficient than iTunes for Windows.
Microsoft – Please advise on how to configure my Surface Pro 4, so I can get the advertised 9 hours of video playback on a fully charged battery. I want to be able to watch the video in full screen mode, streaming the sound to my Bluetooth headphones, without having to dim the default brightness or lower the volume. Your answer will help countless other Surface owners.
Thank you