Cinder OS Aims To Improve Mobile Power Management


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Many of the major mobile operating systems today are derived from desktop variants, leaving them with excess baggage that only hinders their functioning in a mobile environment. A group of researchers at Stanford University are building a mobile operating system from the ground up, taking various things into account that others do not. The biggest focus of the project is power management, and it's got some pretty interesting ideas in that area.

Battery technology hasn't evolved as quickly as other areas of technology, leading to the fact that batteries are mostly the limiting factor in any mobile computing experience. While you could wait on the hardware end to remedy this problem, you could also try to solve it from the software side of things. This is exactly what this Stanford project, called Cinder OS, is trying to do.

For instance, Cinder knows exactly how much power each component or application is using, and you can budget the power reserves it has. For instance, you can boost power to a certain application, or you could tell Cinder to make sure that you can watch that entire 2 hour movie on your mobile device. Cinder will then budget and allocate power in such a way that you will be able to complete your movie.

Other mobile platforms often suffer from power drains caused by stray processes or background applications. Instead of having to hunt down the faulty process or application, Cinder can do that work for you because it knows exactly which process or application is using what amount of power.

These power features also come into play when it comes to new applications. To make sure newly installed applications do not strain the battery too much, they can be executed in a constrained mode where they can only use up a limited amount of energy. At the user's discretion, the application can then be unconstrained if they decide to keep on using it.

Cider has been ported to ARM, and is currently being ported to the T-Mobile G1, and it takes a few cues from HiStar, another Stanford project.

souricon.gif News source: OSNews

viewicon.gif View : HiStar Project

softicon.gif Download : Cinder OS Presentation (PDF file, 1.6MB)

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Sounds interesting. If they can pull it off, lots of people will thank them for it. I wonder a bit at how the commercial software vendors are going to support it, but at the very least there's a plethora of open-source apps available that can be ported to it.

Best of luck to them - the state of power management on some devices and operating systems is woeful and I welcome any effort to try to squeeze more use out of that supposed "3 hour" battery.

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