AMD is solving the battery life dilemma, which is based on power and performance, rather than optimizing power management and battery life for an array of workloads. Since each user enjoys a battery life because its uses vary greatly. While it’s difficult to design and develop mobile and desktop processors, the performance of power management isn’t complex. The main low-power metric for desktop PCs is compliance with requirements like Energy Star and California Energy Commission. Here, engineers should only optimize the low idle power mode. While it comes to power, a laptop/mobile processor is significantly more complex. There’s still time for speed, but its importance has to be paid more attention to power consumption – not just the processor itself, but all the other components of a system have its own component. Interested in learning more about the recent use of a battery on AMD? Click here to download the entire white paper.