The Intel Atom chips found in most netbooks include some nifty power management features that makes it easy to overclock or underclock the CPU depending on whether you want to prioritize performance or long battery life. Asus and a handful of other PC makers make it incredibly easy to toggle between high performance and power saving modes with software such as the Asus Super Hybrid Engine. But if you’re running a version of Linux that didn’t come with your netbook, you might not have access to these tools. And that’s where Jupiter comes in.
This Linux utility adds a power management applet to your system tray. You can use Jupiter to switch between maximum performance, high performance, and power saving modes. Jupiter also lets you adjust your computer’s screen resolution and orientation. And you can click a button to disable your netbook’s WiFi, webcam, or other hardware to save power when you don’t need those features.
Jupiter is based on the eeetray applet EeePC ACPI Utilities designed for Asus Eee PC netbooks. It should work with Ubuntu and other Debian-based Linux distributions. There’s also an RPM package available, which suggests that it should also work with Fedora, Red Hat, and similar Linux distributions.
via Netbooked and OMG Ubuntu
Hi, slight correction. Jupiter isn’t based on eeetray, it’s based on Eee PC ACPI Utilities (https://sourceforge.net/projects/eeepc-acpi-util/) which started from scratch. Also, it will only be supported on Eeebuntu 4. 🙂
Wow, about time someone made an app for that. I wouldn’t call it annoying to manually do it, but it wasn’t the kind of thing I’d want to talk my non-Linux geek friends through either.