Notes, cautions, and warnings

 NOTE: A NOTE indicates important information that helps you make better use of your product.

 CAUTION: A CAUTION indicates either potential damage to hardware or loss of data and tells you how to avoid the problem.

 WARNING: A WARNING indicates a potential for property damage, personal injury, or death.

Key FeaturesBattery Information Display health information for up to six installed batteries, depending on system capabilities, and edit battery settings or create a custom battery setting.Advanced Charge Control battery charging to prolong battery life.Peak Shift  Reduce power consumption by automatically switching the system to battery power during certain times of the day, even when the system is plugged into a direct power source.Thermal Management Control processor and cooling fan settings to manage performance, system surface temperature, and fan noise.Battery Extender Conserve battery charge by affecting the CPU power level, screen brightness and keyboard illumination levels, and by muting audio.Alert Settings Allows you to restore the default alert settings.Access Dell Power Manager

To open the Dell Power Manager application, click the Windows Start button, and then do one of the following:


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Additional thermal setting options may be available through your operating system. Click Control Panel in the Operating System Power Plan box that is displayed in the upper right side of the Thermal Management page.

See Changing Thermal Management Settings for instructions on changing the thermal settings on your system using Dell Power Manager.

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 NOTE: Alert Settings functions only if the service is installed.

 NOTE: To enable or disable the display of specific alerts, click Continue to display this message or Do not display this message again options respectively.

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Restore alert defaults

Perform the following steps to restore the alert defaults:Click the Alert Settings tab in the left pane.Click Restore alert settings. This feature restores the display of an alert if you previously clicked the Do not display this message again option.

A confirmation dialog window displays the message Are you sure you want to restore all alert settings?Click Yes to continue or Cancel to abort.Install, uninstall, and upgrade Dell Power ManagerYou can install, uninstall, and upgrade Dell Power Manager using the Dell Update Package. Dell Power Manager Service Installer is released as a Dell Update Package (DUP) available at Dell.com/support and Dell Update Catalog.

 NOTE: This service installer supports only 64-bit operating systems and is available on Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems.

Dell Power Manager is discontinued and is integrated into Dell Optimizer and MyDell. Hence, Dell Technologies recommends downloading the latest version of the Dell Optimizer application for Dell Latitude, Precision, and OptiPlex users, and MyDell application for XPS, Inspiron and Vostro users to access the features of Dell Power Manager. To install Dell Optimizer and MyDell, go to Dell.com/support and search for Dell Optimizer and MyDell.

If you have installed MyDell version 3.0 or higher, or Dell Optimizer 3.2 or higher on your system, you cannot install or upgrade to Dell Power Manager version 3.13. Dell Power Manager gets uninstalled from your system. However, you can still access the Power settings from MyDell and Dell Optimizer.

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Group Policy template

Administrators can apply the Dell Power Manager settings across multiple systems using the Group Policy feature in Windows Server. For more information about Windows Group Policies, see the Group Policy Overview article at www.docs.microsoft.com.

After you apply a Group Policy Template to a system, end users cannot change the settings that are associated with that template.

To use Group Policy Templates:

Installing the Group Policy Management ConsoleDell Power Manager uses the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC) in Windows Server to administer Group Policies. The GPMC feature is in Windows Server 2008 and newer. However, it is not automatically installed with the operating system. An administrator must install GPMC on the domain server using Server Manager or Windows PowerShell.

An administrator must set Active Directory as a server role. In Server Manager, right-click Roles, and then click Add Roles. On the Server Roles screen, select Active Directory Domain Services, and complete the wizard.

For detailed instructions on installing GPMC, see the Group Policy Management Console article at www.docs.microsoft.com.

Install Group Policy templates

Before you create, apply, or change Group Policy Templates, an administrator must first make the templates available in the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC).

Customize a Group Polic

Dell Power Manager includes several Group Policy settings that administrators can customize based on their domain and environment requirements. To configure Dell Power Manager Group Policy settings:Open the Group Policy Management Editor.

a. Click Server Manager > Features > Group Policy Management > Forest: > Domains > .

b. Right-click the Default Domain Policy, and select Edit.In the left pane, expand Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > System > Dell > Power Manager.In the left pane, select one of the categories to configure the settings you want to apply to the domain.For a complete list of the available Group Policy settings and their values, see the Group Policy Management Editor on your domain server.

Apply a Group Policy

Administrators can apply a Group Policy to specific systems, groups, or users by associating the Group Policy Object (GPO) with an Active Directory Organizational Unit (OU) in the Group Policy Management Editor.Create a Group Policy Object (GPO).

a. In Group Policy Management for your domain, expand Group Policy Objects.

b. Right-click the Group Policy Objects group and create a GPO.

c. Enter a Name for the GPO, and click OK.Add a policy to the new GPO.

a. In Group Policy Management for your domain, right-click the new GPO you created in previous step and select Edit.

b. In the left pane, select Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > System > Dell > Power Manager.

c. Set the wanted policy.Create an Active Directory OU, if it does not exist.

a. In Active Directory, right-click the domain, and select New > Organizational Unit.

b. Enter a Name for the organizational unit, and click OK.

c. In the right pane, right-click the new OU, and select New.

d. Select the system, group, or users to which this policy applies.Link the GPO to the OU.

a. Close Active Directory and the Group Policy Management Editor, if they are open.

 NOTE: Restart the Group Policy Management Editor to see new OUs.

b. Reopen the Group Policy Management Editor.

c. Select Group Policy Management > Domains > 

d. Right-click the OU, and select Link an existing GPO.

e. Select the GPO created in a previous step, and click OK.Apply Group Policy template changes to client systems

Changes to Group Policy Templates do not immediately apply to systems, because they must first be replicated in the domain controller. Also, client systems can take up to 90 minutes to refresh Group Policy Objects. For detailed information, see the Determining When Group Policy Changes are Applied article at www.docs.microsoft.com.

Administrators can manually force updates to take effect immediately by doing the following:On the client system, open the command window.Enter the following command.

GPUpdate/forcePress Enter.In Windows Server 2012, administrators can also force client updates from the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC). For detailed information, see the Force a Remote Group Policy Refresh article at www.docs.microsoft.com.

Customize Group Policy settings

This section provides additional information regarding Group Policies and any special notes you must consider as you customize the settings.

Each policy contains settings and values for options which are honored by the application GUI. If the value for a setting is User Controlled, then the administrator has given the end-user full access to that setting in the GUI. It has the same effect as having no policy for that specific setting.

The following group policies are available in Dell Power Manager:Battery InformationPeak ShiftAdvanced ChargeBattery ExtenderAlerts ManagementThermal ManagementProduct Feedback LinkBattery information Group PoliciesBattery SettingsBattery settings Group PoliciesYou can customize Battery Settings using this policy group. Select a battery setting, and select any one of the following options from the drop-down list:User ControlledStandardExpressChargeAdaptiveCustomPrimarily AC UseIf the Charge Mode setting is set to Custom, you can set the start or stop values. Values may vary between different systems.

When a specified value is not within the minimum or maximum capabilities, the minimum or maximum value of the client system is used. When specifying minimum and maximum values, use the following guidelines:

Most likely the source of heat is not CPU, but video card. You notebook has 2 video cards, with the idea that slow but cool HD400 works by default, switching to hot and powerful one when needed. (which one do you have by the way? They vary in this model). In Linux, this does not work out of the box, and you always have both video cards on, resulting in maximum heat. If you are OK to go without big GPU, you can just disable bigger video card altogether. Intel HD4000 is a rather tough guy itself - it can handle HD video and all 2010 games quite well. Otherwise, search for instruction on how to tweak NVIDIA Optimus if you have NVIDIA, or PowerXPress if you have Radeon. These are the names of technologies that use 2 video cards to save power. 152ee80cbc

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