The purpose of this work was to obtain a component-wise breakdown of the power consumption a modern laptop. We measured the
power usage of the key components in an IBM ThinkPad R40 laptop using an Agilent Oscilloscope and current probes. We obtained
the power consumption for the CPU, optical drive, hard disk, display, graphics card, memory, and wireless card subsystems–either
through direct measurement or subtractive measurement and calculation. Moreover, we measured the power consumption of each
component for a variety of workloads. We found that total system power consumption varies a lot (8 W to 30 W) depending on
the workload, and moreover that the distribution of power consumption among the components varies even more widely. We also
found that though power saving techniques such as DVS can reduce CPU power considerably, the total system power is still dominated
by CPU power in the case of CPU intensive workloads. The display is the other main source of power consumption in a laptop;
it dominates when the CPU is idle. We also found that reducing the backlight brightness can reduce the system power significantly,
more than any other display power saving techniques. Finally, we observed OS differences in the power consumption.