I'm writing to support the original complaint and Alex's post at the top
of this ticket.

Please!  It's really important to be able to dim the screen
automatically when switching to battery power, in order to save battery
life.  I relied on this in Gutsy.  I go back and forth between AC and
battery several times a day, and I obviously don't want to have to
fiddle with the brightness keys or applet every time I hit the power
cord.

(There may be several settings that can extend battery life -- screen
brightness, CPU speed, hard disk spindown period, etc.  I am surprised
that gnome-power-manager doesn't allow all of these to be set
differentially for AC and battery.  Windows has allowed this for years,
at least on Thinkpads.)

Chris, you write: "Personally I do not care if I am on AC or battery, I
will adjust the brightness to the level I want and expect it to stay
there."  But I don't think users like you will be significantly
inconvenienced by Alex's suggestion (whereas it would greatly help users
like me).  Here's why:

- Do you mean that you want to be permanently at 70%?  And when you
first set up the laptop on AC and set the brightness to 70%, it might
change when you unplug it?  That's not so horrible.  You'll be slightly
annoyed that you have to correct the brightness a second time now that
you're on battery.  But then you will live happily ever after, since you
will have identical preferences set for AC and battery.  Having to
adjust the brightness twice seems a small price to pay for giving the
rest of us the flexibility to have two different settings.

   (see https://blueprints.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/backlight-
brightness-simplicity)

- Or do you mean that you adjust your brightness to local lighting
conditions every time you move the machine?  In that case, I don't see
why you would expect your adjustment to "stay there" when you plug or
unplug the machine.  Plugging or unplugging probably means you're moving
to a new location, so why would you care if your previous adjustment
sticks?  You're about to readjust anyway.

Chris, you also write that Alex's use case is confusing.  That's because
Alex was outlining an interesting reversed situation where one might
want a *brighter* screen on battery power.  That is the reverse of the
much more common situation where one wants to *dim* the screen on
battery power to save battery.  Think about this common situation.

-- 
[hardy] Battery brightness slider gone
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/201762
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