

Why this is I do not exactly know but we suspect it has something to do with older versions of electron having problems with higher C-states as the main discord app I do not see high c-states. I hope this guide has helped in terms of saving power on the Linux desktop as canary can quiet visibly make a noticeable difference on power usage in long sessions. The first setup is librewolf empty + discord canary, the second is librewolf empty + discord main, and the third is librewolf with discord web app. A year ago, on my last Instagram run, I got one of those apps that lets you. I ran 3x each setup testing them for 240 seconds each time to give it time to equalize out and then averaged out the result. In this video, we show you how to download and use the Discord Canary client. I decided to for each of the setups test it 3 times using powertop to test it. And optimizations are the ones done by powertop auto tune. The modules that are installed are 2 USB-C, 1 USB type A and 1 DisplayPort. I am using Librewolf as my browser and have installed discord and discord canary from there arch package and AUR package respectively. Mostly I wanted to test between the main discord app, the discord canary app(which uses a newer version of electron) and the discord web browser version as I found that the default discord app doesn’t let the cpu enter lower c-states.

Hey everybody, today I decided to do some testing of power levels for discord on Linux desktop.
