• Kid_Thunder@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    You sure it wasn’t the adapter? Dell has a proprietary chip for their OEM adapters to try to force people to use only Dell OEM adapters. When those adapters’ chips shit the bed, the laptop will no longer charge the battery on purpose, just like using a regular adapter that doesn’t use the chip (or a knock-off one spoofing it).

    An OS isn’t going to destroy battery cells or anything.

    Ubuntu’s official docs do tell you to fully charge the battery and let it run low through a few cycles before it figures it out, though I know people do complain it still gets it wrong. Personally I use Fedora and do not see those kinds of issues over the course of different laptops but as always YMMV.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      You sure it wasn’t the adapter? Dell has a proprietary chip for their OEM adapters to try to force people to use only Dell OEM adapters. When those adapters’ chips shit the bed, the laptop will no longer charge the battery on purpose, just like using a regular adapter that doesn’t use the chip (or a knock-off one spoofing it).

      Considering I have no problems with windows with the same one i’ve had from the beginning, yes.

      An OS isn’t going to destroy battery cells or anything.

      No, but bad built in battery management in the OS absolutely can and will.

      and did.

      • Kid_Thunder@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Considering I have no problems with windows with the same one i’ve had from the beginning, yes.

        Well I mean you were there but from your post it sounds like you’re saying Ubuntu damaged your battery so it doesn’t charge anymore. Are you saying it worked in Windows afterwards anyway?

        No, but bad built in battery management absolutely can and will.

        and did.

        Nah, even if it started overheating the battery from charging, the battery should just stop before it actually damages it. If it doesn’t that’s problematic and definitely a hardware defect.