I might suggest that instead of subjecting your battery to 365 charge cycles per year, that you REMOVE the battery from the laptop completely, and recharge it only once a month which is only 12 recharge cycles a year vs 365 cycles. I'm sure you'll agree that this will extend the life of your battery significantly more than the software recharge cycle you are hoping to find.
The only time you might deviate from this 12 cycle per year procedure would be if you knew you were going to take the laptop with you for 1 day or more, and so reinsert the battery the night before your trip and run and overnight charge cycle. You could repeat the overnight charging cycle for however many nights you are gone from your home. Such as 7 days of Vacation. If you'll did this once a year, as most people don't travel with their laptops more than that such as daily business use it if you are a University student using in classes. Library, etc.
This puts you at 19 uses of your battery per year vs. The 365 uses you now use. Still way better IMO.
lastly, and hopefully you know this, you should be replacing your Laptop battery at least once every 2 years; no longer! No batteries on the market last longer than this even the $250 factory replacement batteries you buy directly from the OEM laptop manufacturer's websites.
If your Current battery in your laptop is older than 2 yrs., your much sought after scheduled power saver program will not extend your battery life on a battery that's already being used beyond it's end-of-life design period anyway. You might get an extra few months of service, but that's not much, so you'll be replacing your batteries every 2-3 Yrs. for the remaining life of that laptop no matter what you do.
Best,
BBJ
Sent from my VS986 using
Windows Forums mobile app