** Description changed:

  The power saving section of system settings has the title "Power saving"
  (all GUI text is translated to English in this report, but I suspect the
  wording is similar enough in the English localization of the UI that the
  points still stand). There are some problems with that title in
  combination with the actual options in that section:
  
  - Screen backlight level
  - Automatic backlight level
  - Keyboard backlight level
  - Dim screen when inactive
  - Empty screen (after interval)
  - Automatic suspend
  - Wireless network: The wireless network can be turned off to save power.
  - Bluetooth: Bluetooth can be turned off to save power.
  
  1. Let's start with the problem with the two bottommost controls
  (wireless network, and bluetooth). Their subtitles in combination with
  the section title "Power saving" gives a very clear impression that
  these settings enable/disable *the ability for these components to be
  automatically turned off in order to save power*, but that's not what
  they do at all. They're just switches to turn off the components
  manually, as though the focus of this section weren't to automate power
  saving but to offer manual controls that are already available not only
  in their own respective setions of system settings, but readily
  available at any time in the global system menu in the top right corner
  of the desktop.
  
  There's no good reason to believe that the Power saving switches are
  just triply redundant instances of these already highly available
  switches, since no one is actually that interested in manually managing
  their power saving from a buried panel in system settings every time
  they decide to go battery powered or are critically low on battery.
  What's expected in this section are settings unique to power saving,
  like automating it during battery power, as opposed to just general
  preferences about whether you need wifi or bluetooth. It doesn't hurt to
  suggest turning the transmitters off in the power saving section, but
  doing it this way is misleading.
  
  I mistakenly turned off the Bluetooth transmitter in this way in an
  attempt to prevent the system from automatically power it off, during my
  efforts to troubleshoot Bluetooth. Needless to say, that didn't help,
  and I was later surprised to discover that Bluetooth was off.
  
  2. The other problem in the Power saving section is that many of the
  settings aren't really about power saving strategies -- they're just
  general preferences that would have to be adjusted manually every single
  time you want to save power:
  
  - Screen backlight level
  - Keyboard backlight level
  - Wireless network: The wireless network can be turned off to save power.
  - Bluetooth: Bluetooth can be turned off to save power.
  
  Sure, they technically have the potential to save power, but then they
  would have to be micromanaged all the time, i.e. not very useful in
  practice if you're using battery power on a daily basis. You would have
  to be extremely proactive for these settings to be preventative of
  needlessly draining your battery, and they're instead very likely going
  to be used when it's "too late" and you're already low on battery.
  
  Here are the ones actually concerned with power saving strategies, i.e.
  preventing battery from draining prematurely:
  
  - Automatic backlight level
  - Dim screen when inactive
  - Empty screen (after interval)
  - Automatic suspend
  
  Notice how you don't have to babysit these settings every time you
  decide to use battery power, and how they're actually focused on the
  problem of conserving power before it's too late.
  
  To alleviate these issues, the easiest quick fix would be to:
  
  1. either remove or change the subtitles of the two bottommost to
  something like "WiFi/Bluetooth can consume a lot of power" which
  succinctly explains why these switches are here while at the same time
  not misleading the reader to think the switches control something else.
  
  2. Move the "micromanagement settings" to their own section to clearly
  separate the more relevant "power conservation strategies" from the
- "general user preferences for devices with potential for high power
+ "general user preferences for components with potential for high power
  consumption that can be manually adjusted here if you're in a pinch and
  are critically low on battery".
  
  The less easy fix would of course be to offer automatic keyboard
  backlight levels instead of manual controls, and to offer actual
  automatic wifi and bluetooth power saving (if that's a thing). Not to
  mention a general "power saving" mode, which is the reasonable level at
  which regular power saving could be expected to be managed manually.
  
  Ubuntu 20.10
  gnome-control-center 3.38.3

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1915744

Title:
  System settings power saving section has misleading wording

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