The technology throttles depending on whether or not it believes an app is running "important" tasks. It won't hamper your music app, for instance. However, there's a good reason why this is still a preview. Although Microsoft believes it can detect which apps will be fine with Power Throttling, it's asking for feedback in case it inadvertently hobbles a must-have tool. Thankfully, you can either opt out for certain apps (say, a video editing suite) or scale the feature back to invoke it less frequently.

The concept of limiting background apps to improve battery life isn't entirely new. Just look at Apple's App Nap in Mavericks for an example. However, App Nap and similar features typically work by telling the app itself to pause or slow down. Here, Microsoft is capping the hardware resources available to those apps -- it's governing the CPU itself. While there's no guarantee this will add hours of running time, it could make a noticeable difference if you regularly juggle multiple programs when you're on the road.