…gets hot (especially when using the pen)
By @sofilofis
It’s common for slim laptops to get hot when using professional applications and games, because heavy processor usage consumes more electricity, which creates more waste heat. The review of the Slim Pro 7 at notebookcheck.net says:
Surface temperatures can be quite warm due to the combination of a thin profile, H-series CPU, and discrete GeForce RTX GPU.
For a laptop to run cooler, it should have a better cooling system (difficult to achieve in the limited space in a thin/light laptop), or the CPU/GPU need to be more power-efficient.
…with a battery normally lasting up to 6 hour…lasts 2 hours when I use photoshop
By @sofilofis
This tends to be true of all laptops. If you read the fine print on the battery life ratings, manufacturers base the battery life rating on general tasks most people do at a home or office: Browse the web, work in some office apps, watch some video. The processor usage of those most common activities is relatively low; the computer has lots of opportunities to rest and not use energy. But pro graphics/video apps and games tend to require all available CPU and GPU power, often driving them to maximum load, which requires more battery power, so the battery doesn’t last as long.
It looks like the Slim 7 Pro has the option of discrete RTX graphics. If yours has that, that is highly recommended for making games and pro apps run fast…but the flip side is, discrete graphics consume much more power than integrated graphics, so battery runtime is shortened further.
I have a Mac laptop and it’s the same situation: Over 10 hours on battery if doing general home/office and online work, but only 3 to 5 hours if I am doing intensive work in any professional graphics or video editing applications (not just Adobe).
It’s kind of like a car or truck: You’ll get the stated mileage if you drive the same way they did in the tests. But if you like to drive fast and accelerate a lot, or if you make it do more work like filling it with cargo or pulling a trailer, of course you’ll get less mileage before having to fill up again. And under heavy load, like pulling a trailer up a mountain highway, a car engine is more likely to overheat…just as a laptop under load is more likely to get hot.
Your laptop may have different power usage profiles to choose from. If so, see if one is a better balance between performance and battery life.