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Well there is a little difference between how they work, remember the PicoPSU "efficiency" ratings are for the PSU module itself and not the wall wart/brick that hangs outside the case. When you get a rating for an ATX PSU it's for the entire unit.
Just like you can get decent ~85% efficiency ATX power supplies (if you want to spend 50 EUR extra on them) you can get more efficient bricks too (if you are willing to pay 50 EUR for them rather than 5 EUR :)
But, like I said..
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Just turn the switch off at the wall and it will take 0W on power down :)
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is pressed for 5s. I guess the wattage while in G2 state is mostly consumed by the ATX PSU itself (IIRC some no name 300W, always wantedt to replace that, but well... laziness). The Pegasos itself (i.e. the mainboard) consumes very low power in that mode of course.
6W just seems rather high for a power supply only being drawn at maximum a few hundred mW on a 5V rail. Obviously with a switched-mode PSU, there are only certain levels of power it can deliver (it goes up in discrete steps) so this may be the lowest it can draw plus the inefficiency of such a load characteristic (i.e. converting 240V 50Hz mains to barely anything) showing itself. But still, 6W seems rather high..
I am surprised the brick draws that much too for the Efika, although the Efika does have a management chip to handle auto-power-on at time, it doesn't draw power except from the coin battery for a simple CMOS clock and event alarm.. so 6W "leaking" from the brick seems very high.
When my Efika is off the brick is stone cold. My VAIO laptop's brick in comparison (because it is trickle charging the battery more often than not) burns my hand if I'm not paying attention.