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Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate?
Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas |
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I do not use either one, I shutdown at night.
From XP HELP: hibernation A state in which your computer shuts down after saving everything in memory on your hard disk. When you bring your computer out of hibernation, all programs and documents that were open are restored to your desktop. standby A state in which your computer consumes less power when it is idle, but remains available for immediate use. While your computer is on standby, information in computer memory is not saved on your hard disk. If there is an interruption in power, the information in memory is lost. Standby is a state in which your monitor and hard disks turn off, so that your computer uses less power. When you want to use the computer again, it comes out of standby quickly, and your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use standby to save power when you will be away from the computer for a short time while working. Because Standby does not save your desktop state to disk, a power failure while on Standby can cause you to lose unsaved information. Hibernation is a state in which your computer shuts down to save power but first saves everything in memory on your hard disk. When you restart the computer, your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use hibernation to save power when you will be away from the computer for an extended time while working. Put the computer on standby when it is idle. While on standby, your entire computer switches to a low-power state where devices, such as the monitor and hard disks, turn off and your computer uses less power. When you want to use the computer again, it comes out of standby quickly, and your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Standby is particularly useful for conserving battery power in portable computers. Because Standby does not save your desktop state to disk, a power failure while on Standby can cause you to lose unsaved information. Put your computer in hibernation. The hibernate feature saves everything in memory on disk, turns off your monitor and hard disk, and then turns off your computer. When you restart your computer, your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. It takes longer to bring your computer out of hibernation than out of standby. -- Hope this helps. Let us know. Wes MS-MVP Windows Shell/User In hlink.net, Jerry and Carol Schull hunted and pecked: Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate? Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas |
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I don't turn off my computers at night.* (Sometimes, _I_ don't shut
down at night.) Windows XP does maintenance-type stuff and some chores at night, if I'm recharging. I happen to use both Standby and Hibernation modes, anyways. I've got two laptops, but desktop-PC users certainly benefit, too. For my short breaks, the laptops are set so that XP will switch off the monitor after 30 minutes user-inactivity**, but the hard drive remains un-parked. (Those settings are usually under Power Options in the Control Panel, when a PC's hardware supports them.) For my long-term breaks (eg: going out, hobbying, recovering from lost work, drinking), I close the lid, and that tells XP to go into Standby mode. My laptops will sit for several hours in Standby mode before their juice level gets low enough to trigger XP to switch to Hibernation mode).*** I use Hibernation mode when I transport a laptop. (I don't like it swinging around while the power is on -- even if I have an expectation that the hard drive will remain parked.) My laptops can sit for days in Hibernation mode until the battery becomes too weak for boot up. (Warning: Don't try this at home!) I think that both modes are very useful simply by virtue of substantially shortening the interval that begins with pushing the power button and ends with the system running almost all of the applications and work that were in progress at the onset of hibernation. Cheers, ~ Mark PS: I realize that the statistics in this post may vary from other users'; nobody needs to post their statistics for my benefit. ------------------------ * My computers usually stay on continually knocking on wood as much as possible; they both eventually need to be turned off secondary to instability or user error or because I'm experiencing a premonition. Even in the absence of user error, I believe that Windows XP will eventually lose it beyond recovery. (I realize that unsolicited opinions may vary; nobody needs to post theirs for my benefit, but if you can't help yourself then please e-mail it to me.) One laptop's gone almost as far as 144 hours before functionality became too abnormal, while the other has never survived 72 hours. **One of my hobbies ***Due to the crappy nature of laptop batteries in general, my computers wouldn't last more than a few hours away from the juice in the absence of Standby and Hibernation modes. end of my post The following snip from a post in this thread by Wesley Vogel gives more definition. ... Standby is a state in which your monitor and hard disks turn off, so that your computer uses less power. When you want to use the computer again, it comes out of standby quickly, and your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use standby to save power when you will be away from the computer for a short time while working. Because Standby does not save your desktop state to disk, a power failure while on Standby can cause you to lose unsaved information. Hibernation is a state in which your computer shuts down to save power but first saves everything in memory on your hard disk. When you restart the computer, your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use hibernation to save power when you will be away from the computer for an extended time while working. ... |
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In a earlier post I was basically asking the same question and was treated
like a idiot because I am on a desktop. My original question remains unanswered. I shut down monitor and drives using power properties after a set number of minutes but am curious if there is a deeper shutdown that I can implement immediately (short of power off which if far from immediate). Standby locks me up with screensaver displayed forcing power plug pulling. SG "Jerry and Carol Schull" wrote in message hlink.net... Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate? Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas |
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Neither one turns the computer off.
Note, in XP, you have to click start, turn off computer, to get to any of these... ONLY one selection within "turn off computer" actually turns off the computer. More MS prevarications. Prior MS 98/ME selections were straightforward and truthful. -- Noncompliant Money don't wag the dog's tail. "Jerry and Carol Schull" wrote in message hlink.net... Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate? Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas |
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Hi Noncompliant:
Actually, you can bypass the start menu. If the focus is on the desktop, then hit [Alt]+[F4]. (If the desktop does not have the focus, then click it first.) Your point about MS prevarications still applies, however; no matter how one gets there, the window title still says, "Turn off computer". ~ Mark PS: For the reader who wonders why they can't see a Hibernate icon on the "Turn off computer" window, hold down one of the shift keys; this causes the Standby icon to change to the Hibernate icon. "Noncompliant" wrote in message ... Neither one turns the computer off. Note, in XP, you have to click start, turn off computer, to get to any of these... ONLY one selection within "turn off computer" actually turns off the computer. More MS prevarications. Prior MS 98/ME selections were straightforward and truthful. -- Noncompliant Money don't wag the dog's tail. "Jerry and Carol Schull" wrote in message hlink.net... Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate? Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas |
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Noncompliant wrote:
Neither one turns the computer off. I completely disagree. Hibernate, as has been mentioned, saves what is in RAM to the harddisk and then shuts off the computer. I have swapped laptop hard drives that were in a "hibernate" state and when swapping back I get the same point I was at. If you tell the computer to hibernate, it WILL turn the computer off. (I do this with my laptop all the time and rarely if ever have a problem - definitely haven't had a problem with hibernate for at least a year). -Lee |
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A PC or laptop is not off if in hibernate mode.
Standby and hibernate were initially developed for laptops to save power when not in use and left on. Which is and was an excellent idea for laptops. An easy way to tell if a PC or laptop is initially actually off is to visually account its display during turn-on. An MVP would not make such a ludicrous statement. -- Noncompliant Money don't wag the dog's tail. "leew [MVP]" wrote in message ... Noncompliant wrote: Neither one turns the computer off. I completely disagree. Hibernate, as has been mentioned, saves what is in RAM to the harddisk and then shuts off the computer. I have swapped laptop hard drives that were in a "hibernate" state and when swapping back I get the same point I was at. If you tell the computer to hibernate, it WILL turn the computer off. (I do this with my laptop all the time and rarely if ever have a problem - definitely haven't had a problem with hibernate for at least a year). -Lee |
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On Fri, 30 Mar 2007 06:50:01 -0600, Noncompliant wrote:
A PC or laptop is not off if in hibernate mode. Standby and hibernate were initially developed for laptops to save power when not in use and left on. Which is and was an excellent idea for laptops. An easy way to tell if a PC or laptop is initially actually off is to visually account its display during turn-on. An MVP would not make such a ludicrous statement. When I close the LID on my laptop it is completely powered down, nothing running, nothing has any more power than if I used the power button and held it in for 10 seconds. The difference between shutting down and suspend is that when the computer boots back up, if suspended, it will restore the memory image instead of booting from scratch. I can assure you that suspend (or hibernate, can't remember which one) actually shuts down the computer. The other one will put it in low power mode and it will appear to be asleep, but still has some power applied. -- Leythos (remove 999 for proper email address) |
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Noncompliant wrote:
A PC or laptop is not off if in hibernate mode. Sorry, you are completely wrong. Read, for example http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/u...hibernate.mspx which states "Hibernate saves an image of your desktop with all open files and documents, and then it powers down your computer." -- Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User Please reply to the newsgroup Standby and hibernate were initially developed for laptops to save power when not in use and left on. Which is and was an excellent idea for laptops. An easy way to tell if a PC or laptop is initially actually off is to visually account its display during turn-on. An MVP would not make such a ludicrous statement. "leew [MVP]" wrote in message ... Noncompliant wrote: Neither one turns the computer off. I completely disagree. Hibernate, as has been mentioned, saves what is in RAM to the harddisk and then shuts off the computer. I have swapped laptop hard drives that were in a "hibernate" state and when swapping back I get the same point I was at. If you tell the computer to hibernate, it WILL turn the computer off. (I do this with my laptop all the time and rarely if ever have a problem - definitely haven't had a problem with hibernate for at least a year). -Lee |
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Follow-ON: The details of exactly HOW the computer saves your info during hibernation are of interest. It seems like a small partition is often reserved specifcally for this purpose. But I can imagine that some manufacturers use static ram for this purpose? Such an arrangement would account for why someone reported swapping their laptop hard drive during hiberation?? --or did I read that wrong?? In such a case, I imagine that coming out of hibernation could be pretty fast, perhaps rivaling coming out of standby.
MY PROBLEM: I understand how mice, keyboards and LAN connections can be enabled/disabled to bring the computer out of either hiberation or standby mode. On my Vista laptop I found then enabling allowed my computer to behave better, overall. On my desktop, I don't really want to disable these things cause I need them (e.g., for printing stuff)? My problem (XP Home edition with an HP Pavillion) is that my machine wakes up on it's own for reasons that escape me. I really want to use it primarily as a print server, or intensively to run 32 bit apps that are not supported on my 64 bit machine. Will these secrets be revealed in the event viewer? I seek control over this beast! One suspect is Windows update. If this is the only problem I could live with this--or change it's configuration? Other ideas or tools would be welcome. Thanks, Lyle, Durham, NC a.k.a. Rickenbacker108 On Sunday, March 25, 2007 3:24 PM Jerry and Carol Schull wrote: Can someone please explain the difference between stanby and hibernate? Does either take the place of shutting down the computer at night? Jerry in Vegas On Sunday, March 25, 2007 3:35 PM Wesley Vogel wrote: I do not use either one, I shutdown at night. From XP HELP: hibernation A state in which your computer shuts down after saving everything in memory on your hard disk. When you bring your computer out of hibernation, all programs and documents that were open are restored to your desktop. standby A state in which your computer consumes less power when it is idle, but remains available for immediate use. While your computer is on standby, information in computer memory is not saved on your hard disk. If there is an interruption in power, the information in memory is lost. Standby is a state in which your monitor and hard disks turn off, so that your computer uses less power. When you want to use the computer again, it comes out of standby quickly, and your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use standby to save power when you will be away from the computer for a short time while working. Because Standby does not save your desktop state to disk, a power failure while on Standby can cause you to lose unsaved information. Hibernation is a state in which your computer shuts down to save power but first saves everything in memory on your hard disk. When you restart the computer, your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Use hibernation to save power when you will be away from the computer for an extended time while working. Put the computer on standby when it is idle. While on standby, your entire computer switches to a low-power state where devices, such as the monitor and hard disks, turn off and your computer uses less power. When you want to use the computer again, it comes out of standby quickly, and your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. Standby is particularly useful for conserving battery power in portable computers. Because Standby does not save your desktop state to disk, a power failure while on Standby can cause you to lose unsaved information. Put your computer in hibernation. The hibernate feature saves everything in memory on disk, turns off your monitor and hard disk, and then turns off your computer. When you restart your computer, your desktop is restored exactly as you left it. It takes longer to bring your computer out of hibernation than out of standby. -- Hope this helps. Let us know. Wes MS-MVP Windows Shell/User In hlink.net, Jerry and Carol Schull hunted and pecked: On Monday, March 26, 2007 4:57 AM Mark M Morse wrote: I don't turn off my computers at night.* (Sometimes, _I_ don't shut down at night.) Windows XP does maintenance-type stuff and some chores at night, if I'm recharging. I happen to use both Standby and Hibernation modes, anyways. I've got two laptops, but desktop-PC users certainly benefit, too. For my short breaks, the laptops are set so that XP will switch off the monitor after 30 minutes user-inactivity**, but the hard drive remains un-parked. (Those settings are usually under Power Options in the Control Panel, when a PC's hardware supports them.) For my long-term breaks (eg: going out, hobbying, recovering from lost work, drinking), I close the lid, and that tells XP to go into Standby mode. My laptops will sit for several hours in Standby mode before their juice level gets low enough to trigger XP to switch to Hibernation mode).*** I use Hibernation mode when I transport a laptop. (I don't like it swinging around while the power is on -- even if I have an expectation that the hard drive will remain parked.) My laptops can sit for days in Hibernation mode until the battery becomes too weak for boot up. (Warning: Don't try this at home!) I think that both modes are very useful simply by virtue of substantially shortening the interval that begins with pushing the power button and ends with the system running almost all of the applications and work that were in progress at the onset of hibernation. Cheers, ~ Mark PS: I realize that the statistics in this post may vary from other users'; nobody needs to post their statistics for my benefit. ------------------------ * My computers usually stay on continually knocking on wood as much as possible; they both eventually need to be turned off secondary to instability or user error or because I'm experiencing a premonition. Even in the absence of user error, I believe that Windows XP will eventually lose it beyond recovery. (I realize that unsolicited opinions may vary; nobody needs to post theirs for my benefit, but if you can't help yourself then please e-mail it to me.) One laptop's gone almost as far as 144 hours before functionality became too abnormal, while the other has never survived 72 hours. **One of my hobbies ***Due to the crappy nature of laptop batteries in general, my computers wouldn't last more than a few hours away from the juice in the absence of Standby and Hibernation modes. end of my post The following snip from a post in this thread by Wesley Vogel gives more definition. On Monday, March 26, 2007 1:12 PM shakey wrote: In a earlier post I was basically asking the same question and was treated like a idiot because I am on a desktop. My original question remains unanswered. I shut down monitor and drives using power properties after a set number of minutes but am curious if there is a deeper shutdown that I can implement immediately (short of power off which if far from immediate). Standby locks me up with screensaver displayed forcing power plug pulling. SG "Jerry and Carol Schull" wrote in message hlink.net... On Monday, March 26, 2007 8:35 PM Noncompliant wrote: Neither one turns the computer off. Note, in XP, you have to click start, turn off computer, to get to any of these... ONLY one selection within "turn off computer" actually turns off the computer. More MS prevarications. Prior MS 98/ME selections were straightforward and truthful. -- Noncompliant Money don't wag the dog's tail. "Jerry and Carol Schull" wrote in message hlink.net... On Wednesday, March 28, 2007 9:10 AM Mark M Morse wrote: Hi Noncompliant: Actually, you can bypass the start menu. If the focus is on the desktop, then hit [Alt]+[F4]. (If the desktop does not have the focus, then click it first.) Your point about MS prevarications still applies, however; no matter how one gets there, the window title still says, "Turn off computer". ~ Mark PS: For the reader who wonders why they can't see a Hibernate icon on the "Turn off computer" window, hold down one of the shift keys; this causes the Standby icon to change to the Hibernate icon. "Noncompliant" wrote in message ... On Friday, March 30, 2007 2:03 AM leew [MVP] wrote: Noncompliant wrote: I completely disagree. Hibernate, as has been mentioned, saves what is in RAM to the harddisk and then shuts off the computer. I have swapped laptop hard drives that were in a "hibernate" state and when swapping back I get the same point I was at. If you tell the computer to hibernate, it WILL turn the computer off. (I do this with my laptop all the time and rarely if ever have a problem - definitely haven't had a problem with hibernate for at least a year). -Lee On Friday, March 30, 2007 7:50 AM Noncompliant wrote: A PC or laptop is not off if in hibernate mode. Standby and hibernate were initially developed for laptops to save power when not in use and left on. Which is and was an excellent idea for laptops. An easy way to tell if a PC or laptop is initially actually off is to visually account its display during turn-on. An MVP would not make such a ludicrous statement. -- Noncompliant Money don't wag the dog's tail. "leew [MVP]" wrote in message ... On Friday, March 30, 2007 9:01 AM Leythos wrote: On Fri, 30 Mar 2007 06:50:01 -0600, Noncompliant wrote: When I close the LID on my laptop it is completely powered down, nothing running, nothing has any more power than if I used the power button and held it in for 10 seconds. The difference between shutting down and suspend is that when the computer boots back up, if suspended, it will restore the memory image instead of booting from scratch. I can assure you that suspend (or hibernate, can't remember which one) actually shuts down the computer. The other one will put it in low power mode and it will appear to be asleep, but still has some power applied. -- Leythos (remove 999 for proper email address) On Friday, March 30, 2007 12:57 PM Ken Blake, MVP wrote: Noncompliant wrote: Sorry, you are completely wrong. Read, for example http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/u...hibernate.mspx which states "Hibernate saves an image of your desktop with all open files and documents, and then it powers down your computer." -- Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User Please reply to the newsgroup Submitted via EggHeadCafe Microsoft .NET DataBase Access For Beginners http://www.eggheadcafe.com/training-...y-Samples.aspx |
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NOTE: The ridiculous long physical lines shoved into Usenet by the
leeching Egghead gateway were reformatted to a more reasonable length. Lyle Allen wrote: On Sunday, March 25, 2007 3:24 PM Jerry and Carol Schull wrote: snipped the ancient thread Follow-ON: The details of exactly HOW the computer saves your info during hibernation are of interest. It seems like a small partition is often reserved specifcally for this purpose. But I can imagine that some manufacturers use static ram for this purpose? Lyle hasn't a clue on how hibernation works in Windows You thought the OP was still monitoring this OVER 3 YEAR thread? Notice the timestamps next time. Also, stop trying to hijack someone else's thread, old or new. Start your own NEW thread to detail YOUR problems. |
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