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PPC
> Computing
Guides > Windows
Sleep Or Hibernate
Don Bradbury looks at the theory and practice
of energy saving
Actually, energy saving is just one reason why you
might want to avail yourself of the Sleep or Hibernate modes your PC
claims to support. Other possible reasons include reducing wear and
tear on certain components, or reducing noise levels in your working
environment, or simply keeping prying eyes off your system while you
leave the desk.
But energy saving is the usual reason for using
these partial power-down options. When you figure how many PCs are
running at any one time around the world, each consuming their, say,
250 watts of power, the potential global savings to be made are
huge.
Basic
The simplest form of power saving is to simply
switch off the monitor. That taxes the display electronics more than
is desirable if you have to engage the mode several times a day.
Going into a standby mode of minimal power usage is rather better.
If you combine that with a reduction in the power fed to disk drives
and processing units etc, more useful saving are to be had. Enter,
stage left, the Sleep or Hibernate modes which most modern PCs - at
least nominally - support.
I say ‘nominally’ because you may have
difficulty making one or the other of them stick on your particular
hardware, even though your BIOS and Operating System say they offer
support. That can be for a whole raft of possible reasons, some of
which we’ll come to, but let’s delve into it nevertheless.
The downsides
First, let’s take a look at the pitfalls, as there
are lots of people around who will tell you that powering down PC
components is counter-productive because of the effect it can have
on component life. Other things being equal, electronic components
do like stability of electrical loading and hence running
temperature. But an equal number of people will tell you that, these
days, the power and other savings you can make outweigh minimal
shortening of component life that may or may not occur.
Screen burn, once a certainty if you left a static
picture blazing away at full brightness on your monitor for a long
time, is now all but a thing of the past. The phosphors on modern
monitors do not burn as easily, yet most PCs you see will still
engage a screen saver after a few minutes of inactivity.
Many consider that to be counter-productive as the
screen saver itself consumes some computing power. Well, something
has to keep watch on your system for the inactivity that will
activate it - if you get my drift. Not only that, no power is saved
by a screen saver since everything has to be kept running in order
to power it.
Better, I think, is to switch off the monitor
altogether if you intend to leave the computer idle for an hour or
two. Anything longer than that and either Standby or Hibernate mode
comes into the reckoning.
Standby
Sleep mode, available on Windows 98, ME, and 2000,
powers down the monitor to use minimal current, while stopping the
disk drives completely, though only after copying the current state
of your PC to system RAM. The latter is maintained by a small
current flow. If you get a power outage during Standby mode, bang
goes any unsaved work because your complement of RAM will lose its
charge. However, it is probably the most-used power saving mode.
Hibernation,
if your system supports it, copies your present working condition to
hard disk before going into the deepest of power saving sleeps, ie
no power consumption at all because everything is switched off under
software control. That is, of necessity, slower to restart than
Sleep as you have to wait for the relatively slow disk drive to
restore everything.
Restoration from RAM is much faster and is often the
option of choice on a desktop computer, but Hibernate is
particularly useful on a notebook because it gives maximum power
saving to prolong the use of your precious battery.
However, both Sleep and Hibernate modes can have
their problems, failing to wake up properly, if at all, after sleep
is induced.
The blame?
PC engineers tend to blame, first, non-compliant
peripherals or their drivers. If you have problems, it’s certainly
worth hunting for a later driver on the manufacturer’s website.
That’s provided you know which piece of gear is to blame.
New power management specs should help. Intel’s
Instantly Available PC (IAPC) is expected to restore a PC from sleep
mode within seconds. But if you make sure the required mode is both
supported and set up properly (BIOS and Operating System) the
current provisions are reasonable.
I reckon my own PC wakes up from Sleep mode
correctly 95% of times. When it doesn’t, I restart the machine
from the Reset switch. That implies that I routinely save all my
work from running apps before engaging Sleep mode, just to be sure.
Favourite failure candidates include one or other of the USB
peripherals, notably my flash memory card reader, but sometimes the
monitor fails to reactivate, or the entire system lacks stability.
Yes sir, it’s reboot time again!
Wake
up.
Activation of wake up from Sleep mode can involve
use of the keyboard, the mouse, modem ring, USB Device Wake up, or
Resume by Alarm. I generally just hit the Ctrl key or nudge the
mouse, when Sleep is reversed within 20 secs or so, including
automatic checks on all drives.
Setting your OS power management for power saving
modes involves Power Options in Control Panel. You may not see a tab
for Hibernation there, in which case just settle for Sleep mode and
do a few trial runs. If you hit problems, try for updated software
from the manufacturer. Check BIOS settings carefully, and make sure
you haven’t missed anything in the Windows’s setup.
In conclusion
Finally, a visit to Microsoft’s Knowledge Base at http://search.support.microsoft.com/kb/c.asp
just
might throw light on a specific problem, though I wouldn’t hold my
breath; the site is simply littered with manufactures workarounds or
worse. Until Microsoft and peripherals manufacturers get their act
together, using Sleep and Hibernate will remain an inexact science.
Until then, good luck. But do give it a try, it can help save the
planet - not to mention your bank balance!
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