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I have a desktop PC and and it goes into S4/Hibernate after about 1/2 hour of it being on. Is it wasting electricity by turning it on and off and not just keep it on overnight in S4/Hibernate?
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I have a desktop PC and and it goes into S4/Hibernate after about 1/2 hour of it being on. Is it wasting electricity by turning it on and off and not just keep it on overnight in S4/Hibernate?
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Purely from a electricity point of view:
Now compared to a power off and a fresh boot:
I am assuming you can start these quite a bit quicker than half an hour (which is your time out into S4).
So, from a purely electricity point of view you are wasting power if you do not power it down.
Note that this answers is from a purely electricity point of view. It does not comment on the ease of having programs already started. Documents already at the place where you left off etc etc.
1Why not just manually hibernate when done for the day? That way you save electricity, have the benefit of picking up where you left off (like with sleeping a laptop), and don’t have to worry about power-loss while it’s “asleep”. – Synetech – 2012-09-30T00:40:11.283