On Sun, 24 Feb 2013 09:04:37 +0000 (UTC), Computer Nerd Kev
<n...@telling.you> wrote:
>Well if they are hibernating rather than being turned off,
>surely battery depletion should be expected. As I understand
>things (and I'll admit my knowledge is often outdated), when
>you put a PC into hibernation mode, it still keeps certain
>systems running so that the machine can be awoken by pressing
>keyboard keys and other inputs which require active
>electronics to scan them.
I'll admit that I brought up hibernation, but it doesn't work like you
said. Normally, hibernation just copies the RAM to a file on t he
harddrive -- in XP it is hiberfile.sys, which in my desktop is
3,220,230,144 bytels long. ( I have 4 gigs of Ram but the file isn't
that big either because XP can only use 3 Gig, or because when I
hibernated I was using only the number of bytes of RAM listed)
Now with the desktiop a few times, I've come back in the morning and
found that it never finished shutting down, so it was using power all
night, but that was obvious because the screen had some of the
programs I'd been running still showing. If I had stuck around the
night before, I could have made sure it closed down. With the
laptops, I have made sure.
>
>Furthermore, it has to keep something alive that would tell
>the rest of the machine where to load the data it stored
>before going into one of your week long sleeps.
In addition it sets one byte or bit to "hibernated" so that on normal
start-up, if that byte is set, one of the first things it does is to
copy pagefile.sys back to RAM.
>OK, perhaps
>nowadays the BIOS and interface is set up to do all this while
I think it's somewhere in the harddrive, probably a very early byte of
pagefile.sys (or possibly the very presence of pagefile.sys)
But it's like a note on the refrigerator door. It doesn't take any
power to stay there. Compared to the schedule of tv shows to
record that my non-calbe-company-supplied DVR forgets if there is a
power failure,(while it does remember the tv shows it has recorded,
because they are stored on a harddrive or DVD.)
>the electronics are actually powered down. But I doubt it, and
>in any case what's wrong with just turning the thing off?
Hibernation brings you back to where you were when you turned the
computer off. All the same programs are open and they're right where
you left them. It's great. One has to actually shut down
completely to make some updates take effect, like most security
updates from MS, the ones with the yellow shield in the systray, and
I believe some poorly written programs can require one to shut down
completely (no hibernation) even earlier than that. When things stop
working right, (after 3 or 4 or 7 days maybe), restarting the
computer, not just hibernating and waking up, can usually make it work
right again.
Sleep, or Suspend, also brings you back to where you were, but with
those two, the RAM has not been copied to t he HDD, so if there is a
power failure not protected for by a Uninteruptable Power Supply, the
computer forgets everything that was in RAM.
I always save my data before Sleep and even before Hibernate. One
time I intended to hibernate, but I pressed the wrong key and shut
down instead. Had I not saved my date, it would have been gone.
>
>Anyway, if that four year old laptop has had a lot of use,
>then it is quite normal for the battery to suffer a bit.
>Lithium-Ion batteries have built in circuitry to manage them
>(mainly to stop them catching fire), this inevitably drains
>the battery slowly over time and if the battery is on it's
>last legs, that and whatever drain the PC may add to it even
>when the machine should be off (or worse, in hibernation) may
>well give you the loss of charge you experience.
I'm not sure it does this all the time. I hibernated my own
computer last night, and about 12 hours later, it was down to 95%. In
6 days that would be 70%. I'll have to keep better track.
>
>As for keeping them on their chargers, unless the charging
>system is poorly designed, I'd figure that should be fine. The
>transformer will always chew a little bit of power though.
So far, I only use the netbook when traveling, which I average about 2
weeks a year. . If I were home, I' guess I'd let it run down,
unless that is really a bad thing to do.
>converting it mostly into heat. Depending on the design, this
>heat might be a problem (either in the transformer or the
>laptop), but I'll leave you to figure how much damage it can
>do.
Okay. ;-)
Thanks.