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But then you have to reopen apps and reload data. And remember to save it before closing again. For me it's a waste of battery time.
Shutdown: No diskspace needed, turn off/on in 15 seconds, no battery wasted, everything is closed
Hibernate: Needs as much diskspace as you have memory, turn off/on in 1 minute (depending on diskspeed and amount of memory to write/read), no battery wasted, just continue working
Standby: No diskspace needed, turn off/on in 1 second, battery decreases 10% per 24 hours (so 7% before I start working again or 3 percent while I sleep), just continue working
For me hibernate only wins when you have battery issues and plenty of diskspace and time that you don't mind wasting. In all other scenarios standby wins.
On the surface battery life is not an issue but diskspace and time are, so standby should be used instead of hibernate.
(I loved hibernate when I used Windows XP with 1 GB of RAM. It only took 20 seconds to hibernate/restore but rebooting took 1 minute and standby sucked 50% per day)





Member since:
2010-09-23
I really don't understand the need for a hibernate file anymore. It actually takes longer now to restore from a hibernate file than to do a clean reboot. So I assume they simply disable hibernating and use sleep+connected standby. The only reason I could think of why they would enable hibernate is for "your battery is at 1%, now saving everything and closing down" scenarios.
Swapfiles should never be entirely disabled, but they don't have to be many gigabytes of data either
And as I have mentioned, a restore file only needs to be 2.5 gig, even with multiple restore points in it (Microsofts own WIM is an excellent format for storing these images and can be restored with built in tools)
Can anyone provide diskspace numbers for the Surface RT?