Dear fellow member,
Don't use hibernation. Hibernation is only for people who are lazy to shutdown their system when they are done using it. Hibernation basically takes a snap-shot of your system AS-IS the way it was right before you hibernated then when you get back it resumes that same snap-shot so you can resume work. This feature works on most systems and is unstable sometimes.
Use standby.
Kind Regards,
Ben
2006-08-12 06:26:11
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Windows XP has a feature called "Hibernation" It is one of the best Microsoft has ever done bye far. What it does it's like a screen shot. It remembers what programs where open and for most programs will bring you back to right were you where. It even logs you in which can be good and bad at the same time because If you are the only person using that computer and you don't have to keep your files and access to your computer hidden from anyone. Then you are good. But if you are then I wouldn't do it. I my case I use as much as possible.
2006-08-12 08:12:51
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Copies this information from my computer's "help."
To automatically put your computer into hibernation
You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you from completing this procedure.
Open Power Options in Control Panel.
Click the Hibernate tab, select the Enable hibernate support check box, and then click Apply.
If the Hibernate tab is unavailable, your computer does not support this feature.
Click the APM tab, click Enable Advanced Power Management support, and then click Apply.
The APM tab is unavailable on ACPI-compliant computers. ACPI automatically enables Advanced Power Management, which disables the APM tab.
Click the Power Schemes tab, and then select a time period in System hibernates. Your computer hibernates after it has been idle for the specified amount of time.
Notes
To open Power Options, click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click Power Options.
When you put your computer into hibernation, everything in computer memory is saved on your hard disk, and your computer is switched off. When you turn the computer back on, all programs and documents that were open when you turned the computer off are restored on the desktop.
To put your computer into hibernation, you must have a computer that is set up by the manufacturer to support this option.
Using Power Options in Control Panel, you can adjust any power management option that your computer's unique hardware configuration supports. Because these options may vary widely from computer to computer, the options described may differ from what you see. Power Options automatically detects what is available on your computer and shows you only the options that you can control.
2006-08-12 06:21:33
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answer #3
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answered by TheHumbleOne 7
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Hibernation saves in memory what you were doing on your computer last it is kind of a psudeo shut down that goes into a power saving mode and lets you "shut down" without needing to reboot when you return.
However, some hardware has problems with this and in some cases it may cause the computer to lock-up forcing you to do a cold boot.
2006-08-12 06:23:56
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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So the ingredient about hibernation is that it occurs at the same time as the computing gadget is idle for a at the same time as. that's to keep the battery/skill. you do not ought to positioned it to sleep each of the time, it is going to bypass to sleep if no man or woman's fiddling with it. the skill button works to get it going back. Plug it in and turn it on. examine the different solutions advice to make it no longer try this, or regulate the era of time in the previous it does it promptly. that's ok. i have were given an inspiron too.
2016-11-24 21:45:18
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answer #5
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answered by casalenda 4
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When your computer hibernates, it just saves its current state on the hard disk, so that when you turn it back on, Windows will not have to reload, but you'll be right back where you were.
2006-08-12 06:19:36
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answer #6
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answered by LorettoBoy 4
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Hibernation will power off you rcomputer but save you work session. Which means, when you will poewer it on, the OS is allready booted and all your windows that were previously opened, will be there so that you may continue your work.
2006-08-12 06:20:27
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answer #7
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answered by Dragosh 3
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Huh ?
I know what hibernation means but I'm not quite sure if I understood your question though?
2006-08-12 06:19:16
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answer #8
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answered by bb_kitkat 2
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I use DISABLE. The darn computer might HANG when it gets into hibernation mode.
My philosophy is, if I want to turn it OFF, I turn it OFF. If I want it ON, I'll turn it ON.
2006-08-12 06:21:19
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Hibernation is sleep mode for computer... your computer seems to be shutdown.......BUT ITS ACTUALLY SLEEPING.
2006-08-12 06:20:33
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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