Turning Off the Computer
Rich Braun
richb-RBmg6HWzfGThzJAekONQAQ at public.gmane.org
Mon Oct 20 14:45:41 EDT 2008
Prius-driving Cantabridgian that I am, I still leave my computers on 24/7. I
simply *cannot* stand waiting for the bootup sequence. For decades, no vendor
has dealt with this issue. (Fastest boot time of any computer I've used? A
VAX 750, circa 1983: about 20 seconds.)
Apple's leading this effort thus far, with proper support of S3
suspend-to-RAM. I can close up my MacBook, forget to turn off the power
button, toss it in the trunk of my car and forget about it for a few days and
then discover that my sessions are all still intact.
S2RAM burns less than a watt of energy in standby. It's the wave of the Linux
future. But alas it's still futuristic, I haven't been able to get it to work
in any real-world Linux situation.
Has anyone else here found a way to get this power-saving feature working the
way it does on a Mac? (Basically it's like a screen-saver...reactivate and
*pop*, your screen and devices are back the way they were before. A lot of
driver re-initialization has to happen under the hood to make it work right.)
This is a central part of my multi-room MythTV design. For now, I have the
choice either of waiting 2 minutes for my TV to come on, or paying the
electric company a bit over $100/year for each MythTV setup that I run 24/7.
I want five of these and I don't want to be paying the equivalent of a new TV
each year for the electricity to run these. It would drive anyone nuts to
have each TV in the house require a full Linux/X reboot when you want to flip
on CNN or, dare I say it, the Sox.
-rich
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