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20 lip 2009 · Hibernate writes everything in memory to your hard drive, then turns basically everything off. Sleep is useful when you want to be able to start up instantly, and you won't be without power (if you're using a laptop) for less than a day.
12 kwi 2023 · Sleep saves your current work to RAM, and your computer continues to draw a little bit of power while in sleep mode. Hibernate saves your current work to your hard drive or SSD, and consumes no power.
14 wrz 2013 · Hibernation is the only way to turn off a computer completely and later, turn it on and get back the exact same state when you left it. It has nothing to do with battery or laptop or boot time saver, ssd, new technology, old times and original purpose. The purpose has never changed. The way people use their computer nowadays don't change this.
When you enable hibernation on Windows, it creates a hidden file called hiberfil.sys in the root of the boot drive. The file is slightly larger than the amount of RAM in your system, as it needs to be large enough to hold the contents of the systems RAM.
15 sty 2010 · Presumably programs which were running when the computer was locked, put to sleep or into hibernation are suspended whilst in any of these states - or are they? And when or why should one state be used rather than the other?
24 cze 2024 · Hibernate is Shutdown but with saved contents. During booting, the system will detect that it was hibernated the last time, and will restore the contents of the previous session from the hiberfil.sys at the start of the system. Pros. Saves Time in comparison to Shutdown: Hibernate is closer to Shutdown than to Sleep. In comparison to shutdown ...
Use hibernation when you know that you won't use your laptop or tablet for an extended period and won't have an opportunity to charge the battery during that time. First check to see if this option is available on your PC and if it is, turn it on.