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  3. Linux will ship on more PCs next year than Microsoft Windows

Linux will ship on more PCs next year than Microsoft Windows

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  • W whatUrunning com

    I've always had network problems resuming from hibernate, maybe its because I regularily connect to several VPNs. Does your PC become sluggish after a few days without a fresh reboot?

    www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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    Rajesh R Subramanian
    wrote on last edited by
    #20

    whatUrunning.com wrote:

    Does your PC become sluggish after a few days without a fresh reboot?

    If you are running applications that leak memory, then yes.

    It is a crappy thing, but it's life -^ Carlo Pallini

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    • G Graham Bradshaw

      But why turn off instead of hibernating? A hibernated PC consumes no power at all, but saves all the "state", so when you turn on again, you're instantly* back where you started. * subject to copying a memory image from disk, of course

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      Graham Shanks
      wrote on last edited by
      #21

      Graham Bradshaw wrote:

      But why turn off instead of hibernating

      Because you need to have enough disk space to store the memory image and when you're short of disk space... Because if a laptop connected to the company network is hibernated you resume when no longer connected to the network then Windows searches for absolutely ages for network drives that no longer exist...

      Graham Librarians rule, Ook!

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      • G Graham Shanks

        Graham Bradshaw wrote:

        But why turn off instead of hibernating

        Because you need to have enough disk space to store the memory image and when you're short of disk space... Because if a laptop connected to the company network is hibernated you resume when no longer connected to the network then Windows searches for absolutely ages for network drives that no longer exist...

        Graham Librarians rule, Ook!

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        Graham Bradshaw
        wrote on last edited by
        #22

        Graham Shanks wrote:

        Because you need to have enough disk space to store the memory image and when you're short of disk space...

        True, but the hibernation file goes in the root of the system drive (and its location can't be changed). If you are that short of space on the system drive, you're asking for trouble anyway.

        Graham Shanks wrote:

        Because if a laptop connected to the company network is hibernated you resume when no longer connected to the network

        Again, true, but I'm thinking more of the "go home for the evening... ... come back in the morning" scenario, when the network would still be there.

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        • G Graham Bradshaw

          Graham Shanks wrote:

          Because you need to have enough disk space to store the memory image and when you're short of disk space...

          True, but the hibernation file goes in the root of the system drive (and its location can't be changed). If you are that short of space on the system drive, you're asking for trouble anyway.

          Graham Shanks wrote:

          Because if a laptop connected to the company network is hibernated you resume when no longer connected to the network

          Again, true, but I'm thinking more of the "go home for the evening... ... come back in the morning" scenario, when the network would still be there.

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          Graham Shanks
          wrote on last edited by
          #23

          Free disk space: 444 MB Disk space requried to hibernate: 2,048 MB And yes, it requires careful management :(

          Graham Librarians rule, Ook!

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          • W whatUrunning com

            Its quite a bold statement but not quite what it seems, full article here[^]

            www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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            Dan Neely
            wrote on last edited by
            #24

            If they'd just stop loading the @#)($ bloatware they could get sub 30s boots from their windows images as well.

            Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots. -- Robert Royall

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            • W whatUrunning com

              Its quite a bold statement but not quite what it seems, full article here[^]

              www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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              Tom Deketelaere
              wrote on last edited by
              #25

              I'v found that linux actually boots slower than windows (ofcourse the laptop where I have linux on is over 7years old), could ofcourse be because I don't know much about linux and it's set up is probably wrong but still. I installed it because I wanted to test linux and because windows didn't work to well anymore on the laptop but it always booted faster. Linux takes about 2-3min before it's booted (like I said very old laptop) and windows XP (on the same laptop) took about 1 min but then took ages to open an application where linux works very nice once booted. Anyway like I said it's an very old laptop and I probably have linux set up completly wrong

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              • T Tom Deketelaere

                I'v found that linux actually boots slower than windows (ofcourse the laptop where I have linux on is over 7years old), could ofcourse be because I don't know much about linux and it's set up is probably wrong but still. I installed it because I wanted to test linux and because windows didn't work to well anymore on the laptop but it always booted faster. Linux takes about 2-3min before it's booted (like I said very old laptop) and windows XP (on the same laptop) took about 1 min but then took ages to open an application where linux works very nice once booted. Anyway like I said it's an very old laptop and I probably have linux set up completly wrong

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                whatUrunning com
                wrote on last edited by
                #26

                There are several light linux distributions suited to older hardware which you could try. Checkout TinyMe[^]

                www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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                • W whatUrunning com

                  There are several light linux distributions suited to older hardware which you could try. Checkout TinyMe[^]

                  www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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                  Tom Deketelaere
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #27

                  I'll check it out thanks I only use the laptop for msn and skype anyway (and some surfing) so doesn't have to be much :)

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                  • W whatUrunning com

                    Its quite a bold statement but not quite what it seems, full article here[^]

                    www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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                    Pete OHanlon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #28

                    Well woo-hoo - so Linux will be installed on machines that also have Windows installed. I can't see MS being too worried about this - they'll still get paid, and consumers will still run application written for Windows.

                    Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                    My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys

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                    • T Tom Deketelaere

                      I'v found that linux actually boots slower than windows (ofcourse the laptop where I have linux on is over 7years old), could ofcourse be because I don't know much about linux and it's set up is probably wrong but still. I installed it because I wanted to test linux and because windows didn't work to well anymore on the laptop but it always booted faster. Linux takes about 2-3min before it's booted (like I said very old laptop) and windows XP (on the same laptop) took about 1 min but then took ages to open an application where linux works very nice once booted. Anyway like I said it's an very old laptop and I probably have linux set up completly wrong

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                      benjymous
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #29

                      The reason for this is quite simple - XP cheats - it lets you get to the desktop before it's actually finished booting (it continues loading services in the background) This is quite a simple thing to demonstrate. Assuming your PC has a login screen, boot the PC and log in as soon as it will let you, and try running stuff. Next reboot, and leave it sat on the login screen for a few minutes, and try the same stuff again. It should be much more responsive this time around, since you've given it a chance to load all the background stuff.

                      Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit! Buzzwords!

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                      • O OregonGhost

                        The funny thing is that the article says that a stripped-down Linux will be available in 30 seconds. Microsoft claims Windows 7 to boot in 22 seconds.

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                        Dave Parker
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #30

                        Boot or log-in and become usable? I can reach the log-in dialog in next to no time (prob <30 secs anyway), but then there's about 6 or 7 minutes of constant hard disk thrashing and unresponsiveness after logging in for 10 minutes before anything becomes usable. On my work PC, one you factor in loading visual studio 2005, excel (for timesheet), outlook and an instance of explorer this goes up to around 20 minutes after logging in before those programs are loaded and respond to mouse clicks.

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                        • B benjymous

                          The reason for this is quite simple - XP cheats - it lets you get to the desktop before it's actually finished booting (it continues loading services in the background) This is quite a simple thing to demonstrate. Assuming your PC has a login screen, boot the PC and log in as soon as it will let you, and try running stuff. Next reboot, and leave it sat on the login screen for a few minutes, and try the same stuff again. It should be much more responsive this time around, since you've given it a chance to load all the background stuff.

                          Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit! Buzzwords!

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                          Tom Deketelaere
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #31

                          Yeah probably true But even after half an hour the laptop was still very slow (just not enough power). Besides the only thing I do on that thing is msn/skype and surfing so not going to install xp for that.

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                          • W whatUrunning com

                            Its quite a bold statement but not quite what it seems, full article here[^]

                            www.whatUrunning.com www.whatUrunning.com blog

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                            R Offline
                            Russell Jones
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #32

                            no more ludicrous than ms selling PCs with downgrade rights and claiming a Vista sale.

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                            • G Graham Bradshaw

                              But most Windows PCs resume from hibernate in less than 30 seconds anyway. Does anyone actually shut down (as opposed to hibernating) a computer these days?

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                              PIEBALDconsult
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #33

                              Absolutely. I don't need my computer to remind me what I was doing before I stopped. I want to get a fresh start in the morning. Would you start your day with a half-cup of the previous day's cold coffee? I think not. Hibernation is for pot-heads.

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                              • P PIEBALDconsult

                                Absolutely. I don't need my computer to remind me what I was doing before I stopped. I want to get a fresh start in the morning. Would you start your day with a half-cup of the previous day's cold coffee? I think not. Hibernation is for pot-heads.

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                                Graham Bradshaw
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #34

                                And shutting down and restarting is quicker than logging off and back on?

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                                • G Graham Bradshaw

                                  And shutting down and restarting is quicker than logging off and back on?

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                                  P Offline
                                  PIEBALDconsult
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #35

                                  My office computer I log off and leave running when I'm not using it. I have to remote into it from home and I have it running a service I like to have running all the time. My home computer I shut down over night. In the morning I turn it on, go grind beans for coffee, check to be sure the kid is getting ready for school, etc. By the time I get back to the computer it's booted and ready to go. If I don't expect to use it for an hour or so, I might log off, and yes that gives me the "clean slate" when I do get back on later.

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