ACPI and S3 Sleep on the Linux Desktop?
"For those of you not familiar with S3, this feature allows you to save the current state of your machine to RAM, power down all of your internal devices (PCI cards, AGP, CPU) and shut down down all your fans. The machine is now in a deep sleep, using but only a few watts to keep the RAM refreshed. Pressing a key or the power switch brings you back to your desktop and applications in a matter of seconds. In contrast to leaving your machine on constantly, and with today's high wattage processors and graphics cards, using S3 is not only environmentally friendly, but can save you more than a few bucks on your electric bill. Getting Linux and ACPI working is a whole other story. I have had no luck getting ACPI sleep states working on an Intel D875PBZ motherboard, even with extensive help from the gentlemen on the ACPI mailing list."
You can use Tab Browser Extentions to save your tab session, either on log off automatically, or manually. Be warned, there is some slightly weird menu placement, partially due to the fact that the author is not a native English speaker. I believe Opera does this automatically, with Nordic instead of Japanese authors.
You like splinters in your crotch? -Jon Caldara
Same goes for recognizing the plugging in or removal of an external monitor during sleep, as well as all the USB devices I've tried.
FY(and others)I XP also does all this quite well IME. Win2k somewhat less so. I've no experience using Windows 9x on laptops.
The only thing that gets a bit flaky IME is detecting external monitors when multi-monitor (ie: spanning) is being used. My D600 used to often either not detect the monitor had been unplugged (hence leaving the bit of the Desktop that had been spanned inaccessible) and/or not detect when a new monitor had been plugged in (hence requiring eith er a visit to Display Properties or another Sleep/wake cycle).
Granted if you took the battery out it would probably dump everything in ram, unless there's some kind of internal backup battery specifically for last minute graceful shutdown everything. But I guess that's the trade-off for not having to wait while half a gig of ram transfers to and from the disk.
PBs seem to have a backup battery to keep the RAM refreshed while the main battery is not present. How long it lasts I never checked accurately, but my old PB 667 certainly used to survive the typical trip through the X-Ray machine suspended - so at least a few minutes (it won't keep for a day, however).