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Vista an Uneasy Sleeper

Emmy King writes "
One thing we just can't wrap our mind about is the terrible, broken, and completely pitiful support for waking Vista up from a Deep Sleep or hibernation.
Anytime you attempt to wake Vista up from Hibernation or "Deep Sleep" (S3-induced sleep mode), it dies. It's either a BSOD, or a driver error, or a broken network, no DWM, lack of sound... the list goes on, and on. So much for an operating system to "power" the future! (No pun intended!) That's with properly-signed drivers and no buggy software on multiple PCs..."

313 of 395 comments (clear)

  1. Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Linux: Ritalin for your new vista box

    1. Re:Linux by WilliamSChips · · Score: 4, Funny

      Linux: It doesn't suck.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    2. Re:Linux by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1, Informative

      Linux: It doesn't suck. Indeed. Ubuntu 6.10 wakes up from hibernation just fine, and quickly, even on my old computers. How hard can it be?

    3. Re:Linux by WindozeSux · · Score: 4, Funny

      How hard can it be?
      When Ballmer is throwing chairs all over the office, it is pretty hard to program ACPI stuff. :-)

      --
      Fallout 3 will suck.
    4. Re:Linux by bmo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Linux: It doesn't suck."

      No...NO.

      They ALL suck. It's just a matter of degree. Indeed the motivation of people migrating from Win3.1 to Win95 was that 95 "sucked less" and the remark was so common that I swear it became a Microsoft marketing line.

      All operating systems suck. You can always point to a particular failing of an OS and say that part sucks or that part has less or more suckage than a corresponding function in another OS.

      That said, many OSes, especially OS/X, Linux and the BSDs contain less total amounts of suckage than anything coming out of Redmond at any price.

      --
      BMO

    5. Re:Linux by Ucklak · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed the motivation of people migrating from Win3.1 to Win95 was that 95 "sucked less" and the remark was so common that I swear it became a Microsoft marketing line.

      They say each successive version is "more stable and secure!"

      --
      if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
    6. Re:Linux by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Offtopic? I guess the anti-non-suckage mods have mod points today...

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    7. Re:Linux by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      "All operating systems suck. Not all operating systems truly blow." -William Wallace

      --
      It's been a long time.
    8. Re:Linux by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Apple/Macs have had trouble with deep sleep for years. Once we start seeing problems on a machine (usually desktop, not laptop), we set logic board not to sleep. Solves so many problems.

      If Apple's having this much trouble with their limited amount of hardware to support, how do you expect a mere software company to manage it?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    9. Re:Linux by topham · · Score: 1


      Maybe that's what you guys do for technical support. The rest of us just put our machines to sleep and wake them; DAILY.

      Out of the hundreds of times I've done this on my iMac I've had problems less than a half dozen times.

      While the ratio of problems on a PC seems to be close to 50%.

      Microsofts implementation is junk.

    10. Re:Linux by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      They say each successive version is "more stable and secure!"

      That just shows you how far from stable and secure they really started.

      --
      We are all just people.
    11. Re:Linux by Zonnald · · Score: 1
      Can you please specify the PC brand that has 50% problems.
      My experience over several manufacturers is that most brands work close to 100% of the time, some brands are complete crap.
      When you say 'iMac' you are being VERY specific about the hardware configuration. Statistically if one machine (of brand*) works well with the software then all, baring defective equipment, should work well.

      *Where configuration of hardware is consistant

    12. Re:Linux by topham · · Score: 1


      I don't remember the specifics of the hardware configurations, it was several. From Thinkpad and Toshiba laptops, to desktops with ASUS motherboards, and more.

      And never have I seen hibernate/sleep be reliable enough to trust it with Windows as the OS.

      My biggest problem isn't even that it doesn't work. It's that Microsoft doesn't even try dealing with the fact it doesn't work. They could easily send an update list of hardware signatures that work, or don't work, a long with driver versions. If you system fails to qualify it could either refuse to sleep (with a message indicating why), or at least show a warning to the user; including an indication of which piece of hardware or driver is the problem.

      I don't expect Microsoft to perform miracles with every companies piece of junk hardware; I expect they could act responsibly and try to prevent problems.

    13. Re:Linux by jseale · · Score: 1

      If M$ gets their way, they'd have you use openSUSE, every bit as good as Ubuntu IMHO. BTW: Anyone tried running anything but YellowDog or Fedora on a PS3?

    14. Re:Linux by MicrosoftRepresentit · · Score: 1

      Indeed. If my MacBook is on batteries, its fine, but if the power if you pull the power adapter while its sleeping, it gets confused. It wakes up eventually, but it takes a few open and closes of the lid.

    15. Re:Linux by jonadab · · Score: 1

      There are two fundamentally different kinds of suckage. There's the kind where it just isn't designed to provide for everything you want, which I'm going to call Class One suckage, and there's the kind where it's *supposed* to do what you want, but in one way or another doesn't do it very well, which I'm going to call Class Two suckage for the purposes of this post. This latter category can be further subdivided into interface issues (Class 2A if you will) and functionality issues (Class 2B).

      All systems have Class 1 suckage to the extent that you ever want them to do anything more (or different) than they were designed to do.

      However, within the limits of their design, some systems don't have Class 2 suckage, at least not very much. PC-DOS 3.3 is an excellent example. It didn't do a lot of the things we expect an operating system to do these days, but what it *did* do, it did quite well. You can argue that there was some Class 2 suckage in the filesystem, but even that wasn't too bad. (Indeed, with a couple of Class 1 improvements (LFNs and a larger max filesystem size) FAT32 is still an excellent choice for storing many kinds of data, and better in many ways than the filesystems normally used with Linux. The LFN implementation has Class 2 suckage, but it was not present in DOS, so there it was only a Class 1 issue.) You can talk about all the stuff DOS didn't do (e.g., multitasking), but then you're back in Class 1, i.e., you're asking it to do stuff it was never intended to do.

      That said, I haven't used DOS in a long time, for obvious reasons, because Class 1 suckage *does* matter. But it is my opinion that Class 2 suckage is much *worse*, and Windows is loaded with it. (I speak here of versions of Windows prior to Vista. I have not experienced Vista. One supposes, given the number of years since XP came out and the amount of rewriting they probably did, that Vista might not have precisely the same suckage properties as previous versions. I also am not really talking about NT3 or NT4, nor CE, nor the versions prior to 3.0, because I never experienced much of those either, so I'm not qualified to comment on them. But the other versions are all loaded with Class 2 suckage.)

      Linux distributions have some Class 2 suckage, but I haven't seen much in the kernel itself. Indeed, the kernel thing that is most noticeable to me as a difference between kernels is the virtual memory handling, which (apart from the minor issue of not auto-allocating swap space when needed) is, in my experience, substantially superior to that of any other OS I have used and, in particular, better than both Windows (same version caveats as above) and FreeBSD.

      On a lighter note, the Gnome folks seem to have really gotten ahold of this principle, because they remove more Class 2 suckage every release, introducing Class 1 suckage in its place.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    16. Re:Linux by bmo · · Score: 1

      I don't know how I got modded flamebait or overrated, but I guess them's the breaks for speaking the truth.

      Class 1 suckage is easier to work around than Class 2. At least you can _add_ functionality.

      With regards to long filenames in FAT, I'm sure you've seen the specification for long filenames in FAT. It's...'orrifyin', guvnuh, absolutely 'orrifyin'. As long as one still uses 8.3 filenames in FAT32, there's not much possibility of losing the long-filename "let's string this from over here to over there" organization.

      NT3.5 and 4 had less Class2 suckage. It seems that as software projects age, more Class2 is added over time, notwithstanding your comment about Gnome, which might be classified as "conservation of suckage".

      --
      BMO

    17. Re:Linux by revmoo · · Score: 1

      Funny, I just tried hibernating on my Vista laptop, it worked fine.

      Too bad linux won't support half the hardware on this machine...

      --
      I would expect such blatant racism on Fark, but on Slashdot? Mods please ban this asshole.
    18. Re:Linux by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 1

      "Can you please specify the PC brand that has 50% problems."
      That would be the one he just made up in his head.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
  2. And with 9 shut down options to boot... by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So which of those 9 shut-down options can we eliminate now? Probably all but the one that goes "shut the hell off"?

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 4, Funny

      They have to keep it, as it's an important usability option. Now your computer can act like you first thing in the morning. HAL, here we come!

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    2. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Nine options?? Damn!!
      What options must I think of???

      Option 1. Shutdown Vista.
      Option 2. Hybernate mode.
      Option 3. Restart.
      Option 4. Force Shutdown.
      Option 5. Shutdown all Users in Usergroup.
      Option 6. Shutdown all Users in Network
      Option 7. Restart in Safemode.
      Option 8. Restart in Safemode (network conn).

      and finaly last one!

      Option 9. Shutdown every Vista User PC located in the world!!!

      whahahaha!

      Le Marquis

    3. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Eliminate all except for the one that says, "Uninstall Vista and revert to previous version of Windows."

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      I was initially a bit confused by the comment's title "9 shut down options to boot", but given all the confusion with Vista's shutdown features, I can only assume that booting is an intended function of the commands on the Vista shutdown menu.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    5. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Now your computer can act like you first thing in the morning. HAL, here we come!

      You mean, If HAL had just stopped for a cup of coffee, both astronauts would have ended up drifting into space? Then HAL could have finished the mission alone, and the last report would have been "My Chandra, it's full of binary stars!".

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    6. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by abradsn · · Score: 1

      The same thing that we do everyday pinky... Try and take over the world!!!

    7. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by Tower · · Score: 1

      No, this problem has already been solved... the only remaining one is "b'bye".

      Pretty simple ;-)

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    8. Re:And with 9 shut down options to boot... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      Why the *Hell* does a poorly-botched version of init come to mind here??

      --
      C|N>K
  3. S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by Junta · · Score: 5, Informative

    S3 is plain old suspend/sleep. hibernate/deep sleep implies suspend to disk and total power down, and is S4. And the word S3-induced makes no sense, S3 is a state entered into, not an active thing.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by agent+dero · · Score: 3, Funny

      You're absolutely right, they should put those in the shutdown menu as well.

      Seriously, KDE can get it right, Mac OS X can get it right. What's so wrong with: Sleep, Restart, Shutdown (, Logout)

      --
      Error 407 - No creative sig found
    2. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by hey! · · Score: 1

      According to TFA, the problem occurs under suspend (S3) or hibernate (S4).

      IIRC "Deep Sleep" is not the official name of any ACPI state, although some refer to S3 that was ("deep" relative to S1).

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    3. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by jZnat · · Score: 4, Informative

      But he's criticising Windows Vista, not Windows 2000. Have you seen Vista's shutdown menu? Have you read the article on Slashdot about how much time and effort went into making it?

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    4. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by v1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was thinking about that, and it's actually pretty surprising how well some systems sleep. Mac OS X can sleep through anything short of a disk burn. I have seen very rare cases where vendor specific hardware didn't wake up properly, but that's probably a vendor driver issue. The OS seems to have its act together.

      The new intel mac laptops now support hibernate instead of sleep. There is no longer a backup battery in the mac laptops. When you sleep them, they appear to go to sleep instantly, but they are not asleep yet. Display is off, sleep light is on (solid), but it is now paging memory off to disk, and will take my 2gb mbp about 25 seconds to do it. Then you hear the HD park and the sleep light begins pulsing. I try not to stuff it in the bag or jolt it around until it actually parks the HD.

      This means you can pull the battery even, and power it back up later and instead of the usual 4 second wakeup time, you get about 20 seconds of watching a washed out image of the last screen, with a dotted progress bar. (looks a bit like a firmware update in progress) When the dots get to the right it's awake again. It has done this from a complete power-down and memory clear. Impressive. I have not noticed anything that fails to wake up properly even from this mode.

      Another nice perk is that if you sleep it, and it loses power, (battery is removed by accident, someone kicks out the power cord etc) it simply appears to have shut off. (no sleep light) Then when you try to turn it back on, it just wakes from hibernation with the usual washed out screen and 20 second progresssbar instead of the quick wakeup.

      I don't think the mac pro (the desktop) supports hibernate though, but it couldn't be that hard for them to add support for?

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    5. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ribond · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The difference in the apple product model shows through here. Power management problems like those described by the story submitter (love that random complaints can be slashdot front page material) are related to bios in use, drivers in use... apple folk obviously deliver an OS to a limited set of hardware, drivers, bioses (did I pluralize that properly?). Windows tries to be all things to all people. breadth vs. depth, etc...

      When XP came out many (many many many) systems could not boot in ACPI mode. Many systems had a bios that would report as supporting ACPI and then fall over in an unexpected way... what resolved this was.... time in market. Once it became important to boot XP it became important to pay attention to the ACPI spec. The XP installer actually has a backdoor built in for those dark days of 2001... you can bang on "f7" when you boot into textmode setup (the media-boot phase) and setup will ignore ACPI support.

      Vista no longer supports non-acpi machines. Vista also tries to do more with power management and if you have current-ish system from a major OEM (dell, gateway, sony, toshiba, hp, etc) they've already posted BIOS updates to make things go in the brave new world. Partnering with the big guys is where MS can recover some depth in the hardware space.

      Vista now provides a new hybrid sleep mode, combining standby with hibernation. The sleep option will write out a hibernate file so that if the machine takes a nap & runs out of juice (laptop scenario here) you can plug the box in and resume without losing your context. I'm typing on a Dell xps m170 right now -- it works well.

    6. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ichief · · Score: 1

      I think what's also really nice about the sleep mode in Mac OS X is that it is capable of resuming down to the last instruction that was executed by an application. That is, lets say you're compiling some source code or encoding a video. The sleep mode will capture the exact state the computer was in so that when you restore your session, applications resume like nothing ever happened...by far my favorite feature, albeit necessary given there's no way to leave a Macbook Pro running while the lid is closed and in my computer bag. I really was hoping Windows Vista had improved the functionality of power states...hopefully they are able to resolve these issues with future updates.

    7. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by 644bd346996 · · Score: 1

      The mac firmware can be hacked to enable hibernation, even on the intel desktops.

    8. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by OriginalArlen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Both suspend and hibernate work fine on this Thinkpad under GNU/Linux... & have done since I got it, almost 2 years ago.

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    9. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

      The Intel mac use EFI while vista will not intell sp1 and they will only be for vista x64

    10. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can tell it to do something I like even better. It writes everything to disk as you described, but sits in suspended mode instead of hibernate. If your battery goes dead or you yank the battery it will resume from the disk copy, otherwise it pops up instantly just like the Powerbooks. Best of both worlds.

    11. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      I've turned into a bit of a Mac snob since my (get this) mother in-law gave me MacBook Pro for my B-Day. Anyways I can say right now that Apple does not have it right. I have put my "sleeping" Mac in its hard case more then once only to find it hotter then a AMD 1Gig without a cooling fan and down to 3% battery.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    12. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ribond · · Score: 1

      to be clear -- do you mean that this gives mac an edge that windows customers won't have? Or the other way around?

    13. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1
      Mac OS X can sleep through anything short of a disk burn. I have seen very rare cases where vendor specific hardware didn't wake up properly, but that's probably a vendor driver issue.

      Apple lets third parties right drivers? That's news to me!

      When doesn't OSX Intel run on non-Apple machines without hacks then?
      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    14. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by mackyrae · · Score: 1

      Windows Vista Ultimate is $399, so you're right, it's $1 less. Hey, isn't that the same price as their OFFICE SUITE? Wow...

      --
      look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
    15. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by obious · · Score: 1

      Sleep/hibernate is easy when you know exactly your target hardware. You said it yourself "I have seen very rare cases where vendor specific hardware didn't wake up properly"

    16. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm missing something, but if it takes 20 seconds to wake up from sleep, why not just shut the thing down and boot it from scratch? That sounds like an irritatingly long time.

    17. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by FLEB · · Score: 1

      I'm a fan of Hibernate, myself. Less power usage, and I can do things like completely remove power (to swap batteries or move a machine, for instance) and still get the state back. I think something like Windows' "hidden" (hold shift) option is adequate, as most people won't use it, but it's there. I don't know how KDE does it... I only use a Mac at work and Windows at home.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    18. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here you are:

      http://www.almaer.com/blog/archives/001182.html

      Pop open a terminal, type in

      sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 0

      and your MB will go back to suspend only. Replace the 0 with a 1 and you're in the (default) hibernate only mode. Use a 3 and the MBP will do as I described, suspending but also writing everything to disk so it can resume if it loses power.

    19. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      20 seconds of watching a washed out image of the last screen

      In terms of resume from hibernation, this is sadly, very slow.

      Vista is slower than WindowsXP on some machine in waking from hibernate, but even on my 2002 Toshiba Laptop, a resume from hibernate is about 5 secs, including bios time.

      On my main laptop as another example, that is more of a desktop laptop with a true desktop processor and 2GB of RAM, the resume from hibernate on Vista is around 11 secs, including both BIOS and RAID initialization time.

      It truly scares me that the original post/article is taken with any credibility. We have a lot of test machines and environments, and yet we have NO systems that fail to resume from hibernate with Vista, and one laptop that does fail to resume from standby, but we have traced this back to a conflict with the NVidia Video driver, which is not RTMed yet.

      Windows and *nixes were hibernating years before Mac even had the option of hibernate, and they still do it quite well. I would not put OSX or Apple as the 'good' standard in performing this task, nor considering the 'small' sample of hardware they deal with as realistic in a comparison to Linux, xxxBSD, or Windows...

    20. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by abradsn · · Score: 1

      I'd like to go back to the days when you could just press the button on the side of the box.
      Leave the logout as the only option in the menu.
      shutdown, and restart only after logout (on the login screen)
      sleep automaticaly after a period of no activity. (no need for menu choice)

    21. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by lazy_playboy · · Score: 1

      You are missing something. It was described as 20 seconds to start up from hibernate, which macs only do if power was interrupted during a sleep. Otherwise it starts in 4 seconds from sleep.

      My macbook starts from sleep within 1 second and about 10-15 seconds from hibernate (sleep + power interruption).

      As far as the user is concerned macs don't make any distinction between sleep or hibernate. Not so good for energy conservation I guess but better user experience, IMHO.

    22. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Are you using RTM? The hybrid sleep mode as you describe it failed virtually all of the time for me in RC1 on an acpi compliant system.

      --
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    23. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ribond · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm on RTM. "ACPI Compliant system" is (unfortunately) a label a little broader than the package it applies to.

      Look for a bios update first. And note that you can disable the hybrid sleep in the power manament control pane.
      \

    24. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Macs have ports for peripherals. USB, Firewire, PCMCIA, whatever the new thing is called. Those things occasionally need drivers.

      OS X Intel doesn't run on non-Apple machines without hacks first because Apple doesn't want it to, and second because the devices that have OS X drivers are the ones Apple writes and various external devices.

    25. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      This happened to my Macbook twice and the only thing I can figure is that Adium had infinite looped like it's been known to do in older versions before I closed the lid. It happened twice over a period of weeks and then hasn't happened since, so obviously something changed.

      It still does suck to open a bag and find my nice white machine hot enough that it becomes hard to handle because it's been in an insulated backpack with the Core Duo running at full capacity for 2 hours. CoreDuoTemp reported it was at 79C after I rebooted.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    26. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by kabz · · Score: 1

      Be careful that you remember to disconnect any USB devices if you expect it to sleep when you close the lid. Macs will function in a lid closed mode if any USB devices are connected. In this case, closing the lid merely turns the screen off.

      Look for the light on the front to start 'snoring' before you slide it into its traveling bag.

      --
      -- "It's not stalking if you're married!" My Wife.
    27. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

      In windows xp when hibernation is enabled via the control panel, a S3 state will automatically shift to a S4 (hibernate) after a period of time. That seems to be what the article is talking about with the "S3-induced hibernate/deep sleep" phrase.

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
      1 John 4:14
    28. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      I have actually watched it snore, then come back several hours later and had no charge left. I think there must be a miss-behaving application. If I put it to sleep before closing the lid it seems to behave. Thsi all started (I think) around 10.4.7 .

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    29. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by v1 · · Score: 1

      Mine seems to operate in mode 3 from the factory? When I close the lid, the sleep light goes on solid for 20 seconds while it writes the hibernate file. Then click goes the HD and the sleep light pulses. If I open the lid it wakes up almost instantly, but if I pull the battery the sleep light goes out and stays off when I plug the battery back in. (the macbook is OFF) press power, and it wakes from hibernation, takes about 20 seconds.

      So I think that mode 3, at least for the laptops, is the default?

      VirtualBook:~ virtual1$ pmset -g
      Active Profiles:
      Battery Power -1
      AC Power -1*
      Currently in use:
        womp 1
        sms 1
        hibernatefile /var/vm/sleepimage
        acwake 0
        sleep 0
        autorestart 0
        halfdim 1
        hibernatemode 3
        disksleep 0
        displaysleep 0
        lidwake 1

      Indeed mode 3 is default for the laptops. Probably not for the desktops tho? This is the way all the MB/MBP opwerate that I have seen. Will have to test the MP tomorrow.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    30. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by v1 · · Score: 1

      Depends on the amount of RAM installed, it's probably simpler to snapshot 100% of the RAM rather than try to figure out what needs to be saved and what does not. If you have 512 it goes fast (4 sec?) but I have 2gb so it takes a little while to go into or out of hibernation. Doesn't happen though unless you pull the battery, if it is kept powered while asleep it just wakes up normally in a couple sec.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    31. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      It must have been made the default, probably with one of the OS updates. I got my MBP last spring and the default was pure hibernate mode. After I switched it with the command line tool I didn't ever think of it again.

    32. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by redcane · · Score: 1

      As far as I know the only machines that support EFI are Macs. So yes macOS has the advantage if you wish to run on Mactel hardware. Else it's all equal.

    33. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by redcane · · Score: 1

      Is there no way to set a timeout, whereafter it will go into hibernate from standby? Or some way to force hibernate (like shift-click on the standby option?)

    34. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by ribond · · Score: 1

      Strictly speaking the itanium platform has been in the market for years supporting EFI... :) But commercially, you're right... I was actually making a little joke there (very little, I suppose) in wondering out loud if the EFI platform was providing a real benefit.

      We'll see what happens as it leaks further in to intel platforms...

    35. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by alibash · · Score: 1

      actually Mac OS X doesn't get it right. At least on my Macbook (and a few others), if it goes into "suspend to disk" when it comes back up, the trackpack "tap with 2 fingers for right-click" feature doesn't work until I disable/re-enable it in the system settings. Very strange. 6 monthes later, Apple still hasn't fixed it...

    36. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by realnowhereman · · Score: 1

      I think you're confused. That is not specific to OSX; every suspend, MUST save every application down to the instruction running. If it did not, it would be highly likely that everything you were running would crash. Programs don't cope very well if you don't execute bits of it at random.

      --
      Carpe Daemon
    37. Re:S3 is not hibernate/deep sleep. by v1 · · Score: 1

      it's possible the hibernate mode is set by the OS installer, and is not touched by the OS update. My MBP isn't that old, so the newer installers may set it that way.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  4. bummer by yagu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Each new release, each patch, each service pack I keep waiting for the perfect, all-right-I'll-settle-for-well-behaved advanced power control. I find this unsettling Vista may not deliver. One "feature" I always treasure in Windows systems is its "better" support for power control.

    At least Windows with its more cozy relationship with chip and BIOS industry supposedly offers ACPI for fast "sleep" and "rewake" functionality. In fact that was my trick way to get ACPI for linux when it was really important by running a vmware install of linux within a well behaved windows (not always as well behaved as I'd have wished, but better than the problematic ACPI linux support).

    And now, out of the gates (sic) Vista may not deliver? That's going to leave a mark. I'd considered getting a machine for educational purposes (since I do support for everyone I know), but I'd considered waiting for some of the initial bugs to get ironed out. I just didn't expect this big of an initial speedbump. Guess there's not much to do but wait for Microsoft to get it right, or close to right.

    Also, I thought I'd read they were offering super-sized power control a la scheduled up and down times, etc. More vaporware?

    I'm still amazed they get to skate on this kind of stuff.

    1. Re:bummer by timeOday · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Does power management work properly on Apple computers? If so, they're the only ones to get it working right. On Linux you normally can get it working, but it's the kind of job that is likely to take several days with no guaranteed outcome. And 90% of the time you think it's working, you'll still find glitches over time - no sound after resume, won't suspend if USB devices are plugged in, won't suspend if 3d acceleration is enabled, crashes every 10th suspend or so, appears to suspend to RAM just fine but battery drain is far more than it should be... I've concluded that power management is just insanely tricky. APM/ACPI must be inconsistently implemented on every device, otherwise it could never work as poorly as it does.

      I should never have to reboot my laptop. I should be able to pop it into my docking station, resume from hibernation, and have it come up working properly including my desktop monitor and all the other peripherals hooked to the docking station. And the reverse should be true when I leave at night. I've never seen it happen.

    2. Re:bummer by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1
      On Linux you normally can get it working, but it's the kind of job that is likely to take several days with no guaranteed outcome. And 90% of the time you think it's working, you'll still find glitches over time - no sound after resume, won't suspend if USB devices are plugged in, won't suspend if 3d acceleration is enabled, crashes every 10th suspend or so, appears to suspend to RAM just fine but battery drain is far more than it should be... I've concluded that power management is just insanely tricky. APM/ACPI must be inconsistently implemented on every device, otherwise it could never work as poorly as it does.

      I should never have to reboot my laptop. I should be able to pop it into my docking station, resume from hibernation, and have it come up working properly including my desktop monitor and all the other peripherals hooked to the docking station. And the reverse should be true when I leave at night. I've never seen it happen.

      I really wish Linux developers would quit copying Windows. It's embarrassing.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:bummer by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Each new release, each patch, each service pack I keep waiting for the perfect, all-right-I'll-settle-for-well-behaved advanced power control.

      If you want that, get a Mac. My iBook has been waking from sleep reliably (and almost instantaneously!) since 2003, and the new Intel Macs can hibernate, too.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:bummer by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      There's the occasional hiccup which is usually fixed pretty quickly in a software update.

      I've never had a Mac that got rebooted except when there's an OS update that requires it. They just sleep, and they wake up fine. The only problem I've ever had was with the first software update for my MPB. Sometimes on resume you'd have to manually tell it to reconnect you to the wireless network. That got fixed a couple months later.

    5. Re:bummer by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Does power management work properly on Apple computers? If so, they're the only ones to get it working right.

      here's something you may not have known: Sun boxen (some workstations) can actually suspend to disk (and power down) and when you resume (such as the next day when you power up the workstation) the unix o/s resumes gracefully and FULLY architected (not a hack but proper part of solaris).

      it surprised me since you don't think of Sun as an 'APM' implementation company, but it is true for at least some Sun (blade?) workstations.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    6. Re:bummer by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      This process actually works like a top on my IBM T42P with my docking station running Windows XP.

  5. Screw Ups by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    So someone fucks it up and it's irrevocably broken? I've used both sleep and hibernate functions on my laptop since Vista was beta 1 and both have worked beautifully. Both features require decent support from the hardware, not just "signed drivers."

    1. Re:Screw Ups by doctormetal · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Same here. Both my notebook and desktop work without any problems with sleep and hibernation under vista.
      Sleep did not work on either of them under winxp.
      This sound like unfounded ms bashing by someone who got frustated.

    2. Re:Screw Ups by kingturkey · · Score: 1

      I've been using sleep in Beta 2 and RC2 and in Beta 2 it screwed up when resuming (I think I lost power while it was napping) and it corrupted the install. I come home or wake up in the morning to find that it has mysteriously woken itself up, although I'm thinking that this is from the router initiating Wake on LAN.

    3. Re:Screw Ups by GIL_Dude · · Score: 1

      It's worked pretty well for me through the betas and into RTM. The drivers are key; they can be signed but still "not so good". For the Lenovo T60p I am using, Beta 2 worked great with sleep. Then RC1 would sleep OK, but no network when you would come out of sleep. With RC2, the wired network would work, but the wireless was toast after sleep. With RTM, the wired works after sleep, the wireless only works for networks that broadcast their SSID. For ones that don't (like the one we have at work), the wireless is toast after sleep unless you disable and re-enable the adapter in device manager. This problem is clearly the wireless driver though. I'm waiting on a new one, but at least it functions with the workaround.

    4. Re:Screw Ups by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Same, have always had problems with sleep and hibernate, move to Vista, everything works perfectly.

    5. Re:Screw Ups by Dokterdok · · Score: 1

      I'm running Vista RTM and when I use the hibernate function my mouse, or keyboard, or sound card, randomly fails to wake up. When I put Vista on sleep mode, my screen flickers, a huge "Thump" comes out of my speakers, and then the logon screen appears (I'm very satisfied with the shut-down feature, though!). I'm running 1 year old hardware with signed drivers and I expect at least that it's default shut down option (sleep mode) works. But hey, that's just me.

    6. Re:Screw Ups by krotkruton · · Score: 1

      I've only had sporadic problems with sleep and hibernate on other versions of Windows, but for the past 2 or 3 weeks that I've had Vista, there haven't been any issues. Of course, I can't transfer files over the network to my non-Vista computers without Vista disconnecting from the network, use a network printer, burn a whole DVD using Windows DVD Maker... but that's a totally different story.

    7. Re:Screw Ups by abradsn · · Score: 1

      Right, driver problem... not poor design of the network block device API... no never that... nor a problem with quality control for signed drivers... not that either... yep! vista includes no breakthrough in driver management and recovery... great state of the art system guys.

  6. Ghee, I musta been sleeping... by 3seas · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...I didn't know Vista was out yet. Thought it was still in the debuggng stage...

    Or maybe I'm still sleeping and this is a dream. Vista released with major operational flaws. Now that's a Linux promotion!

    1. Re:Ghee, I musta been sleeping... by CortalUX · · Score: 1
      Very confusing situation - it's been released to manufacture at least. The Register article

      Yes, Vista is available (well, it has been released to manufacture) and yes, MSDN subscribers are jamming its servers in an attempt to download a copy. And yes, corporate subscribers are allowed to get early access. But no, you can't go into a store and buy one, despite what it says on the adverts.
    2. Re:Ghee, I musta been sleeping... by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      It's out for business customers, but in unreleased according to many driver developers. ;-) (these consider January 2007 to be the official launch) So then you get these sort of problems I guess. This article is jumping way too quick to conclusions. Heck, this feature even works just fine here, so Vista is not at fault anyway, but it has to be some external source.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:Ghee, I musta been sleeping... by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's a real nice beta they released a few weeks ago. I can't wait to see the final release next year!

    4. Re:Ghee, I musta been sleeping... by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Its out if you have a MSDN subscription. I have one through work and have been using Vista for about a month.

  7. "no buggy software" by woodhouse · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd like to know where this completely bug free software comes from. The last completely bug-free software I saw was Hello World.

    1. Re:"no buggy software" by Kopl · · Score: 1

      It may just not have any other software installed.

      --
      Disagree with me? Tell me why, but follow these rules.
    2. Re:"no buggy software" by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      The last completely bug-free software I saw was Hello World.

      Really? The last time I ran "Hello World" a virus did a low level format of my hard disk...or was that "ILOVEU"???

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    3. Re:"no buggy software" by DohnJoe · · Score: 1

      no bug, the formatting was a feature....

    4. Re:"no buggy software" by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

      $10 for the first person to include a buffer overflow error in a hello world program.

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    5. Re:"no buggy software" by WheresMyDingo · · Score: 2, Funny
      The last completely bug-free software I saw was Hello World.

      Nope, has an output format bug. It should end with an exclamation point, as in: "Hello World!"

    6. Re:"no buggy software" by chengmi · · Score: 2, Funny

      #include

      int main(void) {
          char msg[4];
          sprintf(msg, "Hello, World!");
          printf("%s\n", msg);
          return 0;
      }

    7. Re:"no buggy software" by fbjon · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's not WTF enough to qualify:

      #include <stdio.h>

      int main(void) {
          char msg[10]; //should be enough
          // print user-input number
          gets(msg);
          printf("%d\n", (int) msg);
          // finally, print hello world.
          printf(msg, "Hello, World!");
          printf("%s\n", msg);
          return 1;
      }

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    8. Re:"no buggy software" by rbarreira · · Score: 1

      Actually, most Hello World programs aren't perfect. For example, most of them don't do error checking, and the ones in C often don't use a standard main function...

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    9. Re:"no buggy software" by timster · · Score: 1

      That's why we have GNU hello (http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/), a standards-compliant implementation of hello complete with localization and command-line options.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    10. Re:"no buggy software" by honkycat · · Score: 1

      ...and feeping creatures!!

    11. Re:"no buggy software" by abradsn · · Score: 1

      Only because you saw and compiled the code yourself... or maybe your compiler had been hacked, or the libraries that Hello World depends on were hacked, or maybe you ran the executable without compiling it yourself. Or maybe the operating system modified the executable before/during/after runtime. Are you sure your printf had a null terminated character at the end of the string? :)

      These are typical security bugs that can be avoided, but most companies/organizations/individuals/ ignore them. There are many more, and they can affect any program... even hello world.

    12. Re:"no buggy software" by ecuador_gr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I remember that one. It came out just after Hello Wor;d.

    13. Re:"no buggy software" by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Your version has a grammatical bug: it should output "Hello, World!"

    14. Re:"no buggy software" by TheLink · · Score: 1

      But then you'd have to change the unit test module and the relevant docs and support guides.

      Plus I heard requests from sales and marketing that the next version should be multilingual.

      --
    15. Re:"no buggy software" by fm6 · · Score: 1

      If the program is supposed to be localizable, then its design is fundamentally flawed. The message string needs to be relocated to an external resource, and printf needs to be replaced with something that handles Unicode strings. Given the scale of the changes necessary, the whole program will have to be scrapped and rewritten from scratch. Since we're scrapping the C source code, we might as well move to a more modern language with better i18n support, such as Java.

  8. Hibernating by AlHunt · · Score: 2

    Once I went laptop-only, hibernating became the truth, the light and the way. Before that I never hibernated because I never shut the desktop off.

    Interesting that TFA says Vista hibernated fine in beta but not in the release version. Oddly, Xp hibernated flawlessly on my laptop but openSuSE 10.1 hangs every time. No Linux distro hibernates this particular laptop (toshiba). We'll see if 10.2 will as soon as ATI gets done developing Vista drivers and gives us a driver for Xorg 7.2

    --
    1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    1. Re:Hibernating by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1
      Once I went laptop-only, hibernating became the truth, the light and the way.

      Do you mean suspend? Hibernate is only very slightly better than shutting down and restarting again. Suspend on the other hand, is overwhelmingly fantastic.

    2. Re:Hibernating by Pinkfud · · Score: 1

      I have a laptop with XP, and it's not a good idea to let it hibernate. Sometimes it wakes up fine, other times it crashes horribly. I actually didn't know this was a common problem. I just thought I had a buggy laptop. Now I feel better!

      --
      The world is my oyster. That's why it's always in a stew.
    3. Re:Hibernating by AlHunt · · Score: 1

      >Do you mean suspend? Hibernate is only very slightly better than shutting down and restarting again.
      > Suspend on the other hand, is overwhelmingly fantastic.

      Nope - hibernate (linux equiv - "suspend to disk"). Close the lid, it writes to hiberfil.sys and powers off until I open the lid. In XP this works flawlessly on my laptop and it comes back in under 10 seconds. This is my only gripe with OpenSuSE 10.1 on this beast - "suspend" of any kind (disk or ram) crashes, as with every other distro I tried. I'm anxious to upgrade to 10.2 - I really hate shutting down and restarting, just not enough to go back to XP.

      --
      1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    4. Re:Hibernating by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, the only advantage of hibernate over suspend is that hibernate doesn't take any power, because it actually shuts off the computer, while suspend "only" takes several orders of magnitude less power than normal use.

      Now, the big advantage of suspend over hibernate is that it's many times faster, usually on the order of 2-3 seconds, though it tends to require more cooperation from the hardware. Having said that, suspend works perfectly on both of my ThinkPads (T60 and T40).

  9. "power" the future by oKtosiTe · · Score: 3, Funny

    It doesn't look to me like there was no pun intended...

  10. Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Make that:
    Linux: It sucks less.

    1. Re:Not quite by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Make that:

      Linux: It sucks less in this particular application when a comparison between the worst case scenario for Vista that makes headlines is compared to a single happy ubuntu user.

      --
      It's been a long time.
  11. Blame ACPI, not Vista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm vociferously anti-MS; but in this case, I believe they deserve a small pardon. Go read the ACPI specifications sometime. You will cry and beg for mercy. ACPI is horrible. Considering the small number of requirements the real world has for such an interface, the specification is vast beyond imagining. Linux has also had long standing problems producing a proper ACPI layer, for this very reason: ACPI is a pig.

    Now it is worth noting that MS themselves contributed to the development of this specification. The cynical side of me believes that confounding the competition by way of impenetrable specifications is simply Microsoft's modis operandi. Look at Microsoft's OpenXML specification for example: while in theory it meets the European requirement for documenting file formats and protocols, in practice it's ~6,000 pages will certainly confound all but the most determined attempts at interoperability. But here's the rub: Microsoft has to eat their own dog food, and they are suffering the consequences. Microsoft's operating system and applications are becoming so piggish that even Microsoft can't manage them.

    1. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by ivan256 · · Score: 1, Troll

      The reason ACPI is so ridiculously convoluted for the simple tasks it needs to perform is that it was developed by Microsoft in order to easily map to Microsoft Windows registry constructs.

      If they can't figure out how to make their own technology work correctly, I don't see how it can possibly be anybody's fault but theirs.

    2. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1

      Interesting theory; makes sense that num_FA_contribs will logarithmically whilst num_MS_devs can only scale linearly.

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    3. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by fbjon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, it includes its own language too.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    4. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      ACPI has a bad reputation and really justifies it based on how convoluted it is. I really believe that Microsoft should be pushing motherboard manufacturers to implement EFI based boards. BIOS no longer fills the requirements for a modern system and has been hacked to pieces to fill the new requirements. Apple made a good move adopting Intel's 'next-gen' BIOS known as EFI. It is now time for the rest of the x86 based industry to do the same.

      At the same time if the blogs by Microsoft developers are anything to go by, then there is something seriously wrong in the whole development methodolgy at Microsoft. For an OS as large, complex and important as MS-Windows the development processes should have been much more streamlined. I suppose this one advantage of separating the base OS from the upper-level OS - this is something used by most other OSs such as "MacOS X" and Linux. MacOS X has Darwin with graphics user environment fitted on top, Linux has the base system with KDE or Gnome fitted on top.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    5. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by abradsn · · Score: 1

      First, do you have a link to this EFI tech?

      I'd just like to add that the OS in Windows is tightly coupled between the lower and upper rings for reasons of efficiency and speed.

      It was likely a correct decision to use that tightly coupled design in the past, and likely incorrect now as the speed difference is negligable now. Time will tell.

      By the way, streamlining a process like that is (very) hard. I look forward to the day where it is a reality though.

    6. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1
      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    7. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      I attended two MS sponsored conferences last year where MS reps put out a call to action at the end of a long talk on power management for OEMs to move to EFI. Both times someone from the audience answered back with words to the effect that it's too expensive to do right now and doesn't add real customer value.
      We'll see.

    8. Re:Blame ACPI, not Vista by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      ACPI is Microsoft's baby, and since it is Windows centric, it keeps other OS vendors at a disadvantage. EFI is open and designed by somebody else. What incentive does Microsoft have to invest in EFI?

      Given that 32-bit Windows doesn't actually support EFI right now, the scenario you describe seems dubious. I'm almost willing to bet the commenters from the audience were plants.

  12. Not a single issue with sleep or standby by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Huh. I've got two systems here with Vista running on them, a Dell e1505 notebook and a not-as-new homebuilt Athlon X2 system, and on both of them both hibernate and sleep "Just Work." In fact, Vista's been less problematic in all areas than XP could ever dream of being.

    They don't quite Bill's 6 second boot time either - but both systems clock in right around 10 seconds, and that's pretty hard to complain about.

    1. Re:Not a single issue with sleep or standby by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      I also have an Dell, though it's a e1405/640m. Hibernation and sleep mode work perfectly under vista. It worked perfectly under XP MCE also as far as I could tell.

      --
      Gone!
    2. Re:Not a single issue with sleep or standby by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      I can wake from sleep in a second or two. Waking from hibernation takes longer.

      I have an g4 ibook also, it takes about the same amount of time.

      --
      Gone!
    3. Re:Not a single issue with sleep or standby by Megane · · Score: 1

      And yet, as a Mac user I can manage to do it! My 3-year-old iBook has always woken from sleep in approximately one second. Six seconds -- let alone ten -- would be unbearably long in comparison.

      That is why I immediately switched to OS X back in the Public Beta days. MacOS 9 would take forever (like 8-10 seconds or so) to wake from sleep. I think it was something going on in Open Transport, FWIW. The instant wakeup was that much of a difference that I didn't care that it didn't properly sleep all the hardware on my Pismo (sleep mode was a lot more power-hungry than on MacOS 9 until a while into 10.0.x or even 10.1, IIRC)

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    4. Re:Not a single issue with sleep or standby by prator · · Score: 1

      Give me a break. Even though the screen may turn on and the mouse pointer moves around a bit, is it usable in one second? I've got a G4 PBook, and it takes at least 10 seconds to get an application to respond decently. Longer if I made the mistake of leaving a disc in the DVD drive.

    5. Re:Not a single issue with sleep or standby by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Even though the screen may turn on and the mouse pointer moves around a bit, is it usable in one second?

      Well, maybe a second and a half. Certainly less than 10, though -- if it's still under warranty, you might want to have that checked.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  13. Re:No buggy software? by Devv · · Score: 1
    You know, "Vista" is "Windows" with new color. Just like the iPod nanos.

    Oh! Almost forgot. There is that new startup sound as well. Maybe the hibernation would be less buggy if they spent less time developing a startup sound that doesn't annoy me. Fact is, every sound that a computer gives away without me clicking something and expecting a sound annoys me.

    --
    +1 Agree -1 Disagree
  14. Press SHIFT to se all commands! by newr00tic · · Score: 1

    In XP's shutdown-menu you can press and hold SHIFT to see more options, -the standby becomes hibernate, if nothing else-; isn't this a possibility in Vista, aswell?

    --
    A horse can't be sick, you know, even if he wants to.
    1. Re:Press SHIFT to se all commands! by Fred_A · · Score: 5, Funny

      You can also press Alt, Super and Meta to see even more options such as doze, slumber, nap, snooze, relax, take a rest, nod off, or crash. I'm not sure what they do though.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    2. Re:Press SHIFT to se all commands! by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      ... doze, slumber, nap, snooze, relax, take a rest, nod off, or crash.

      I'm pretty sure I know what the "crash" option does.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    3. Re:Press SHIFT to se all commands! by kinzillah · · Score: 2, Funny

      reboots the system into windows?

      --
      Douglas P. Price
    4. Re:Press SHIFT to se all commands! by rthille · · Score: 1

      Given that it's microsoft we're talking about, I'd expect that the 'crash' option continues to run merrily along, or at least 'hang' the system, not really crash.

      (Typing this from my mac, but just about to switch to my work PC to do 'real' work...sigh.)

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    5. Re:Press SHIFT to se all commands! by mikiN · · Score: 1

      Add Hyper to that and maybe you'll see 'Get High'/'Get Stoned' as well.

      And a deep insider trick: Do a quadruple bucky and you open the Doors of Perception..!

      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
  15. Re:OK, we get it. by domovoyny · · Score: 1

    Thank you. There must be something else to complain about out there.

  16. Re:OK, we get it. by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

    Not to my knowledge. I looked, briefly, at Digg, but the commenting is just horrible in every respect.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  17. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 2, Informative
    [...] but why in the wide wide world of sports are you putting it in sleepmode?

    It might be the end of the day, time to go home, huggle the wife and get some sleep and stuff? Nice to have everything the way you when tomorrow morning.comes. Or your server might need replacing the UPS. Hibernate is one easy way to get this done.

    Just guessing, of course. I use hibernation every day with my Debian laptop.

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
  18. fud ahead by Silicon+Avatar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've had fewer problems with my laptop since installing vista than I ever had with linux.

    Pretty much everything worked 'out-the-box' -- including video (although I ultimately had to go download the vista drivers from ATI to get any kind of acceleration), sound, even suspend/sleep (although, microsoft renaming hibernate to sleep confused me at first).

    There are plenty of places where microsoft seems to suck across the board .. but vista sleeping and waking up works just fine.

    BTW - this sleeping is a feature that I never did get 100% working properly in linux -- and what I WAS able to get working right required I bounce around a few websites ultimatly doing my own research ... whereas it seems to work now in vista just fine?

    1. Re:fud ahead by jamesshuang · · Score: 1

      I should say, I've only seen vista running on a friend's computer, so I've never actually installed it myself. However, if you use Ubuntu, all the sleep/hibernate stuff also works out of the box. When I first tried to get S3 working, it was on a dell 700m running gentoo, about two years ago. It was a nightmare. The particular kernel version that I used wouldn't suspend at all. Downgrading to another version let me suspend, but waking up NEVER worked. Waited for 6 months. Found that they were developing the whole vbe system to get the screen working again. Tried some test package that I literally HEARD about across 20 different sites, but could never FIND. Finally got it to work! The first attempt to get an S3 suspend took a full 6 months to get working, and countless hours to figure out.

      Flash forward to 2006, Ubuntu Dapper. Since a few versions ago, S3 would work "out of the box" on the same 700m. Logout->Suspend, and bam it goes down. I felt so stupid for wasting so much time with S3 just a year back x_x. A few other systems which previously did not work under any attempts started working randomly. A Fujitsu S6230 would suspend with older ubuntus and with the vbe restore system. However, when waking up, the screen would turn on with one color, and crash. Dapper, works out of the box much to my surprise. A Samsung Q10 (IIRC) had a completely broken ACPI. The battery level wouldn't even read properly in gentoo without kernel patches. Dapper - S3 again, works out of the box. Just log out->suspend, and it's down. These rather obscure systems were working without any further intervention! Linux suspend was once a nightmare, I admit. But they sure got their act together recently, and it definitely competes favorably with both Apple and Microsoft!

    2. Re:fud ahead by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      I've had fewer problems with my laptop since installing vista than I ever had with linux.
       
      Pretty much everything worked 'out-the-box' -- including video (although I ultimately had to go download the vista drivers from ATI to get any kind of acceleration), sound, even suspend/sleep (although, microsoft renaming hibernate to sleep confused me at first).
       
      There are plenty of places where microsoft seems to suck across the board .. but vista sleeping and waking up works just fine.
       
      BTW - this sleeping is a feature that I never did get 100% working properly in linux -- and what I WAS able to get working right required I bounce around a few websites ultimatly doing my own research ... whereas it seems to work now in vista just fine? Funny though, all the things you mention my XP does perfectly.
    3. Re:fud ahead by spyrochaete · · Score: 1

      I'll go one further and say that I've had fewer problems with my laptop with Vista than I ever had with XP. Most problems solved pertain to wireless connectivity, but I've had zero problems since the beta with putting my computer in suspend or hibernate modes.

  19. Huh? by Jugalator · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This feature works just great here, making it quite impossible it's due to Vista (unless my Vista is magic), but rather due to hardware drivers after all.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    1. Re:Huh? by Jugalator · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh, and also note that many vendors consider January to be the launch date of Vista, such as Creative Labs and NVIDIA, and aren't focusing much on high performance and stable drivers for the RTM yet. With hibernation, at least three factors are essential: motherboard/BIOS support, correct BIOS settings, proper drivers. Many systems are lacking at least one of those, breaking the whole thing, causing e.g auto-reboots instead of power downs, etc. One could argue if MS shouldn't have used this feature so extensively with such poor support among manufacturers, but that's still an entirely different issue than a mythical "bug" in Vista.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    2. Re:Huh? by keraneuology · · Score: 1
      RTFA issue, perhaps?
      Throughout the beta , Deep Sleep in Windows Vista went great. But in the final version of Windows Vista, something is very, very majorly wrong. On 6 of the 8 tested systems,3 recovering Windows Vista from a hibernate or Deep Sleep results in [human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together - mass hysteria].

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    3. Re:Huh? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      RTFA issue perhaps?

      some of these can be solved when ATi and nVidia release their final (hopefully bug-free) drivers for Vista.

  20. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by geoff+lane · · Score: 1

    MS claims that Vista is the cure for everything from Global Warming to the common cold.

    Sometimes you just have to hold a company to its promises. If the OS is released, it is being installed on computers that will be sold for this Christmas. If there are bugs that affect simple operations it is a serious problem.

  21. Re:MSN Ramps Up the Linux FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Those were no typos. I just destroyed you!!!

    BTW, it's funny how the parent is flamebait, while replacing a few words makes you insightful. Moderators, make up your mind.

  22. Uneasy lies the head... by hey! · · Score: 4, Funny

    Canst thou, O partial sleep, give thy repose
    To the wet sea-boy in an hour so rude,
    And in the calmest and most stillest night,
    With all appliances and means to boot,
    Deny it to a king? Then happy low, lie down!
    Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown.


    -Henry IV. Part II.
    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:Uneasy lies the head... by Marbleless · · Score: 1

      Methought I heard a voice cry 'Sleep no more!
      MacVista does murder sleep

      --
      --I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken.
    2. Re:Uneasy lies the head... by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      Oh well *THERE'S* your problem.

      You need to upgrade to Henry V. Don't forget to install the SP1, codnenamed Agincourt.

      Bemo

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    3. Re:Uneasy lies the head... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You need to upgrade to Henry V.

            That's a good version, but for some reason they plan to make it obsolete rather quickly and replace it with Henry VI, which is far more inferior. This, plus the ensuing civil war and an unavoidable Richard III rootkit, tends to drive up the TOC.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    4. Re:Uneasy lies the head... by metamatic · · Score: 1
      for some reason they plan to make it obsolete rather quickly and replace it with Henry VI, which is far more inferior

      I'm holding out for Henry VIII, which they say will come with multiple wife support.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    5. Re:Uneasy lies the head... by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      I heard about that. Even runs well on headless servers.

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  23. Not exactly great with other OSes by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    S3 (Suspend) doesn't exactly work wonderfully under other operating systems either. It's highly dependant on the motherboard chipset being used, and all attached hardware.

    I would be quicker to condem Microsoft if Linux (or FreeBSD preferably) could properly suspend and resume ANY of my systems properly. Unfortunately, that doesn't seem to be the case.

    FreeBSD-6.2 was the closest I got... If I pull out my videocard and use the onboard, it actually resumes successfully.

    Though the onboard video (Savag) really blows, and I haven't yet found any version of X.org that doesn't regularly crash when using that particular driver.

    And both the onboard nic, and my SBlive card stop working, and I have to manually reload the kernel module every time I resume...

    And with all of those addeniums, that's the closest I've ever gotten to getting Suspend to work (and being forced to use the onboard video is a complete show-stopper). In fact, the latest snapshot of 7.0 was actually a downgrade, and wouldn't resume from S3 at all.

    So the problem can't lie entirely with Microsoft (though they are partly to blame for the extremely lax and often Windows-centric ACPI practices). Hardware manufacturers bare a great deal of the responsibility for making their ACPI implimentations buggy as all hell to begin with... So much so that even Microsoft apparently can't even work-around it.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    1. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by fermion · · Score: 1
      I agree with you. A big problem on Linux and MS Windows is that OEM tend to use the cheapest parts available, even on machines they charge real money for, and then MS has to deal with it. OTOH, that is MS job. It is, after all, the OS of the commodity machine, and people choose ti because it is such a good value. Also, I wonder if we have these issue on hardware that is vista certified.

      Just as a point of comparison, since you mention external devices and motherboards, I have a oldish Powerbook, say I got it in 2000. It is not in great shape, for instance the screen and internal DVD drive does not work. It has an external HD, and external DVD burner, an external bluetooth adapter, and external scanner, an external remote sensor, and is often hooked to my phone. Always wakes up. No problem. So, while it is easy to put the blame elsewhere, if the problem continue to be persistent, then there is something wrong with vista. To be fair, XP also does a bang up job with sleep on any hardware.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by rjdegraaf · · Score: 1
      I would be quicker to condem Microsoft if Linux (or FreeBSD preferably) could properly suspend and resume ANY of my systems properly. Unfortunately, that doesn't seem to be the case.
      I had hibernation working on Debian Sarge and just upgraded to Debian Etch (at the moment still in testing) and it works perfect too, see Debian Etch on Dell Inspiron 1150.
    3. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by value_added · · Score: 2, Insightful

      FreeBSD-6.2 was the closest I got... If I pull out my videocard and use the onboard, it actually resumes successfully. Though the onboard video (Savag) really blows, and I haven't yet found any version of X.org that doesn't regularly crash when using that particular driver. And both the onboard nic, and my SBlive card stop working, and I have to manually reload the kernel module every time I resume... And with all of those addeniums, that's the closest I've ever gotten to getting Suspend to work (and being forced to use the onboard video is a complete show-stopper). In fact, the latest snapshot of 7.0 was actually a downgrade, and wouldn't resume from S3 at all.

      Running 6.1 on several different hardware configurations and two different laptops (Thinkpad and a Toshiba). Suspend (S3) works as expected.

      Maybe the lesson here is to choose your hardware more carefully? I can't comment on your existing hardware, but it's worth reminding the kids that crap hardware was probably designed to work OK with Windows. Anywhere else, the user should not expect the hardware to work, either because a) no one wanted to bother with writing a driver for it; or b) the hardware simply can't be made to work (read Winmodems). The fact that some hardware does work (or work with kludges) should be considered an accident.

      As a side note, it looks like you haven't looked at /etc/rc.suspend and /etc/rc.resume. No need to manually do anything (loading kernel modules, included), when everything is scriptable with little fuss.

    4. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Maybe the lesson here is to choose your hardware more carefully?

      Oh? And where is the list of hardware fully ACPI supported under FreeBSD? If it exists now (which I happen to doubt) it certainly didn't back when I bought all my equipment.

      None of this happens to be cheap junk. My systems are all Asus/MSI motherboards, with ATI/NVidia cards, SBLive for sound, etc.

      As a side note, it looks like you haven't looked at /etc/rc.suspend and /etc/rc.resume.

      No, I know. It looks like you didn't read where I explained that the videocard was the show-stopper.

      And before you accuse me of anything else, I've tried with every possible combination of video-related settings in the BIOS, in combination with all video-related sysctl variables. That was necessary to get it to work even with onboard video, and there's just no way any combination works with any AGP card.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    5. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by evilviper · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I actually wonder why that is the case. In other areas (say, Java) you don't see anybody selling something claiming it's Java, when it's not (MS tried and didn't succeed).

      The main reason is that ACPI bugs can be worked-around in software (if you know everything there is to know about the hardware and BIOS implementation) and the manufacturer has to write a driver anyhow. So they do a quick, one-off driver that just barely works, and don't care about all the problems that will result from that mindset in the near future.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    6. Re:Not exactly great with other OSes by evilviper · · Score: 1

      No, I have indeed tried other drivers, and it definately doesn't work at all with any others.

      It "works" with older versions of X.org, until you start anything that use the GL or SDL capabilities, at which point the server crashes. With newer versions though, restarting X11, or trying to switch from X to a VT will cause the system to lock-up hard. It's really a mess.

      Besides, the Savage chip's performance is so bad that none of this matters. It not only wastes CPU time, but also completely kills the system's responsiveness. Even launching some dumb little program like GAIM freezes everything up for a half second. You don't even want to know how horrid it is when Firefox is trying to scroll a large/complex web page. It's ridiculous that onboard video today should be so utterly lowsy. Even my decade-old ATI Rage 128 card makes the system fly (by comparison).

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  24. No problems here at all. by Marbleless · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We currently have 4 systems running Vista RTM and a not one of them has any problem waking up from hibernate. They are a mix of P4, AMD XP, and Athlons.

    We had Vista RC1 & 2 on other systems, both desktops & laptops, and they behaved perfectly as well.

    They all respond perfectly to Wake-On-LAN too. I know this because our tape backup system sends WOL packets to the systems to do the backups.

    --
    --I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken.
    1. Re:No problems here at all. by monkeySauce · · Score: 1

      Great, they hibernate... but your Wake-On-LAN comment is pointless. That is hardware/motherboard/bios supported and has nothing to do with the OS.

  25. "Did anyone ever try this even once?" by dpbsmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The bugs that always amaze me are the ones that seemingly would have been caught if anyone had ever actually tried the feature even once.

    The only way I can account for something like this is that perhaps when a bug exhibits "protean symptoms" (fails in a different way every time), one could imagine in a completely bureaucratic, micromanaged corporate environment, instead of being registered as "this always fails," it could be registered as two hundred completely different bug descriptions, each specific description having been recorded only once and therefore judged by management to be unimportant.

    "Fails with blue screen of death reading 0687FF13 618AC003 ..."

    being regarded as a "different" bug from

    "Fails with blue screen of death reading 31469B21 96CB2022 ..."

    And before people start saying "blame the hardware," it's Microsoft's job to make sure that Vista does work on every PC certified for it. The days when DOS said "Toshiba DOS" or "PC-DOS" or "NEC DOS" are long gone. The name on the product is Microsoft WIndows and it's Microsoft's responsibility to see that it works.

    It's Microsoft's choice whether to do this by making their code robust, or jawboning vendors at WinHEC, or pressuring vendors.

    1. Re:"Did anyone ever try this even once?" by hey! · · Score: 1

      Nah. It's the kind of bug that probably never affects some configurations of hardware and software.

      I like to test my application software on a fresh virtual machine. You'd be surprised how often having a stray dll around saves your ass while you're running, so you need to test on a fresh machine.

      ON the other hand, you can't test for every case where a stray dll will do you in. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of the people having this problem are upgraders.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    2. Re:"Did anyone ever try this even once?" by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

      In other words... "Did anyone ever try this even once on a fresh machine?"

      Given that _large_ numbers of PCs are being sold "with Vista," meaning with XP presinstalled and a coupon for a Vista upgrade when it's available, there are likely to be large numbers of "upgraders." So...

      "Did anyone ever try this even once on an upgraded machine?"

    3. Re:"Did anyone ever try this even once?" by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      As someone who works in software - those kinds of bugs fall into two categories > poor testing and system specific issues.

      System specific issues are probably more common, and sometimes not even bugs.

    4. Re:"Did anyone ever try this even once?" by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      When an OEM builds an image for their system, it is the OEMs job to make sure the drivers their vendor provide work well with the hardware and don't conflict with anything else in the system. Things like this are (almost) always a bios or third party driver issue. Many drivers don't handle their power management right.

      Most of the people who see these issues will be people who build their own systems or bought from cut rate OEMs that don't do proper quality control.

  26. No input file specified. by techmuse · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it does not wake up properly because, as the website states, there is "No input file specified."

  27. And the site crashes by strredwolf · · Score: 1

    Well, there goes that blog entry. Entire site crashes and presents a "no input file specified" error. Nice.

    --

    --
    # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
    $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
  28. Does this work in Linux? by RiotXIX · · Score: 1

    Just wondering, I'm sure it does..someone show me...

    --
    "You know you don't act like a scientist, you're more like a game show host." Dana Barret
  29. I wasn't planning on laptop installs anyway by gelfling · · Score: 1, Informative

    I don't have any laptops with the power to actually run Vista so how it comes out of hibernation is irrelevant. I don't think that Vista is going to be a laptop friendly OS in the first place given that internal hardware upgrades are nearly impossible.

  30. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by DoorFrame · · Score: 1

    You don't have a laptop, do you?

  31. Pun... by Five+Bucks! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So much for an operating system to "power" the future! (No pun intended!)

    The pun was clearly intended, otherwise there would not have been quotation marks around 'power'.

    Why can't we all just be honest about our use of puns? Puns are not always bad. There's no need to be ashamed of them.

    --
    52 52'23" W 47 32'07" N
    1. Re:Pun... by Aeamarth · · Score: 1

      Puns killed my father and raped my mother... :(

    2. Re:Pun... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Are you sure that wasn't you, Oedipus?

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    3. Re:Pun... by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Funny

      When I heard the horrible screams from what those puns were doing to your parents, I had to stuff my fingers in my ears just to sleep. Now I can't hear anything, so I say making puns ought to be a deaf penalty offense.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    4. Re:Pun... by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      Well, he did avoid the joke that he has trouble sleeping as well with Vista installed.

  32. How many times do you test before calling it truth by HairyCanary · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just opened my laptop and turned it on, and it resumed from a hibernate just fine (running Vista Business release version). No blue screen, no network problems, it put me right back where I was before with a perfectly functional session. I hate Windows as much as every other Unix geek, but it sounds to me like this is a classic case of "not enough research" ... or if you prefer, "fud".

  33. How hard can it be? by Marbleless · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > Linux: It doesn't suck. Indeed. Ubuntu 6.10 wakes up from hibernation just fine, and quickly, even on my old computers. How hard can it be?

    How hard? Very!

    Linux has had 2 (3?) separate attempts to get hibernate support working properly and while it is pretty good now it still isn't perfect.

    --
    --I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken.
    1. Re:How hard can it be? by TheShadowzero · · Score: 1

      Point in case: my experience with Fedora shows that hibernation/sleep is still not perfect. Especially with Beryl and/or a USB wi-fi adapter with ndiswrapper.

      --
      If history repeats itself, why can't we study the future?
    2. Re:How hard can it be? by hanssprudel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How hard? Very!

      You are right about this. It isn't hard for anybody with a bit of coding experience to realize that trying to freezedry, serialize and then defrost an entire multitasking OS full of running tasks and hardware is a very difficult task. Especially when computers today are often busy talking to other computers (you can't really expect every TCP connection to suddenly spring to life where it was).

      That said, Ubuntu 6.10 does hibernate very, very, well. Try it.

    3. Re:How hard can it be? by secolactico · · Score: 1

      Linux has had 2 (3?) separate attempts to get hibernate support working properly and while it is pretty good now it still isn't perfect.

      Indeed. But how come, Win2k and XP hibernation features work damn near perfect and Vista doesn't?

      I hibernate my XP laptop every night and I've yet to encounter a BSOD or another problem. Well, I did encounter a couple of instances where the network wouldn't work, but disabling and re-enabling the network fixed that.

      --
      No sig
    4. Re:How hard can it be? by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The big difference is that Linux needs to implement what the hardware designers did, many of the drivers are reverse-engineered or poorly implemented because the lack of specs, and it needs to implement properly the ACPI spec, which is a spec totally broken that doesn't works in the real world (in fact the guys that take care of ACPI in Linux are INTEL employees: you know, Intel invented ACPI, isn't a bit shocking that the company that invented ACPI can't write a implementation that does work 100%? - although ACPI support is pretty good these days)

      Windows, in the other hand, just designed all their power management features. It was the hardware designers who took care of making their devices work with Windows. It's not easy to do what the Linux people is doing - trying to make linux suspend work with all the windows-oriented hardware devices out there.

    5. Re:How hard can it be? by Afrosheen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Imagine that. Using a hack (ndiswrapper) to load non-native Wifi drivers that are not ACPI-compliant like native drivers are causes problems with hibernation/sleep.

        If you used something native or if the manufacturer supported linux you'd probably be OK. I've experienced this myself.

    6. Re:How hard can it be? by TheShadowzero · · Score: 1

      Except that when I remove the adapter and disable ndiswrapper, it still doesn't work. Oftentimes, HAL doesn't fix on resume and applications do not start and everything runs molasses slow..and this is when metacity is in use. With beryl, I come back to a black screen, 100% of the time.

      --
      If history repeats itself, why can't we study the future?
    7. Re:How hard can it be? by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 1

      That said, Ubuntu 6.10 does hibernate very, very, well. Try it. I have. It has not worked on any system I've tried.
      --
      "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks
    8. Re:How hard can it be? by EvilAlien · · Score: 1
      That said, Ubuntu 6.10 does hibernate very, very, well. Try it.

      So does Vista, in my experience. One of the platforms I've been running the RCs on is a tablet PC. Sleeps, Hibernates, and wakes up without any issues whatsoever.

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
    9. Re:How hard can it be? by andreyw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ugh. I think I am going to stop reading Slashdot now. Okay. So Vista has a problem dealing with S3 resume. Fine.

      What bothers me are snide remarks from people who have a very vague (if any) understanding of what is involved in power management support. At all. So Microsoft dropped the non-ACPI HALs with Vista. About time. Considering the number of ACPI "compliant" systems out there, I'm not surprised a lot of this shit barely works. Get a new computer and shut the hell up already...

    10. Re:How hard can it be? by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      You're lucky... or have better hardware. I've got a Thinkpad T43 and about a third of the time it fails to come out of hibernation. Either it freezes on the "resuming windows" screen or I get a BSOD about "invalid queue" or something.

      I'd bet that my issue and the Vista issue is hardware or some extra software related anyhow... i.e. not related to the OS.

      ---John Holmes...

    11. Re:How hard can it be? by tyler_larson · · Score: 1
      That said, Ubuntu 6.10 does hibernate very, very, well on my computer(s).

      Fixed it for you. (I doubt I'm the only one here who has had trouble hibernating 6.10)

      --
      "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. However, this is not necessarily a good idea...."
      RFC 1925
    12. Re:How hard can it be? by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      I suspect that the manufacturers design their hardware around the OS. I'd expect the same trends we see here to apply to laptops made around the win98->win2k rollout(Didn't use 2k->xp because they are pretty similiar). After some time, I expect Dell, et. al., to sell laptops that support vista's S3 bugs, nuances and expectations, because they engineers have had time to futz around with everything.

      The problem with ACPI, IMHO, is not that noone follows the standards, it's that the standards are so general, you can interperet them seven ways from Sunday and still claim you are fully compliant.

    13. Re:How hard can it be? by tyler_larson · · Score: 2, Informative
      Indeed. But how come, Win2k and XP hibernation features work damn near perfect and Vista doesn't?

      I'll assume you wanted an answer.

      Hardware was designed with W2K and XP as their development test cases, and was specifically made to work with those OSes. XP is only an incremental update over W2K (ver 5.1 from 5.0), whereas Vista is a complete rewrite in many areas. So they code power management according to the spec, such that all ACPI-compliant devices will work, then they make tweaks and exceptions for all the non-compliant hardware later on.

      I had the same problems you had in when I was running the the public Beta, but they went away in RC1. Hardware support is still under heavy development, and the January release will be significantly improved in that area over the official RTM.

      --
      "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. However, this is not necessarily a good idea...."
      RFC 1925
    14. Re:How hard can it be? by secolactico · · Score: 1

      Thinkpad A31 here. The only issue I have with hibernation is with an ADSL modem I use at home sometimes. Whenever it's plugged in, thge system refuses to go into hibernation. I guess your problem might be a driver issue or a recalcitrant background program (antivirus or the like).

      --
      No sig
    15. Re:How hard can it be? by paniq · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that every application has to implement hibernation support properly, not only drivers. If only one (essential) application fails to handle a wakeup properly, the system presents itself as unstable to the user, although all the other parts went just fine. Hence it is a bug that requires to be fixed in Metacity and Beryl.

      With drivers which run in kernel mode, support should be much better. HAL and ndiswrapper are both usermode applications, and not managed by the kernel team.

      With Windows however, all components constitute an indifferent mass for which one company is responsible for, so in theory, Microsoft should be able to fix those issues - if Windows' drivers had not been largely developed somewhere else: the thing that is most crucial to a flawless wakeup routine has not been developed inhouse. Now try to go through all these customer support systems finding a person which a.) can understand your problem ("what do you want? just shut it off properly!") and b.) is able to provide you with a fixed driver.

      On Ubuntu, Launchpad is the system which requires these reports, bugs are sent upstream, then fixed by the kernel/app team or admins, and a few weeks later, magically, with a new update, the problem is gone. I've seen it happen(tm)! THIS is customer service.

      --
      Do not trust this signature.
    16. Re:How hard can it be? by sqlrob · · Score: 1

      They work perfectly? My Dell laptop with XP at my old job I could never let go to sleep. If it did, it would never come back. That was with XP

    17. Re:How hard can it be? by Sepodati · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm wondering if it's not related to the drive-head parking feature found in these laptops. If I'm moving the laptop around while it's coming out of hibernation (getting settled on the couch or whatnot), then it seems to fail. If I don't touch it, it'll usually work. Haven't really tested that a lot, though, just seems to be that way. Will have to do some tests now, I guess.

      ---John Holmes...

    18. Re:How hard can it be? by Skreems · · Score: 1

      That sounds odd to me. I could see why drivers would need to support it, but shouldn't the OS be able to basically "freeze" applications, write them to disk, and then start them up again when it comes back? The app would experience a continuous runtime, but the clock would suddenly jump forward. That shouldn't mess with most programs that badly.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    19. Re:How hard can it be? by GenP · · Score: 1

      Assuming they didn't have any external state, like active network connections. Then again the OS can just disconnect the sockets on the next send/recv and hope the app handles that gracefully.

    20. Re:How hard can it be? by ladoga · · Score: 1

      I've got a Thinkpad T43 and about a third of the time it fails to come out of hibernation. Either it freezes on the "resuming windows" screen or I get a BSOD about "invalid queue" or something.

      Your Thinkpad is blue because wind eyes make it cold inside.

      My X41 sleeps and hibernates happily with Debian.

      (word window comes from old norse vindauga, wind eye. hole in the wall which wind blows thru.)

    21. Re:How hard can it be? by hufter · · Score: 1

      I just tried. It turner the power off. No moving the mouse or pressing keys woke it up. Okay: the power button - it hang on black screen. So I reset it and I was relieved it bootet normally, except the filesystems were not clean of course.

    22. Re:How hard can it be? by Skreems · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Since network connections can and do fail with some frequency, any decent networking app should be able to detect and recover from a dropped connection.

      I don't see how this is such a huge deal in Vista, anyway. It seems to work fine under XP, and you're going to be running most of the same apps for now...

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    23. Re:How hard can it be? by kkwst2 · · Score: 1

      My T42 sleeps fine. It might fail to come out properly once every 20 times. It takes longer than it used to though.

    24. Re:How hard can it be? by kylegordon · · Score: 1

      Linux hibernation on how many platforms, vs. Vista hibernation on how many platforms?

    25. Re:How hard can it be? by davidsyes · · Score: 1

      Yeh, vista IS seeing things... what a view... Maybe they should rename it "Diablo" (devil, in Espa~nol...)

      Funny... Novell is being CALLED microsoft's bitch, and vista is BEING a bitch... ain't dat a BITCH??!!
      Novel want's to wake UP from a bad dream, and vista wants to stay in hibernation... Man....

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
    26. Re:How hard can it be? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      You must have missed all the snide remarks from winlusers for each issue regarding linux, from linux being just different, to actual bugs, to the fact that hardware manufacturers author win drivers and linux drivers are made by third parties with no guarantee of help.

      > Get a new computer and shut the hell up already...

      this is the usual upgrade trap that made me go linux, incidentally.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    27. Re:How hard can it be? by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      Indeed. But how come, Win2k and XP hibernation features work damn near perfect and Vista doesn't?


      I have had multiple problems with XP hibernation - failure to resume, failure to hibernate in the first place "insufficient resources", and on occaisions, waking from standby (whilst in the laptop bag) in order to hibernate, failing to hibernate and then burning all the remaining battery power trying to catch the laptop/bag on fire to tell me it failed to hibernate.

      In contrast, colleagues who've switched to vista rave about how good and bobust the hibernation/sleep support is...

      YMMV. YHMV (your hardware may vary).

    28. Re:How hard can it be? by triffid_98 · · Score: 1
      IIRC, Win2k laptop hibernation isn't necessarily all it's cracked up to be either, that was one of the few things they improved on with XP.

      Indeed. But how come, Win2k and XP hibernation features work damn near perfect and Vista doesn't?
    29. Re:How hard can it be? by Barny · · Score: 1

      Yup, every pc I have tried vista on has worked fine in s3 mode, maybe they are using dells (or such) with shoddy PSUs without enough juice on the 5vSB?

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    30. Re:How hard can it be? by paniq · · Score: 1

      It's not that easy. First of all, the BIOS will not hibernate. The graphics card has internal states it won't be able to write back as well (content of the videobuffer, renderstates in 3d cards, texture memory, current resolution). The harddisk cache will be empty. A lot of high level hardware will be required to reinitialize.

      Usually, it is the drivers job to "pretend" that a true hibernation took place by serializing the data that it wants to maintain, and on wakeup deserializing that data again to the hardware, if applicable.

      --
      Do not trust this signature.
    31. Re:How hard can it be? by jrockway · · Score: 1

      > I just tried. It turner the power off. No moving the mouse or pressing keys woke it up.

      Yes, that's what hibernate means. The computer is completely off. When you restart, the kernel loads the data that was in memory from disk (swap space, which you had better have enough of). It's a lot more complex then this, which is why it's very difficult to get right. Read some of the documentation that comes with the kernel if you're interested in how this actually works.

      You'll probably have better luck with "sleep" instead, which just puts everything in a low power mode. You also save the time-consuming step of reading and writing everything to disk.

      --
      My other car is first.
    32. Re:How hard can it be? by andreyw · · Score: 1

      Actually, I didn't. Both camps have an equivalent number of morons on their side to make snide, irrelevant and uneducated remarks at opportune moments.

      I've also grown increasingly tired of people expect the Second Coming of Christ after putting Linux on their 10-year- old Compaq or Dell shitbox, so the "get a new comuter and shut the hell up already" argument well applies to those.

      Back on the subject though. If there is anything you have to give props to Linux, Windows, BSD, etc for is making it all tick on really really broken HW. Fuck you, hardware "engineers".

    33. Re:How hard can it be? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. I guess my Asus P5B, C2D 6700, 2GB ram, and gf7900 are just showing their age.

      Although, for the record, it DOES resume from hibernation just fine. It's only once I type in the password that the BSOD shows up.

    34. Re:How hard can it be? by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Funny

      Glad you caught that, I thought I might have been a little too subtle.

    35. Re:How hard can it be? by linuxfanatic1024 · · Score: 1

      Me too! Amazing!

      I don't see why hibernation support is that important anyway--I am perfectly fine with shutting down my laptop instead of putting it into hibernation.

      --
      Microsoft-free since March 28, 2004
    36. Re:How hard can it be? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Second coming of Christ? I think that would be more in line with trying to install Vista on a 10 year old Compaq and/or waiting for it to boot up.

      --
    37. Re:How hard can it be? by vally_manea · · Score: 1

      I don't really think it's about the OS. From what I have understood mainly the ACPI implementation on some system sucks which causes all this problems.

      As a small example, I had to wait for the first BIOS patch on my HP laptop so Windows could resume from Sleep(Ubuntu worked fined though)

    38. Re:How hard can it be? by sowth · · Score: 1

      I would like all programs to just be able to save their state. Then I wouldn't even be thinking about using hibernate. Like Mozilla and Firefox for example. You can bookmark a group of tabs, but the browser insists upon trying to load them off the network even if I am not connected and they are already cached. I just want to be able to read crap offline without a big hassle even after a reboot. This doesn't work, so lots of times I end up just leaving my computer on.

      I think X Session Manager is supposed to do this, but I haven't had time to learn how it works, and most apps don't seem to have it working anyway...

  34. Only In America!! by Tim+Ward · · Score: 1

    For now, if you really need to keep your PC on all day and all night, stick to XP, Linux, Mac OS X, or SkyOS!

    Global Warning Denial USA Rules OK!!

  35. Breaking News Update: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny


    Random blogger has computer problems, documents them on his homepage, blames manufacturer

    Film at 11.00

  36. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by Meatloaf+Surprise · · Score: 1
    MS claims that Vista is the cure for everything from Global Warming to the common cold.

    Of course Vista will be a cure for global warming! Think of all of the computers that will be rendered useless by this OS and will be powered down.

  37. Is it just me?... by egr · · Score: 1

    ...or "No input file specified."

  38. Questions about sleeping by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am always uneasy when business customers ask about sleep, heres a few of the things which bug me

    What happens with network applications (take google earth as an example - it connects and logs in at program start)?
    How about a domain?
    What happens if you go to sleep on one domain and wake up plugged into another?
    What happens when you wake up outside the login hours?
    What happens if your server slot is taken for an application (because you disconnected and someone else took it)?
    What happens if you are editing a networked (word etc) document at the time, can people edit it whilst you are asleep?
    Will your application pick up where it left off or display the edited document?

    Its things like this which prevent us from recommending sleep or hibernate to our clients.

    If the hibernate just allows the core OS to be brought up without problems then that doesn't help people who use their computers too much.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:Questions about sleeping by bcmm · · Score: 1

      Things like the network getting unplugged and plugged in again happen even without hibernation. It's handled pretty much the same. No system actually simply saves the RAM to disk and powers down; things like graphics hardware state get saved first for example. I believe that applications simply see the network get disconnected and reconnected, which they should be able to handle really.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    2. Re:Questions about sleeping by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Disconnections on the network break lots of things.
      You are right that they *should* really handle the events, but there are lots which don't and that is the problem.
      Its no use telling everyone everything will be ok when it just brings about more support headaches.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    3. Re:Questions about sleeping by Sirpete · · Score: 2, Informative
      The Mac OS X handles most of these situations with notifications. Here is a sleep - wakeup cycle with Google Earth open and running before and after the iBook lid was closed and reopened, no problems with GE. The problems are handled gracefully like the lookupd hangs up when there is no network yet (WLAN).

      Dec 10 21:51:39 hidden-zapto-org configd[44]: posting notification com.apple.system.config.network_change
      Dec 10 21:51:39 hidden-zapto-org lookupd[23379]: lookupd (version 369.5) starting - Sun Dec 10 21:51:39 2006
      Dec 10 22:36:56 hidden-zapto-org /etc/rc.sleep: executing .sleep of user Petri
      Dec 10 22:36:59 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: AirPort: Link DOWN (Client disAssoc 0)
      Dec 10 22:36:59 hidden-zapto-org launchd: Server 0 in bootstrap 1103 uid 0: "/usr/sbin/lookupd"[23379]: exited abnormally: Hangup
      Dec 10 22:36:59 hidden-zapto-org configd[44]: posting notification com.apple.system.config.network_change
      Dec 10 22:37:00 hidden-zapto-org lookupd[23471]: lookupd (version 369.5) starting - Sun Dec 10 22:37:00 2006
      Dec 10 22:37:09 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: System Sleep
      Dec 10 22:37:09 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: System Wake
      Dec 10 22:37:09 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: Wake event 0008
      Dec 10 22:37:10 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: Sound assertion "0 != err" failed in "AppleLegacyAudio/AppleTexas2Audio/AppleTexas2Audi o.cpp" at line 960 goto Exit
      Dec 10 22:37:10 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: ^PADB present:8c
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: Couldn't alloc class "AppleADBMouseType4"
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: Couldn't alloc class "AppleADBMouseType2"
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: Couldn't alloc class "AppleADBMouseType1"
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: iScroll2: starting up driver.
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: iScroll2: enableEnhancedMode called.
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: iScroll2: deviceClass = 0xd (Extended Mode, scrolling supported)
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org /Library/StartupItems/iScroll2/iScroll2Daemon: Service 'iScroll2' matched.
      Dec 10 22:37:11 hidden-zapto-org /Library/StartupItems/iScroll2/iScroll2Daemon: Loading settings for user 'Petri'.
      Dec 10 22:37:16 hidden-zapto-org /etc/rc.wakeup: executing .wakeup of user Petri
      Dec 10 22:37:18 hidden-zapto-org kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Active: "KATTILA" - 000fb514da02 - chan 11
      Dec 10 22:37:20 hidden-zapto-org launchd: Server 0 in bootstrap 1103 uid 0: "/usr/sbin/lookupd"[23471]: exited abnormally: Hangup
      Dec 10 22:37:20 hidden-zapto-org configd[44]: posting notification com.apple.system.config.network_change
      Dec 10 22:37:20 hidden-zapto-org lookupd[23533]: lookupd (version 369.5) starting - Sun Dec 10 22:37:20 2006
      Dec 10 22:37:22 hidden-zapto-org mDNSResponder: Repeated transitions for interface en1 (192.168.0.2); delaying packets by 5 seconds
    4. Re:Questions about sleeping by man_ls · · Score: 1

      Windows Active Directory has group policies which will allow you to define the answers to several of those questions -- for instance, if you define a policy that machines must authenticate with the Domain Controller when unlocking the workstation, and have mandated (I think it is automatic, in fact) that you must enter a password when returning from sleep mode, then I imagine waking up, getting a password prompt, and if your login time is expired it shouldn't let you back in. Network applications that handle network disconnect/reconnect will be okay. Others will probably glitch.

      Same on a domain -- just as you can login to a Windows PC in an Active Directory network in offline mode (authenticate using cached credentials and profiles) it would work just the same for sleep -- there are no problems there.

      If you go to sleep on one domain and are plugged into another one, Windows will continue right along pretending it is connected to the old domain -- changing domains isn't an automatic process (you have to remove and re-join the new one), your computer will use cached policies and cached profiles and so forth. If you mean the fact that your DNS suffix and IP address may change, then in that case, it should be handled by the application just as any network disconnect/reconnect.

      Waking up and having no slot on the server will likely trigger an error message in the application to the effect of "connection to the server lost." I would think, anyway. Any application that doesn't manage to keep track of its own connection status after it connects is so broken already...

      Finally, many many many applications are able to track when a document opened in their window has been modified by an external source, and give you the option to reload the copy from the disk to ensure you're editing the most recent version.

  39. And this is why... by buddyglass · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...we wait for Vista SP1 before making the jump.

    Also, because DX10 cards (and titles) will be ubiquitous by then.

  40. Re:yeah, and whose fault is that? by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1
    And Microsoft usually likes that.

    Why is it Microsoft's job to simplify a process so it can be better implemented by their competitors?

    If you have evidence that they are demanding companies test against Windows exclusively, maybe you have a legitimate gripe. Short of that, they aren't doing anything wrong (by not forcing to a spec) that I can see. Besides which, it sounds like the companies are making a choice that testing against Windows and ignoring other markets is a cost-effective tradeoff.

  41. "He's resting." by overshoot · · Score: 2, Funny
    "No, it's not."

    Why do I have this urge to post the entire Monte Python "Dead Parrot" sketch?

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  42. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1
    I just shut my monitor off and go to sleep usually. Sleep mode to me is just another worthless feature.

    That method wastes a fair amount of power. I prefer the way I go now: I close the lid, the computer hibernates, on the morning, I open & press the power button, finds & plugs in the mouse and power, say good morning on so on... and then the laptop is good to go.

    Also, stuffing the laptop in a bag without powerdown would make it rather hot?

    I wish I could do this with my main computer, but alas, the one piece of proprietary software (nvidia's drivers) prevents this.

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
  43. Apparently ... by eck011219 · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... the poster's blog is hosted on a Vista box, as it seems to have fallen asleep. Or been Slashdotted.

    Anyhow, I've been running Vista RC1 since it was released (and the beta before that) and never had a problem with the sleep function. Other problems, yes, but none with sleep and none so bad I'd complain about them (mostly my preferences vs. Microsoft's, predictable stuff like that).

    In fact, I was just telling my wife the other day (she just melts when I talk sweet to her like this) that the sleep/hibernate function in Vista is so much more stable than it used to be that I haven't actually had my laptop all the way off in a few weeks -- I just open and close it as needed, and it wakes right back up and grabs whatever network it sees. I never had this work so well with XP or W2K.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Apparently ... by BlenderFX · · Score: 1
      You didn't read TFA, did you? The problems exist in Vista Final.

      From TFA:

      Throughout the beta, Deep Sleep in Windows Vista went great. It's the default option (so long as it's configured in the BIOS) when you click the shutdown button.2 It would put your computer in a low-power mode that recovered in a matter of 2 or 3 seconds, and didn't crash! But in the final version of Windows Vista, something is very, very majorly wrong.
    2. Re:Apparently ... by eck011219 · · Score: 1

      You didn't read MFP (my fine post), did you? The site was Slashdotted already.

      Moreover, I suspect, as do many others here, that it's specific to a certain hardware configuration. I've had identical installations of various flavors of Windows AND Linux across different machines, and some things work great on one machine and not the other (sleep being chief among them).

      So while I'm most appreciative of your TFA crack, but I still don't know that one can say Vista RTM is fundamentally broken based on one guy's blog post. I can now get to the post, and I've now read it. And I stand by my post from before.

      Even if it is about 6 of 8 test machines he's running, we don't know enough. Is he running something else on all of them that could cause this problem? What kind of boxes are they? Are they all one model with one hardware config? Are they different configs but one type of video card? Are they all using one brand of mouse (Logitech hardware/software has a history of causing funny problems like this)? These are just the first few of a hundred questions that would actually get down to the cause of the problem, and none of them are covered in the blog post. They do indicate a few things in the footnotes that begin to cover some of this, but not enough to call it conclusive data.

      I'm not trying to be a Microsoft apologist, but this is just the kind of FUD (or more accurately, ID -- insufficient data) that gets bandied about as fact all the time. This is the first I've heard of it, and I tend to do quite a bit of reading about Vista these days. So one shop is having troubles, and no one else has complained of this. Perhaps the shop is doing something unique that causes this problem? No, it must be that Vista is fundamentally flawed.

      Maybe it is. But this is a ridiculously small amount of data to go saying that Vista is broken. This isn't error tracking, this is bitching. And that's fine -- I think that's what's great about blogs. But don't defend it as fact until you know more.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  44. Re:MSN Ramps Up the Linux FUD by Goaway · · Score: 1

    Congratulations! You have been awarded the coveted Slashdot Groupthink Of The Week award!

  45. MSDN by MLopat · · Score: 2, Informative

    Windows Vista has been available to MSDN subscribers for a few weeks now. From Business Basic right up to Ultimate Edition, in both x86 and x64.

  46. No big surprise? by phreaki · · Score: 1

    While I see users come into our computer store weekly, with all the sleep and hibernation features working fine, a partner on the other hand says he's never seen one work right. It's so 'broken' in XP, 98, ME that it's branded a Microsoft problem every single time instead of an ACPI problem, or a driver issue that the vendor didn't work out. Irregardless I think many people have no business mandating that it's all broken without having ever tried to call any tech support to get that one guy who wants to do his job. Tracking down a blue screen's cause helps and in many cases helps get you closer to a real Google answer, which is something I've never seen another tech do... Debugging on a windows machine. In tracking down bugs, I'm sure Microsoft, Dell, HP, Gateway, Intel, MSI, Giga-byte, Asus, Abit, Award, AMI, ECS, Soyo and others all want these features to work. Any bug tracking includes hundreds of samples, not just 20 odd motherboards or recollections from many years: after all if it's been broken and never works, then why is Microsoft still trying to do it... give it up.

  47. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sleep is for girls, n00bs, and douchebags. The rest of us leave 'em up on all the time. And fuck laptops. If you need to write code on holiday then you're not a real developer. Real developers don't *go* on holiday.

  48. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by kryten_nl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Vista will be the best thing ever for third world countries. Do you realise how much PCs will become obsolete the moment it hits the shelves? A large percentage of those PC will be donated to aid organisations, who will install Ubuntu and ship them to Africa.

    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
  49. strange... by rmallico · · Score: 1

    The 3 machines I have Vista Ultimate running on seem just fine coming out of hibernation... sound/video/etc all work just fine... I have it running on a nice Conroe 6700, a IBM T30 laptop and another IBM T42 laptop... all work, wakeup, sleep, hibernate, reboot, etc... guess i am one of the few...

    --
    sig goes here!
  50. My Experience is Completely the Opposite by Rycross · · Score: 2, Informative

    Vista is the only OS I've used that has ever been able to wake up from sleep and hibernate properly.
    The OP makes it sound like their experience applies to everyone, so I have to call FUD on this.

    At any rate, I have zero problems with these features, using Vista Home Ultimate 64 bit.

    1. Re:My Experience is Completely the Opposite by Rycross · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I haven't used a Mac. I do intend to buy a MacBook whenever the next version of the OS (geez, whats it called again? Was it Leapord?) comes out.

      But your comment about my Windows experience is off the mark. I never used pirated windows, and I've used pretty much every version of windows in some form or another from 98 SE to Vista (although using that horrible abortion ME wasn't my choice). I worked in tech support for a university campus for a couple of years. I also use Linux. Right now I've got a distro of Ubuntu running on my other box, which I switched to from Fedora Core.

      But basically, my point still stands. Of all the versions of linux and windows I've used, none of them have ever properly implemented sleep and hibernation. My computer would go to sleep and never return, or would wake up and promptly crash. With Vista, it just works.

    2. Re:My Experience is Completely the Opposite by PPH · · Score: 1
      Hmm. I'm running Linux on a Dell Latitude laptop. It's an old laptop and an old SUSE distro and it goes to sleep and wakes up just fine. It has been a few weeks since it was shut down.

      To be honest, I can't speak for Windows, since I've never had a system running it.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:My Experience is Completely the Opposite by Rycross · · Score: 1

      I don't doubt you. Its an issue of hardware + drivers + os. You seem to need that right magical combination to make it work. Which is why the article is BS.

  51. Only in the *final* by kripkenstein · · Score: 1, Informative

    You say you've been using Vista "since beta 1". But which are you using now, still one of the beta versions, or the final (which isn't available to run-of-the-mill consumers yet)? TFA says:

    Throughout the beta, Deep Sleep in Windows Vista went great. [...] But in the final version of Windows Vista, something is very, very majorly wrong.

    The problem is in the final version only, not a beta. This wasn't mentioned in the Slashdot summary, though, which could have saved confusion for those that don't RTFA.

  52. Hello World bug free? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Yeah, right -- I bet it had a buffer overflow in printf or something!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  53. Point of view by Tony · · Score: 1

    Why is it Microsoft's job to simplify a process so it can be better implemented by their competitors?

    From a business standpoint? It isn't Microsoft's job. From a technical standpoint? That should be obvious. (Quality control, ease of implementation, etc.)

    The fact they prefer to use their dominant market position to make it harder for competitors, rather than making it better for everyone, is one of the reasons Microsoft is not good for computing, nor for business.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  54. ACPI Sucks. by twitter · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've concluded that power management is just insanely tricky. APM/ACPI must be inconsistently implemented on every device, otherwise it could never work as poorly as it does.

    ACPI does suck. It's a typical M$, "extensible," "do it in software" nightmare described in 500 pages of spec. It reminds me of nothing more than a winmodem. It will be hard even for careful hardware makers to follow and that's what M$ likes.

    APM, on the other hand, worked well for laptops and still does if supported. I close the lid and it suspends. I open the lid and everything comes back. Yes, you have to unplug things still but I actually like that. That way, I can close the lid and have some boring operation still going without fear my cats will dance on the keyboard and screw it up. Other quirks are largely due to the fact that APM too is a M$ written "extensible" standard.

    The funny thing about all of this is that free software will give you a working system but M$ never has. I've never seen a windoze user who can make good use of power management, despite all sorts of time wasted hunting down drivers and fiddling. At the same time, I've been enjoying multiple month uptime on my laptops for years. The non free way of making code work together is simply broken.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:ACPI Sucks. by abradsn · · Score: 1

      It's funny how I've been enjoying multiple month up time on Windows computers too. Sometimes 4 to 6 months at a time, continuously on, and most times under heavy load and stress. Usually running things all day, and through the evening. The only times the computer goes off is literally when the power gets disconnected. This has been the case with my machines since XP came out. Recently, I did have a Linux machine that croaked though.

    2. Re:ACPI Sucks. by Allador · · Score: 1

      "The funny thing about all of this is that free software will give you a working system but M$ never has. I've never seen a windoze user who can make good use of power management, despite all sorts of time wasted hunting down drivers and fiddling."

      Your experience may be unusual. Every laptop we've deployed in the last 5 years has worked reasonably well, and the last 3 perfectly wrt Sleep & Hibernate. Thats across 2 models of gateways and 3 models of dell latitudes. The latitudes have been fairly flawless.

      I'll give you that its been noticeably better in the last 3 years or so, at least on the equipment that we use. And for the times when there are problems, they pretty much always go away on the next bios update or driver update.

      It's also been my experience that corporate class equipment performs much better than consumer level stuff like what they sell at best buy.

  55. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    say good morning on so on...

          You talk to your computer? Man, you need to get laid, lol.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  56. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by bcmm · · Score: 1

    Sleep is what caffeine is for.

    --
    # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
    Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
  57. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1

    Usually, I direct the pleasentries at my colleagues, but I'm sure the laptop appreciates it as well ;)

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
  58. Re:OK, we get it. by drsquare · · Score: 1

    They should stop bashing Vista when things stop going wrong with it.

  59. Compared with linux though... by adrianbaugh · · Score: 1

    I have a reasonably normal machine (Athlon XP, nVidia, P-ATA hard drive, VIA BIOS) and have yet to see Kubuntu wake it up correctly. It appears to do something while putting itself to sleep, but on wake-up the HD whirs for a bit and it crashes stone dead. (This happens on other machines, too..) It seems to be the only thing that linux has consistently sucked at, for a long long time, so I suppose it's a pretty hard thing to program. In which case, MS probably deserve a tiny bit of a break too...

    --
    "'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
    - JRR Tolkien.
  60. I beg to differ by mdboyd · · Score: 1

    I'm actually using Vista build 6000 on my laptop and I haven't had any problems booting up after both suspend or hibernation. In fact, it works much better than XP ever did. XP would often 'stall' for several minutes with a black screen after boot up from hibernation. I'm actually very impressed with how well Vista performs on my laptop. Even with only 512 MB of RAM, it's still about as fast as XP. I will say that it seems to use more battery life, especially with Aero.

  61. Re:How many times do you test before calling it tr by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

    How many times do you test before calling it truth

    I don't know about truth, but according to my gut, it's definitely truthiness.

  62. Macbook Pro w/ OS X by cavtroop · · Score: 1

    I have the same problem with my Macbook Pro running OS X 10.4 - where is the frontpage /. article for that?

    1. Re:Macbook Pro w/ OS X by jkerman · · Score: 1

      Did you get the TWO firmware updates released this week that address that problem?

    2. Re:Macbook Pro w/ OS X by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

      So what you're basically saying is, MS have to have it working out of the box for every one of millions of system combinations, but Apple can wait months to fix the same problem on proprietary hardware?

      Just curious.

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  63. Re:Why are you even putting it in sleep mode by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I prefer the way my PowerBook works. I close the lid and it goes to sleep. Open the lid and it comes back up and works perfectly every single time. I haven't turned the thing off since I bought it last year.

    --
    "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks
  64. Cisco VPN Client causes this problem by agressiv · · Score: 1

    The Cisco VPN client for Vista (beta), if it is installed, will cause this blue screen condition to occur while resuming from sleep.

    I have about 6 machines as well that have or had been running Vista as well, and only the ones with the Cisco client ever had problems resuming from sleep.

    agressiv

  65. Re:OK, we get it. by Afecks · · Score: 1

    But if things go wrong on Linux? RTFM, you have the source, you fix it, etc etc...

  66. Most likely sub-par drivers by dubstar · · Score: 1

    I had this same problem with the final version of Vista Ultimate for a while. It would go into sleep mode just fine but when it woke my network connection was always dead. Trying to disable and re-enable it would result in a blue screen. In the end it was my Cisco VPN client that was mucking it up. The newest beta version of the client works much better, although there are still a few issues (to be expected with beta software).

    One thing that I found interesting - when I went to install the production version of the VPN client that my org typically uses, Vista warned that there were compatibility issues with it. I don't expect that they can do the same with beta versions, but it was a useful warning/feature nonetheless.

  67. Hardware Hibernate by MichaelKaiserProScri · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't anybody implement a "hardware only" (or at least firmware only) hibernate? Screw the OS. If the BIOS can save the memory footprint somewhere and restore it and the exact state of the processor, how would the OS know anything had happened?

    1. Re:Hardware Hibernate by cnettel · · Score: 1
      Because not all hardware state is CPU state. A Bluetooth card driver from 3Com would always crash when resuming from hibernation (on my machine) a few years ago. On another machine, there is the odd event of a garbled bitmap cache, probably some kind of synching error where the graphics driver is insisting on that the stuff is still in memory, while that memory was really powered down for a few hours and the content needs to be recreated.

      You really do need the cooperation from drivers or hardware specific firmware to do this. Doing it in all firmware, but firmware specific to each device, is certainly possible, but it would entail saving a far more complex state to fool the OS. (In the GPU example, one would need to save a more or less complete image of the GPU memory as well, while the most reasonable solution is to recreate it properly when resuming, as that operation is simple enough and there already is code present to do that during normal use.)

  68. Re:Relax by domovoyny · · Score: 1

    People are free to complain about bugs and security vulnerabilities that they discover - it helps everyone. But when it's done with this personal tone, the author loses credibility. When you read the article it seems that the author's purpose wasn't to inform people, but rather to bash the company.

    P.S. It's not "my" OS - it's just my choice for maximizing personal time. Everyone knows that Windows is buggy, but some people choose it because it lets us spend more time with family and friends instead of staring at the kernel. And yes, maybe one day there will be a better alternative, but you should at least show some respect for the people who work on Vista - they're not stupid you know.

  69. For longer computer life by mackyrae · · Score: 1

    In sleep mode, everything acts like it's off, so there's not a crapload of heat coming out of the processor. The amount of heat that thing spews out is killer on hard drives and batteries. Unless you want your computer to start going on the fritz in 3 years, either hibernate or shut down. If you want your stuff to still be there when you get back, hibernate.

    --
    look! it's a bird, it's a plane, it's....a girl? yes, a girl browsing Slashdot on Linux
  70. No such problems. . . by CrtxReavr · · Score: 1

    First let me preface with the statement that I'm no Microsoft lover. . . I'm a pragmatist. . . preffer the right tool for the job. . . though if I have to pick a favorite OS, it's FreeBSD, hands down.

    I have, however, experienced no such problems with Vista. The only bugs I've encountered with RC2 on this Inspiron 9300 have been with dragging documents into an XP-created Briefcase on a USB stick. If you drag newer versions of an existing file in, they new files never appear and the old ones are erased. Vista-created Briefcases are fine.

    -CR

    --
    "So is the BSD licence even more 'free' (than GPLv2)? Yes. Unquestionably." --Linus Torvalds (TinyURL.com/2vugzl)
  71. Re:Why do they Lie to Us? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    twitter, please read this carefully. Following this advice will make Slashdot a better place for everyone, including yourself.

    • As a representative of the Linux community, participate in mailing list and newsgroup discussions in a professional manner. Refrain from name-calling and use of vulgar language. Consider yourself a member of a virtual corporation with Mr. Torvalds as your Chief Executive Officer. Your words will either enhance or degrade the image the reader has of the Linux community.
    • Avoid hyperbole and unsubstantiated claims at all costs. It's unprofessional and will result in unproductive discussions.
    • A thoughtful, well-reasoned response to a posting will not only provide insight for your readers, but will also increase their respect for your knowledge and abilities.
    • Always remember that if you insult or are disrespectful to someone, their negative experience may be shared with many others. If you do offend someone, please try to make amends.
    • Focus on what Linux has to offer. There is no need to bash the competition. Linux is a good, solid product that stands on its own.
    • Respect the use of other operating systems. While Linux is a wonderful platform, it does not meet everyone's needs.
    • Refer to another product by its proper name. There's nothing to be gained by attempting to ridicule a company or its products by using "creative spelling". If we expect respect for Linux, we must respect other products.
    • Give credit where credit is due. Linux is just the kernel. Without the efforts of people involved with the GNU project , MIT, Berkeley and others too numerous to mention, the Linux kernel would not be very useful to most people.
    • Don't insist that Linux is the only answer for a particular application. Just as the Linux community cherishes the freedom that Linux provides them, Linux only solutions would deprive others of their freedom.
    • There will be cases where Linux is not the answer. Be the first to recognize this and offer another solution.

    From http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO/Advoca cy

  72. Re:Dude, just buy a fucking Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Vista has it too.
    "In Windows Vista, 'Stand By' and 'Hibernate' have been combined into an additional 'Sleep' function which is active by default. When chosen, this new 'Sleep" mode saves information from the computer's memory to the hibernation file on disk, but instead of turning off the computer, it simultaneously enters Standby mode. After a specified amount of time (3 hours by default), it shuts down (hibernates). If power is lost during Standby mode, the system resumes from the existing hibernate image on disk. Sleep mode, thus, offers the benefits of fast suspend and resume when in Standby mode and reliability when resuming from hibernation, in case of power loss."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Features_new_to_Windo ws_Vista

  73. Works for me syndrome... by Vellmont · · Score: 2, Informative

    but it sounds to me like this is a classic case of "not enough research"

    A rather funny comment coming from someone who presumably tested one system and found it to work, so therefore all systems must work.

    The article mentions that the author had problems with "deep sleep" on 6 of 8 systems.


    On 6 of the 8 tested systems, recovering Windows Vista from a hibernate or Deep Sleep results in one of the following:


    So he's obviously not making the claim that hiberate/Deep Sleep is broken on ALL systems, since there were two he tested that worked correctly. 6 out of 8 is a pretty bad track record though, so it's likely that a significant amount of people are going to have problems with this feature. It's not a huge sample either, so maybe he's just unlucky enough to own systems where this feature doesn't work properly. I DO think it's a quite nice "heads up" to know about before before Vista becomes mainstream though.

    I guess I can't be terribly surprised that hibernate/sleep is still broken though. It doesn't work properly under Windows 2000 on my circa 2002 desktop computer, but worked just fine on my Circa 1999 laptop.
    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:Works for me syndrome... by HairyCanary · · Score: 1

      but it sounds to me like this is a classic case of "not enough research"

      A rather funny comment coming from someone who presumably tested one system and found it to work, so therefore all systems must work.


      Au contraire. You misread what I wrote if you think I made any absolute claim that all systems worked. All I did was point out that the summary & headline's assertion that Vista did not hibernate correctly is flawed. They found a few systems where it failed, and quickly extrapolated that to a general case.

      Frankly I'd have to see a lot more than eight systems tested before it becomes a pattern. For all I know, the six systems that failed were all identical hardware. That would sort of cast the test in a different light, however, so I do not expect that level of detail to be given.

      (disclaimer: I hate Microsoft products with a passion. If I have to be the voice of reason then you are really a nutcase ;-))

  74. Except in Vista it doesn't work by melted · · Score: 1

    Except in Vista it doesn't work and on Mac it does. Oh, and Vista is not available yet. Also, in Vista, it doesn't do hibernate at the time when it goes to sleep. So if you sleep your laptop and remove the battery five minutes later, you're royally fucked without a warning.

    1. Re:Except in Vista it doesn't work by EvanED · · Score: 1
      Except in Vista it doesn't work and on Mac it does.

      Based on what? This article? From the comments throughout this story, it seems the article is just FUD. I'll admit that Macs seem to be better, but if you look through you'll see at least a couple saying that even their Macs have problems.

      Also, in Vista, it doesn't do hibernate at the time when it goes to sleep. So if you sleep your laptop and remove the battery five minutes later, you're royally fucked without a warning.

      Did you even read the post you're repyling to:

      When chosen, this new 'Sleep" mode saves information from the computer's memory to the hibernation file on disk, but instead of turning off the computer, it simultaneously enters Standby mode. After a specified amount of time (3 hours by default), it shuts down (hibernates). If power is lost during Standby mode, the system resumes from the existing hibernate image on disk. Sleep mode, thus, offers the benefits of fast suspend and resume when in Standby mode and reliability when resuming from hibernation, in case of power loss. [emphasis mine]

      Or do you have information that this is wrong?
  75. Dude, just don't buy hardware with shit drivers... by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

    My Dell does just as good - If its on AC power, it only ever shuts off the screen. On battery, it sleeps at 1 minute idle, and hibernates after an hour or so, or if the battery gets too low.

    Many of the problems with ACPI in PCs are caused by third-party drivers.

  76. Curious Bios vs Software? by swalters1 · · Score: 1

    I know I have limited experience with Vista at this point, but using Beta 1 and Beta 2, I never had an issue with Suspend or Hibernation. In fact I used it continually. So my quesiton is... how much of this is simply a BIOS issue and how much is really a Vista issue? Now before you respond...

    I have 4 computers, all of them worked fine under Vista, however, my personal PC will not suspend under Xp correctly (BSOD or won't wake up at all). My wife's comptuer doesn't hibernate under Xp at all. (Can't boot afterwards have to delete Hib file) But both work perfectly under Vista. The other two machines work fine under both.

    It sounds to me like what they fixed under Vista corrected the issues I had with XP but caused other new problems with other computers.

    So BIOS vs Software issues? Anyone want to comment... and by comment I don't mean... Linuix figured it out why can't microsoft because that's not a productive discussion, that's just MS bashing. (It may be true.. but it's not productive)

    1. Re:Curious Bios vs Software? by swalters1 · · Score: 1

      Okay I missed that on my first read! Thanks Dahan!

  77. YAWN by Zorque · · Score: 1

    Why is this news? If there's a minor (and this is really minor) problem with your computer, just figure out a solution. Either leave your computer on or finish everything and turn it off. You people are supposed to be smart and resourceful, figure something out for yourself.

  78. Not true! by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    AmigaOS doesn't suck. All that crappy software that needs stupid luxuries like "memory protection" is what sucks. ;-P

  79. Re:MSN Ramps Up the Linux FUD by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    BTW, it's funny how the parent is flamebait, while replacing a few words makes you insightful. Moderators, make up your mind.

    What, so now a paragraph is true or untrue based on its structure?

  80. They really need to work on that. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    I mean, I'm an uneasy sleeper too ... but at least I don't crash when someone pushes my buttons.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  81. Saving the OS isn't the problem by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    To save the OS state you can just dump the entire RAM to a dump file and save the program counter and registers there too. The real problem is saving the hardware state of all the peripherals.

    1. Re:Saving the OS isn't the problem by mikiN · · Score: 1

      The real problem is saving the hardware state of all the peripherals. I think that's where the real solution can be found. Instead of trying to save hardware state, why not re-initialize the hardware to a known workable state and go from there? For example (don't know if it isn't done like this already), after hibernate, let the X server re-init the graphics card to the current configuration, then signal the window manager to have all the apps redraw themselves. As for soundcards, USB devices, whatever, re-init the hardware and have the applications reconnect to them. As mentioned in previous posts, it is safe to assume that all network connections will have died since the hibernate anyway, why not just re-initialize the network from scratch and signal all servers and clients to re-establish all connections?

      If I had to choose between a supposedly seamless transition between on-state and hibernate and back again that bombs out with a nasty crash 3 out of 4 times or some sort of shortened 'boot sequence' and session restore, I know what I would choose.
      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
  82. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by kryten_nl · · Score: 1
    Allthough your post is obviously flamebait, let me at least try to educate the other readers, who think you might have a point.

    From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Africa:

    Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30,221,532 km^2 (11,668,545 mi^2) including adjacent islands, it covers 6.0% of the Earth's total surface area, and 20.4% of the total land area.[1] With more than 890,000,000 people (as of 2005) in 61 territories, it accounts for about 14% of the world's human population.
    Not all africans are poor, not all africans have to deal with famine, not all africans are at war.

    Please read some of the sites mentioned here, for further information on what is being done with your donated PC's.

    And to reply to your statement: I don't know what Africa needs the most, but I think we can agree that every little bit helps. (Except for cheap food, that's just killing local economies).
    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
  83. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by kryten_nl · · Score: 1
    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
  84. desktop hibernation not available on Linux by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    That's funny, last time I checked, Linux didn't actaully have the hibernation feature. At least it doesn't install it on desktop installs.
    (By the way, just to be clear, hibernation is a feature first brought out with Windows ME, that requires no hardward support. It just dumps the contents of RAM onto your hard drive.)

    1. Re:desktop hibernation not available on Linux by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      It's been there out of the box on every Linux install I've done in the last 3 years. Also, it's not a Microsoft "innovation", I've been using laptops with hibernation support for years. I distinctly remember a work notebook my dad had long ago having hibernation at the BIOS level with Windows 3.1 installed.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    2. Re:desktop hibernation not available on Linux by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      I'm sure it's available for laptop installs, but I was taking about desktop

    3. Re:desktop hibernation not available on Linux by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      There's a difference? What distro are you using? I've just put Ubuntu on everything except my servers (Debian goes there) for the last 2 years and it's installed the same on both laptops and desktops. Hibernation worked on all of them.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    4. Re:desktop hibernation not available on Linux by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      Mandrake 10.1

  85. Same problem with Windows XP by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    Windows XP had the same problem... I'm not sure but I think they screwed up the feature with SP2. Firstly, SP2 disabled Hibernation, but you could re-enable by changing a registry entry. However, if your PC had more than 2GB memory it wouldn't work. Only reciently (like a couple of months ago) they released a fix for the bug

  86. Yes, that is funny. Re:ACPI Sucks. by twitter · · Score: 1

    It's funny how I've been enjoying multiple month up time on Windows computers too. Sometimes 4 to 6 months at a time, continuously on ... The only times the computer goes off is literally when the power gets disconnected.

    So, how do you avoid the monthly mandatory "update" reboot? I can see how you might not bother with patches, given how poorly they work.

    How do you monitor your uptime? Has Microsoft included an "uptime" utility yet?

    Finally, I envy the reliability of your power company. Mine can't keep things going more than 140 days and usually goes down once every two months on average.

    I've read claims like yours, but have never seen a real machine do as you say. For the average user, performance like yours is as removed from reality as a trip to the moon. I doubt Steve Balmer's workstation can keep it up more than 30 days.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  87. XP Still has it wrong by PhotoGuy · · Score: 1

    Dear God, please say it isn't true. After all the patches and service packs and driver updates, even *XP* still can't hibernate/restore properly more than 80% of the time, I find. If it's worse than XP, then MS should just give up on this tech.

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    1. Re:XP Still has it wrong by aXis100 · · Score: 1

      My XP machines have always been very reliable with hibernate/restore - maybe 99%.

    2. Re:XP Still has it wrong by toddestan · · Score: 1

      It depends on the hardware. My AMD Athlon XP box I built from parts which is crammed full of parts and various stuff doesn't work right. It'll suspend and come back on, but no sound until I reboot, and sometimes no keyboard and mouse until unplug them and plug them back in. Usually sleep/hibernate just doesn't work quite right on my frankencomputers, and I just deal with it.

      On the other hand, close to stock OEM computers work great. IBM Netvista's, most Dells, and HP Vectras just seem to work. I even put Vista on a 5 year old HP Vectra (1.5Ghz P4) and have no problems with sleep/hibernate/resume on that computer.

  88. Are we sure that's not just a Linux fanboy site? by CatOne · · Score: 1

    I went to the site, and got 2 dialogs warning that Mozilla versions 1.3 aren't supported. WTF? Guess Safari isn't good enough... is IE good enough either?

  89. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by loraksus · · Score: 1

    They can use parts of the razor sharp dell cases as machetes to kill people in different tribes, thus reducing the amount of people in the country and creating an increase of food available per capita.

    --
    1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  90. Re:Why do they Lie to Us? by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

    Er, bullshit. I close my Windows laptop; I open it again, and everything is fine. Network comes back up, applications come back up, music carries on playing from where it was before I shut the lid...all works. In the interests of fairness, Ubuntu worked just as well.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  91. Re:Yes, that is funny. Re:ACPI Sucks. by Fweeky · · Score: 1
    "So, how do you avoid the monthly mandatory "update" reboot?"

    Turn off the Automatic Updates service when it starts bugging you to "please reboot or I'll do it for you".

    "How do you monitor your uptime? Has Microsoft included an "uptime" utility yet?"

    It's not part of a default install:

    C:\Documents and Settings\freaky>uptime /?
     
    UPTIME, Version 1.01
    (C) Copyright 1999, Microsoft Corporation
     
    Uptime [server] [/s ] [/a] [/d:mm/dd/yyyy | /p:n] [/heartbeat] [/? | /help]
            server Name or IP address of remote server to process.
    /s Display key system events and statistics.
    /a Display application failure events (assumes /s).
    /d: Only calculate for events after mm/dd/yyyy.
    /p: Only calculate for events in the previous n days.
    /heartbeat Turn on/off the system's heartbeat
    /? Basic usage.
    /help Additional usage information.
    You can get it off Microsoft's download site here.

    "Finally, I envy the reliability of your power company. Mine can't keep things going more than 140 days and usually goes down once every two months on average."

    That sucks; I think we've had maybe one blackout every two years or so, and I'm pretty sure they were all local. Then again I do live near a big industrial area and within spitting distance of a 1.3GW nuclear power station. So.. don't you have a UPS?
  92. Re:Yes, that is funny. Re:ACPI Sucks. by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

    I've read claims like yours, but have never seen a real machine do as you say.

    You've also never used iTunes or an iPod, but still shout off about how shit they are. And you've never had any real experience with Windows XP, by your own admission.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  93. I've been running it for months, no such problem. by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 1

    Now, the original poster seems to be implying that this is an inherent flaw with Vista that affects all machines.

    I have been running the beta of Vista for months now, on multiple machines, including laptops, and have yet to see this occur even once. With varying sets of hardware and sofware on the machines. I have not read on any messageboards of this being a widespread issue.

    Now, my MacBook Pro, when shipped, had an issue that if I had an ExpressCard in the slot, it would instantly wake up from sleep as soon as it went into sleep mode. This meant that if the lid was closed, it would go to sleep, wake up, go back to sleep, wake up, etc, until either the battery died, or I opened it up. This was fixed with a firmware update. More recently, one of my external peripherals seems to cause a kernel panic on waking up. If i unplug the peripheral first, it wakes up fine though.

    This is in contrast to a certain model of Dell laptop from 2000 that my company bought a dozen of that NONE of them would go into sleep mode properly. Dell's official answer? Disable sleep mode. On a laptop. (The symptom was that when you told it to go to sleep, it would turn off the hard drive, monitor, and fans. But it was apparently supplying full power to the processor, causing it to cook itself. We had one of them get so hot while shut in the user's laptop bag that the screen warped, and the machine died. The others didn't have permanent damage.)

    --
    Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
    The purpose of that site was not known.
  94. Re:Yes, that is funny. Re:ACPI Sucks. by abradsn · · Score: 1

    So, how do you avoid the monthly mandatory "update" reboot? I can see how you might not bother with patches, given how poorly they work.

    I typically patch the living crap out of the machine whenever I install the OS in the first place.
    Then I follow good practices. Turn off services that I never use. Run the system behind a hardware firewall. Don't install stuff that tends to be buggier than hell. Don't click on stupid stuff while browsing the web, or reading email.
    I review each new patch. Sometimes I don't install them. Sometimes you can just get away without a reboot, by restarting or unloading a particular service. Even still you can get by for several months without worrying about patches, if you've got the machine in a great state when you start out.
    To, be honest, the same ideas have worked for me for Linux too, given that I start with a superb distro and recompile the kernel right away.
    A UPS power supply (battery backup) also helps keep the machine a little more healthy. Hardware seems to fail pretty often in server environments (too Hot), so get redundant and/or high quality hardware if you can afford it.

  95. That's what it does by default now by melted · · Score: 1

    That's exactly what he said. Open it up and it's ready to go. If your battery goes out when it's sleeping, you resume from hibernate.

    1. Re:That's what it does by default now by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      The original poster was not clear about whether he was using suspend with write to disk or hibernate. I don't know about now, but that was not the default in the past. Powerbooks used to suspend only, while the MBP was released in hibernate only mode. So instead of popping awake the second you opened the lid a MPB from the factory would take a while to come back to life. I never saw the progress screen, but I used to always wonder if it was waking up or not... sometimes I'd hit the power button a couple of times.

      With option three the notebook wakes up instantly. Hopefully Apple made that the default, but it didn't used to be.

  96. Re:yeah, and whose fault is that? by idlake · · Score: 1

    Why is it Microsoft's job to simplify a process so it can be better implemented by their competitors?

    I don't presume to tell Microsoft what to do, and I'm not speaking to Microsoft. I frankly don't care what Microsoft does. I'm just telling potential Microsoft customers: wake up, Microsoft is screwing you again.

    And in this case, Microsoft customers are screwed not only because their choice of OS is limited because of Microsoft's poor standardization efforts, but because not even Microsoft's new OS runs reliably on the platform they themselves have defined.

  97. Had enough yet? by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

    Bugs, viruses, people lining up to snag your data, music downloads that go POOF! in the middle of the night...

    Just how much more crap will you put up with, before trying something new?

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  98. Re:Slashdot Ramps Up the Vista FUD by kimvette · · Score: 1

    I think the idea is to get the pissant third-rate military dictators addicted to WoW, then they won't have TIME to oppress their subjects.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  99. It works for me by FS · · Score: 1

    I've been testing Vista Enterprise on my work Latitude D610 laptop for just over a week now. I have entered and successfully recovered from every sleep state. I have not seen a single bluescreen, and after turning Aero off have found the experience to not be terribly slow either. There were only two drivers that did not load from the DVD: Sound and the smartcard reader. I don't use the smartcard reader, but it did download the driver from Microsoft. The sound driver was available from Dell. My Verizon EVDO card (kpc650) works fine as well even though VZAccess does not (I don't need it). Aside from a few minor usability issues that I just have to get used to, I don't find it to be a bad product at all. The only real issues are that I don't like is that the screen buzzes like it did when I loaded a certain driver on it in Linux (fixed it with a different driver revision), and the Contivity VPN client does not work.

    I am not advocating Vista or any product here, but I also do not think it is fair to make a blanket statement about any product until you have tested the product on all hardware. Unfortunately, The Fine Article's website is broken, so I can't read about how well they tested or didn't test. My test involved one machine so far, so I can't say definitively whether or not I have the only machine in the world that Vista works on or not, but my guess would be not. Do some testing for yourself to determine the truth before bashing. We're always asking people do that with Linux based on an appropriate use, so let's give Vista a fair shake here as well.

  100. You are an idiot by MicrosoftRepresentit · · Score: 1

    I was going to write a sensible post, but then I read your post history, and realised you where a complete and utter tool. Do people as blinkered as you really exist in real life, or are you just a script of some kind?

  101. Bet I Know Why by Quantam · · Score: 1

    I had this problem with the company laptop I used over the summer, running XP. As our product includes a driver component, the computer was prepared for it, generating BSOD crash dumps which I then sent to our driver guys (as I first suspected it was a bug in our product). They ultimately found that it was due to a bug in the NIC driver (RTL was the manufacturer, I think), and told me that they've seen this before in other computers using NICs by the same manufacturer.

    --
    You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!
  102. Bias by revlic · · Score: 1

    I'm no Microsoft fan, but people here are making pretty big asses of themselves over here without reason. I've been working with Vista Release Candidates and I've yet to see a serious issue regarding the hibernation mode. On this note, the people who are interested in articles like these probably aren't going to care of how wonderful the hibernation features of Ubuntu 6.10 or SuSE are. But the "Linux will fix all of that" crowd needs to STFU sometimes.

  103. Works fine for me by eraser.cpp · · Score: 1

    I've hibernated my thinkpad running Vista RC2 numerous times and haven't had any trouble. I suspect it's a hardware driver afterall.

  104. Blame it on NVidia by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    It's no Ubuntu, its the NVidia drivers. The binary NVidia drivers (which most people end up using for one reason or another) do not do hibernation at all. So if you're in X when you hibernate, when you wake up you'll get a black screen, and no keyboard / mouse working.

    1. Re:Blame it on NVidia by sowth · · Score: 1

      How is this different than doing anything else with NShitia drivers? If they are using that kind of card, I don't see how they'd notice any difference if it crashes when it comes out of sleep. Just watching videos or sometimes nothing at all will cause the screen to go blank and the video to stop working. Luckily it usually doesn't completely crash the kernel so I can use SysRq or the power button to shut down properly. Though sometimes it crashes the kernel during shutdown. Looks like journaling filesystems came just in time...

      I think I will go back to using the emachine w/the i810 graphics my dad gave me. At least with the intel graphics drivers, everything is stable, but it would be nice to upgrade.

      Anyone know if there are any motherboards which support AMD64 processors with Intel graphics? Or some sort of graphics with open programming specs and open source drivers? Not likely, but I can hope. The AMD64 design sounds great, and I don't do accelerated 3D too heavily, so integrated graphics would work. Though it would be nice to accelerate raytracing as well, and if I had programming specs, maybe I could try something. I will probably just have to settle with an Intel processor with accel 3D or go with an AMD and just use the graphics unaccelerated? I don't really like either choice.

  105. Sometimes... by mtec · · Score: 1

    Vista may have trouble sleeping
    or
    Vista BSODs on waking are causing me to lose data
    or
    Vista is terribly broken with completely pitiful support for waking Vista up from a Deep Sleep or hibernation.
    or
    Death never sleeps.

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!