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S3 Standby State Done Right

For Earth Day, Cameron Butterfield has written in with a pointer to his article on how to get your Windows PC into S3 sleep, and why you want to. It covers the question of how to take advantage of this extremely low-power mode even when your machine is an "always on" file server, remote desktop, or VNC server.

5 of 216 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And Linux? by BACbKA · · Score: 5, Informative

    Gentoo's Power Management Guide is a bit gentoo-centric, but most things carry to another distribution easily.

    --

    VKh

  2. dumppo.exe the Microsoft Power Tool by MSRedfox · · Score: 5, Informative

    Windows XP will often times not give s3 suspend as an option even when turned on in BIOS. But with Microsofts dumppo.exe utility you can force it to use an S3 or S4 state. ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/products/Oemtest/v1.1/WOST est/Tools/Acpi/dumppo.exe To force it to S3, run this under command prompt "dumppo admin minsleep=s3"

  3. Re:FreeBSD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Guys! You found each other!

    Shouldn't you guys exchange phone numbers or something?

  4. Re:And Linux? by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 5, Funny

    > what are the options to set up a Linux system to reduce power usage and fan noise when idle?

    Disconnect those pesky cooling fans. They just make a lot noise and suck up power. Truth is, your PC will run fine without them. It's just a scam by equipment manufacturers to make a few extra bucks out of you. I've been running with them removed for years, no problems.

    regards
    Scott E. Brown
    NOAA Antarctic Station

  5. Nice FUD by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Informative
    Anything M$ touches is shit

    Oh yeah.

    Bill Gate's memo

    That's an interesting email from 1999. Myself, I've been known to send emails to the tone of "how can we prevent the competition from leeching on our multi-million dollar R&D investment with our technology partners", but OK.

    Would you like to point me to the follow up email from Eric Rudder that says "Hi Bill - As you requested, we've made the ACPI extensions specific to Windows so no one else can implement them. Cheers!" I can't seem to find it.

    Oh, wait - here's ACPIfor Linux and ACPI for FreeBSD. Indeed, here's a quote from the WP entry:

    The Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) specification is an open industry standard first released in December 1996 developed by HP, Intel, Microsoft, Phoenix and Toshiba that defines common interfaces for hardware recognition, motherboard and device configuration and power management.

    Now, ACPI has its shortcomings. It's complicated. It might not be your ideal of a standard. But it is an open standard, which Linux indeed implements. It might be broken in some ways in Linux as it is in Windows, but implemented it is. It's an important standard because it takes hardware out of the equation, which is important for a general OS that's supposed to support a wide range of it.

    I still use APM for the most part

    Really? That's also a Microsoft-defined standard (along with Intel):

    Advanced Power Management (APM) is an API developed by Intel and Microsoft

    Is that standard "shit" as well? And if you all these standards from Microsoft are "shit", then why do you use them at all? You use Linux, right? Why don't you come up with your own standard and give it to the free software world so they can stop using all these "shit" open standards that Microsoft has bothered to make open for anyone to use? Which reminds me, I'd love to see that other email about ACPI I mentioned. Thanks.