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Post by cowboy40 on Nov 8, 2019 7:21:01 GMT -7
Microsoft Windows 10 has the fast boot options in the power settings. What this does is when you shut down your computer it stores a file into the non volatile ROM of the system. It is a file similar to the one that gets created in you put your computer into sleep mode. Pretty much saves the system status at shut down and this allows the computer to boot back up in seconds if you have a SSD as the boot drive.
I am not a fan of the "fast boot", because if have seen issues related to "drivers" of the devices you might have installed in your system. I have run into sound driver issues, printer issues and the like. I have even had kernel panics that have led to the famous "blue screen".
I have all my boxes set up to run a fresh boot every time on a start or restart. This loads a fresh kernel into memory every time. When i use this method, I don't have the issues listed above...
Has anyone else had problems operating Windows 10 booting up with "fast boot"?
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Post by starcruiser on Nov 8, 2019 8:47:51 GMT -7
"Hibernation" has been an issue with all PCs since sometime in the 1990's (when it was first used).
As you noted, some devices don't recover and initialize correctly with this method and that has still not be resolved by anyone (AFAIK).
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