Date: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 12:23:42 -0800 (PST)
From: Matt Hanson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [LIB] W2k Hibernate Stand By conflicts


--- Eduardo Duca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> >the bios. windows power management is not implemented
> >properly and will mess up the hard drive and give you
> 
> Even in W2k ?

I've always had great success with W2K's hibernation...  or at least with
whatever the default hibernation function was after W2K installation.  I'm
pretty sure it was W2Ks.  Philip was always writing about just how well
W2K's hibernation function worked.  Instead of fully shutting down a Libby
with W2K installed, hibernating, and then waking up from hibernation always
goes much faster than a full cold boot to W2K.

> How I turn off Hibernation and suspend in windows (using again BIOS 
> hibernation with Bios animation)
> Some websites say BIOS hibernation (16bits) its worse than windows..

Can't help there.

> Whats diference in BIOS setup: BOOT, HIBERNATION, RESUME modes ?
> Whats RESET HOLE in right side of librettos do ?

The hole provides access to the reboot/reset switch.  When the system
freezes and won't shut down, press a pen into the hole to activate the
reset switch to reboot the system.  Sometimes it even works! ;-P  (Windows
is problematic with this at times)

I'm not clear on the BIOS settings for BOOT, HIBERNATION, & RESUME myself. 
All I know is that in general, a hibernation function puts the system into
a full power down where data for the booted session is written to the hard
drive.  The system can then wake up to the same condition it was in before
hibernating.  A resume function only writes the data to RAM, and doesn't
power the system down totally.  Just what those BIOS settings do I'm not
sure of.  But I'd assume they would do bassically what I outlined above.

Matt

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