- Aug 25, 2001
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I always do a powercfg -h off command.
But do all you guys also disable it on laptops? Hibernate sort of make sense for laptops and tablets.
I don't think I've ever switched off Fast Boot in the BIOS. In Windows, definitely (unless it's a HDD booter). Are there any definite advantages of switching off Fast Boot in the BIOS?
I have battery backups. Not a concern. When I turn my PC off, I want it off.You realise that also kills hybrid sleep, being a safeguard for sleep mode whereby the contents of RAM are saved to disk first? If the computer loses power during sleep mode, the contents of RAM can be loaded from disk to recover the Windows session.
With fast boot enabled. You may find yourself hitting the del key or F2 key over and over when booting to get into the bios menu. Not a big deal for some but annoying for others.Never had a problem with fast boot and not being able to get into the BIOS: I use it on 3 computers here - a B660 alder lake machine, an H170 Skylake build, and a B450 5600X build. The one time I can think of a related issue was a BIOS that had a setting for ultra fast boot, and that one was an oopsies I quickly undid.
As for the network adapter waking the computer, I wouldn't have thought to look through Windows settings for something that was happening from an "off" state. Maybe I'd only look in that direction after exhausting the BIOS stuff.
Maybe it depends on the system. I don't have any problems getting into the BIOS with the delete key on any of the systems I listed (Gigabyte and MSI boards). But I can see how it can be an issue if the system's fast boot behaves more like the ultra fast setting I noted I hit one time.With fast boot enabled. You may find yourself hitting the del key or F2 key over and over when booting to get into the bios menu. Not a big deal for some but annoying for others.
Ditto Asus boards. I wait for my trackball light to come on (or say a keyboard flash on other systems) and immediately start pressing Delete. OEM PCs are often a pain though.Maybe it depends on the system. I don't have any problems getting into the BIOS with the delete key on any of the systems I listed (Gigabyte and MSI boards). But I can see how it can be an issue if the system's fast boot behaves more like the ultra fast setting I noted I hit one time.
Yes, that can have an influence on the time delay allotted, too!It just occurred to me that one change I've made for over a decade of my builds (Asus boards, almost always) is to disable the BIOS logo (so I get the standard text BIOS screen that tells you a bit about what's being detected), which in turn changes the BIOS screen timer from (I think) 3 seconds to 5 (I'm sure about this figure).