But of course, next year's housing costs are going to include electricity consumption. They'll just pass the savings on to you.Originally posted by: lil buttercup
I'm up at college, in dorm, same cost no matter how much electricity I use... this computer is staying on!
Originally posted by: Jeff7
It's cheaper to turn it off. I turn mine off at night, and when I'm away for the day, unless I'm going to have it encoding or recording a TV show.
Originally posted by: Amused
Because of thermal wear and tear it is better for the lifespan of the machine to leave it on. Especially the hard drives.
Mine stay on unless I am leaving for more than a few days. Because of this and proper HDD cooling, I have had only one HDD failure ever. (And that was an IBM deathstar over 3 years after everyone else's failed).
Originally posted by: Syrch
wow i didnt' think so many would leave their pc's on. what would it cost to run a typical computer all month long in comparison to shutting it down every day?
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: Syrch
wow i didnt' think so many would leave their pc's on. what would it cost to run a typical computer all month long in comparison to shutting it down every day?
Not a whole lot. $10-20 difference or so.
I turn mine off, just because I like my bedroom to be as quiet as possible when I'm going to sleep, and winXP boots so quickly anyway that it doesn't matter.
Originally posted by: homercles337
Originally posted by: Amused
Because of thermal wear and tear it is better for the lifespan of the machine to leave it on. Especially the hard drives.
Mine stay on unless I am leaving for more than a few days. Because of this and proper HDD cooling, I have had only one HDD failure ever. (And that was an IBM deathstar over 3 years after everyone else's failed).
Anecdotal. I turn mine off and have only had 1 disc failure in a laptop. I have had more than 20 personal discs.
