Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
S0 The computer is running and the CPU executes instructions. "Away mode" is a subset of S0, where monitor is off but background tasks are running. G1 Sleeping S0ix Modern Standby, [34] or "Low Power S0 Idle". Partial processor SoC sleep. [35] [36] Sub states include S0i1, S0i2 and S0i3. Known to ARM and x86 devices. S1
CPU/chipset/BIOS support for S0ix "Low Power S0 Idle" power state; On Windows 8.1, supporting InstantGo and having a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 chip will allow the device to use a passive device encryption system. [4] [5] Compliant platforms also enables full BitLocker Device encryption. A background service that encrypts the whole ...
Windows Vista's Hybrid sleep feature saves the contents of volatile memory to hard disk before entering sleep mode. If power to memory is lost, it will use the hard disk to wake up. The user has the option of hibernating directly if they wish. On PCs that enable Modern Standby, Hybrid sleep feature is unavailable.
Wake-on-LAN (WoL or WOL) [a] is an Ethernet or Token Ring computer networking standard that allows a computer to be turned on or awakened from sleep mode by a network message. The message is usually sent to the target computer by a program executed on a device connected to the same local area network (LAN).
[2] [3] It can set parameters such as drive caches, sleep mode, power management, acoustic management, and DMA settings. GParted [citation needed] and Parted Magic both include hdparm. [4] Changing hardware parameters from suboptimal conservative defaults to their optimal settings can improve performance greatly.
Hibernation (also known as suspend to disk, or Safe Sleep on Macintosh computers [1]) in computing is powering down a computer while retaining its state.When hibernation begins, the computer saves the contents of its random access memory (RAM) to a hard disk or other non-volatile storage.
S0 Number of rings before Auto-Answer 0–255 (0 = never) 0 S1 Ring Counter 0–255 rings 0 S2 Escape character 0–255, ASCII decimal 43 ("+") S3 Carriage Return Character 0–127, ASCII decimal 13 (Carriage Return) S4 Line Feed Character 0–127, ASCII decimal 10 (Line Feed) S5 Backspace Character 0–32, ASCII decimal 8 (Backspace) S6
Device Sleep with a maximum return latency of 20 milliseconds unless otherwise specified in Identify Data Log; These can be selected by the SATA AHCI driver, usually via a configuration option, or by the OS Power Options. Windows Vista and later allows the tweaking of AHCI LPM modes through a registry hack. [3] Hot swapping is disabled.