Don't SHUT DOWN your computer!

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
  • The shutdown button on your computer doesn't actually shut down your computer!
    wait. what?
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 4,9K

  • @patrickgerth4570
    @patrickgerth4570 Před 2 lety +5830

    Straight to the point. No rambling for 30 minutes. Great tutorial. I wish more instructors and educators would learn that!

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +216

      Thanks for hanging out here 👍

    • @lemonacidrounds7293
      @lemonacidrounds7293 Před 2 lety +10

      @@LironSegev There's something I don't understand though. Its set up on a fast start-up right? How is it gonna start-up faster if we untick the option? I'm asking cause right now my laptop is taking 20 minutes (sometimes more) to come back after a shut down. Should I untick or leave like that?

    • @uogiusj
      @uogiusj Před 2 lety +60

      @@lemonacidrounds7293 If your laptop is taking that long to turn on, it is either 30 years old or you have a serious problem

    • @lemonacidrounds7293
      @lemonacidrounds7293 Před 2 lety +5

      @@uogiusj Its 4 years old and I have a very special program installed that allows me to use windows 10 with the look of windows 7. I'm not a fan of windows 10 looks so I've installed this one to look and operate as windows 7 as the model supports windows 10 only. I'm sure this program is taking too long to adjust after restart. Its fine as I rarely restart it. If I don't restart it works as a Swiss watch!

    • @rogergeyer9851
      @rogergeyer9851 Před 2 lety +26

      @@lemonacidrounds7293: In my experience, an old PC can build up a LOT of extra stuff over the years as you add various software. Trying to clean up stuff you find in the startup folder can help.
      But the biggest thing, which can make a HUGE, almost miraculous difference for very slow startup in Windows is to use an SSD instead of a slow old HDD.
      i strongly suspect that for a 20 minute startup, it won't make much difference for you, but you could experiment and try it both ways and time it and see.

  • @FOF275
    @FOF275 Před 2 lety +4179

    It's so refreshing to find a video that just starts without the usual intro. Great stuff, really learned a lot here

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +368

      Appreciate the comment. If you came here to learn about Windows, I figure no one needs a 20 min montage of me making coffee 🤪 Let's just get into it!

    • @FOF275
      @FOF275 Před 2 lety +56

      @@LironSegev exactly

    • @blotski
      @blotski Před 2 lety +42

      And somebody who doesn't actually start off with 'what's happening, guys?' quickly followed by a request to subscribe and click the bell. So refreshing.

    • @blisssing8449
      @blisssing8449 Před 2 lety +12

      I now automatically start at the 5-10 minute range. CZcams must give them all a script to read.

    • @Sean-sn9ld
      @Sean-sn9ld Před 2 lety +6

      100% agree

  • @SomeoneCommenting
    @SomeoneCommenting Před rokem +943

    I wish all people were like this guy, he just goes straight to the point and shows all the steps to do and the meanings for all things. No narcissistic waste of time trying to adore his own persona like if he was a celebrity.

    • @Honeneko.
      @Honeneko. Před rokem +6

      Most people just look up Linus. You either get his Tech Tips or his Techquickie channel. This was covered a year ago.

    • @SlowDIIV
      @SlowDIIV Před rokem +18

      @@Honeneko. That's the point of having alternatives, I'm quite aware of Linus but I can't stand his style 🤷🏻

    • @xaby996
      @xaby996 Před rokem +1

      @@Honeneko. "linus did it first" shut up lol

    • @Honeneko.
      @Honeneko. Před rokem +1

      @@xaby996 Lol. Paint him Yellow and call him Homer.

    • @lavawingsplays1627
      @lavawingsplays1627 Před rokem +2

      Totally agree

  • @LisaRamseyArt
    @LisaRamseyArt Před rokem +1031

    Never underestimate the power of a restart.
    Doesn’t just apply to your computer, either.

    • @lookorionisonthesky605
      @lookorionisonthesky605 Před rokem +38

      It works on your mobile phone

    • @gouthamkrishna7366
      @gouthamkrishna7366 Před rokem +120

      It works for life too...

    • @bruhiimbored6061
      @bruhiimbored6061 Před rokem +12

      It works for your dental appointments (repeat chain yall)

    • @Norwagen
      @Norwagen Před rokem +18

      @@gouthamkrishna7366 life speedrun (any %)

    • @Jebu911
      @Jebu911 Před rokem +22

      true best way to restart your brain is to get a 9mm tool push it to your temple and then you automatically do a hard reset.

  • @brianschuetz2614
    @brianschuetz2614 Před 2 lety +3634

    I've been a computer programmer for years, but I didn't know this about the shutdown process. I did notice that some led lights were still on in my computer after a 'shutdown'. Thanks for making this useful video.

    • @diamondninja4938
      @diamondninja4938 Před 2 lety +70

      There are also Bios settings that change what led lights do when shutdown

    • @guguigugu
      @guguigugu Před 2 lety +51

      not necessarily the same thing

    • @PlasmaBurns
      @PlasmaBurns Před 2 lety +103

      just turn off the power supply with the switch built on to it once yuo shut it down

    • @PlasmaBurns
      @PlasmaBurns Před 2 lety +87

      @Karl with a K Just flip the power switch in the back of the power supply.

    • @qwertyuiopasdf160
      @qwertyuiopasdf160 Před 2 lety +89

      @Karl with a K well....
      New AAA games don't have win 7 compatibility.......

  • @doktormcnasty
    @doktormcnasty Před 2 lety +1435

    I find that Fast Startup is really only useful if your computer is using one of those older mechanical hard drives rather than the more modern SSDs. SSDs are so fast there really isn't much to be gained with Fast Startup enabled.

    • @nickdibart
      @nickdibart Před 2 lety +63

      I agree. If you have win10pro, you can disable this feature in group policy editor. Startup programs are the main cause of slow startups also.

    • @SonicBodhi1
      @SonicBodhi1 Před 2 lety +43

      I also agree- when I finally made the switch from hdd to ssd, the difference in startup times was like lightning. I have disabled fast startup for other reasons on hdd boot drives before. So it only makes sense that this is now outmoded.

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare Před 2 lety +19

      Fast startup could still reduce your startup time from 45 seconds to 10 though.

    • @flinch622
      @flinch622 Před 2 lety +26

      Avoid sleep or hibernate. If system crashes... you are in real trouble. A security concern being afk? Just log off.

    • @cogs7777
      @cogs7777 Před 2 lety +9

      @@flinch622 ikr, i've had trouble coming back from hibernate.

  • @wettuga2762
    @wettuga2762 Před rokem +40

    Just a clarification: Shutdown with Fast Startup enabled is basically like hibernating AFTER logging off. The computer saves the RAM content to HDD/SDD and FULLY turns off. When you turn it on, Windows doesn't need to load everything back up, it simply loads the hibernated state and logs in, which sometimes creates havoc with drivers and/or hardware, specially old/outdated ones. If the computer has an SSD, having Fast Startup on or off won't make much of a difference anyway, even on old hardware, so just keep it disabled.

    • @AyushSharma80001
      @AyushSharma80001 Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks

    • @Stratelier
      @Stratelier Před 4 měsíci +1

      I run a laptop from 2017, HDD, I recently disabled Fast Startup (after one incident where startup yielded INTERNAL_POWER_FAILURE when trying to log in) and I don't notice any practical difference in startup times. Hmm...

  • @zevirem9301
    @zevirem9301 Před rokem +33

    Thank you for not forcing this past the 10min mark with random computer/personal history. This stuff is useful to know.

  • @LAM1895
    @LAM1895 Před 2 lety +1685

    The title can be misleading, so I’ll add this: YOU SHOULD ALWAYS shut down your computer regularly, because although the kernel doesn’t get reset other caches are, so by doing this you can avoid having issues related to running your computer for too long. Otherwise very informative video, I learned a few things.

    • @NiteSaiya
      @NiteSaiya Před 2 lety +149

      I'll add this: One of the main causes of hardware failure is thermal stress. Which arises not from very high or low temperatures, but from *changes* in temperature. Faster changes in temperature cause more stress. So any shutdowns should ideally be brief. For example, your CPU may idle at 120F and jump to 150F under stress. That's a ΔT of 30F. If you turn it off and let it reach a room temperature of 70F, that's a ΔT of 50F. And if you turn your computer on and jump right into a high-load activity like gaming, your CPU may go from 70F to 150F (ΔT=80F) extremely quickly.
      [note: It is NOT correct to say that a ΔT of 60F is "double" a ΔT of 30F, because Fahrenheit and Celsius are not absolute scales. To find the true % increase in temperature you have to take a ratio of the temperatures scaled from absolute 0.]
      I'm not 100% on this next part, but I personally believe this is one reason why game consoles die so much faster than PCs. Part of it is that they're made as cheaply as possible while trying to maximize performance, certainly. But budget PCs often don't have the same short lifespans. Imo, game consoles die so fast because they get flipped between sitting cold and running games so much more often than PCs ever do.
      tl;dr if you need to reboot, do it quickly.

    • @jeremiahwilkins5837
      @jeremiahwilkins5837 Před 2 lety +33

      My PC hardly ever shuts down. Its allowed to go into standby mode when it idles too long. My Desktop PC is running fine with no issues.

    • @TechSupportDave
      @TechSupportDave Před 2 lety +17

      @@NiteSaiya strange becauso my 360 still works fine, same with my xbox1. Got the 360 on RELEASE and used it a LOT, I'd say over 10000hours in total.

    • @kazzymoogle4976
      @kazzymoogle4976 Před 2 lety +13

      @@NiteSaiya a difference of 60F IS double a difference of 30F. Despite the fact that the scale doesn't start at absolute zero, the differences scale equivalently. A difference of 30F is exactly equivalent to a difference of 16.666K, no matter what the actual temperatures recorded are. The difference between 0F and 30F is 16.666 Kelvin, the difference between 12.5F and 42.5F is 16.666 Kelvin. Differences are double, but the actual values are not double.
      Look at it this way. A difference of 30°F is exactly 30R. A difference of 60°F is exactly 60R. Rankine is an absolute scale and the % increase on the 60R will be exactly double that of the 30R every time. It's the same with °C and K. It doesn't matter whether they start at absolute 0 or not if the only thing you're doing is comparing DIFFERENCES in heat and not the actual temperature values. The comparison of difference in energy is also identical to the difference in heat as long as both items compared are identical (same structure and mass)

    • @oneandzero6251
      @oneandzero6251 Před 2 lety +38

      @@NiteSaiya I've built my own computers since I was 16. The first years I always shut down my computer each time I did not use it. Weirdly enough, I seemed to encounter hardware problems (hdd, ram, power supply and internal controller card) failures regular. After some years I kept my PC running 24/7. They would run for years without any problems. You can compare it the effects of G force. If you accelerate too fast, your body will not handle it. If you accelerate slower, you can reach speeds as high as you want. Same goes for harddrives.

  • @Bill_CBR
    @Bill_CBR Před 2 lety +425

    Just run "shutdown /s /t 2". If you want to see how long it's been since a true shutdown simply run the Task Manager and look at the Performance tab with the CPU option selected. The Uptime will show how long your computer has been running since a restart or true shutdown.

    • @richardjones2811
      @richardjones2811 Před 2 lety +8

      Mine says 5 days so not that bad. How do you personaly do a full shut down?

    • @Bill_CBR
      @Bill_CBR Před 2 lety +29

      @@richardjones2811 I have a batch file on my desktop with the command "shutdown.exe /s /t 02" in it and I run it when I'm done using the computer. The "/t 02" is the amount of time the computer waits before shutting down, in this case 2 seconds. It's just long enough for the prompt to come up and tell you the computer is about to shut down, and then it does.

    • @samsneed6238
      @samsneed6238 Před 2 lety +17

      @@Bill_CBR I do the same thing, but have icons on my desktop for Shutdown and Restart. Create a shortcut for a Command window, change the properties of the new shortcut to: Target: %windir%\system32\cmd.exe /C "shutdown -s -t 2". For restart, Target is: %windir%\system32\cmd.exe /C "shutdown -r -t 2". Then change the icon to something that make sense to you.

    • @silicon212
      @silicon212 Před 2 lety +6

      I'd use the /t 0 option myself, the 2 second delay doesn't make sense

    • @pencinta1329
      @pencinta1329 Před 2 lety +1

      @@richardjones2811 shift+shutdown

  • @anthonyfauci7837
    @anthonyfauci7837 Před rokem +91

    As I understand it, the original difference between sleep and hibernate is that sleep remembers your system's current state in RAM, which means it requires constant access to power to retain sleep mode. Hibernate saves your current state to the hard drive and loads that state from the drive when restarted, like with fast startup, and thus can be fully disconnected from power while hibernating and still be able to reload the state of the machine when it was told to hibernate.

    • @queengown4255
      @queengown4255 Před rokem +3

      I use sleep all the time. And, when the power goes off due to a particularly powerful lightning flash, the laptop reboots back to where I left it.

    • @jas_bataille
      @jas_bataille Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@queengown4255 Except one day the surge will get to your laptop in sleep mode and fry it through because it's still connected to power... just saying. Disable fast start-up in the control panel under power option, "change what the power button does". Search for it if not appearing.

    • @denzeroneYT
      @denzeroneYT Před 5 měsíci

      I still don't understand why? Well, the computer is there, I can just turn it off (pull out all the wires from the outlet) and nothing like that will happen..@@jas_bataille

    • @TomCruz54321
      @TomCruz54321 Před 5 měsíci

      I loved using hibernate when my laptop had a hard drive, but when i switched to SSD I’m hesitant to use hibernate because it might wear down my SSD. I wish Windows allowed you to change the location of the hibernation file.

  • @youngtevanced8818
    @youngtevanced8818 Před rokem +6

    I didn't know about this for more than 20years working in IT field. Wow! give this man a standing ovation and monument. Thank you.

  • @frankbarajas
    @frankbarajas Před 2 lety +472

    I did not know we could disable the fast start up feature. I have been doing manual restarts on weekly basis to avoid issues, so you have saved me, yet again with good advice and Thank you!

    • @burnsyd17
      @burnsyd17 Před 2 lety +4

      Huh? Didn't you watch or listen? He clearly pointed out that Restart bypasses Fast Start.

    • @laoch5658
      @laoch5658 Před 2 lety +3

      @@burnsyd17 you cant tick it off its grayed out

    • @mikesartorii234
      @mikesartorii234 Před 2 lety +31

      @@laoch5658 You have to click on "Change settings that are currently unavailable" then you can uncheck it.

    • @Blinkerd00d
      @Blinkerd00d Před 2 lety +10

      You can also, usually, disable the fast startup option in your bios.

    • @HelloKittyFanMan.
      @HelloKittyFanMan. Před 2 lety +5

      @@burnsyd17: Looks like Frank already knows that, duh.

  • @boiledelephant
    @boiledelephant Před 2 lety +295

    I've been disabling hybrid shutdown ("powercfg -h off") for years, partly to speed up the shutdown process but mainly to reduce wear on SSDs, because with it on, every shutdown hammers ~4GB onto your boot drive, shortening its lifespan (think about it - it's more IO than a home user writes to their drive cumulatively in a typical day, happening every single time). I hadn't thought so much about the software advantages of non-hybrid shutdowns, but it makes sense. A 'true' restart is always the first diagnostic step.

    • @TheMrZ100
      @TheMrZ100 Před 2 lety +31

      I have no idea why he didn't add this as an option in the video, the best way around this is to simply remove it and he dose not show that. That command just straight up removes that files and its features from your PC which is the whole point of this video of showing the benefits to removing it.

    • @derkevevin
      @derkevevin Před 2 lety +1

      I always use the sleep mode and restart now end then to refresh the system. Should be fine since sleep uses the RAM, right?

    • @TheMrZ100
      @TheMrZ100 Před 2 lety +3

      @@derkevevin You should still use the command above though, especially if you never use hibernate.

    • @boiledelephant
      @boiledelephant Před 2 lety +3

      @@derkevevin Absolutely fine, but disabling the hibernate file will also free up a little bit of space on the C drive if that's something you're into!

    • @michamarkowski2204
      @michamarkowski2204 Před 2 lety

      @@TheMrZ100 because he's that kind of expert.

  • @Flammberger
    @Flammberger Před rokem +348

    Some thing you missed - using hibernation permanantly stores memory data from RAM to the hard drive. This might cause heavy wear off when using an SSD. And they still use cheap nand quite often days, so enabling hibernation can make your drive fail earlier.

    • @SreenikethanI
      @SreenikethanI Před rokem +19

      is it practically an issue these days? i have been using my laptop for 2.5 years (16 GB RAM and 128 GB SSD) and hibernate basically everyday. The diagnostics app says that only ~25% of the SSD's "write cycles" (? or something like that) has been worn out... so atleast in my case i dont feel that hibernation would be problematic

    • @colecampbell1906
      @colecampbell1906 Před rokem +4

      when you say that, do you mean it causes problems when it's enabled or only when you use it?

    • @rabiatorthegreat6163
      @rabiatorthegreat6163 Před rokem +13

      @@SreenikethanI 25% of the "terabytes written" or TBW perhaps? That is the total amount of data one can write to the SSD during its lifetime. 25% of TBW used up in 2.5 years implies it might fail after 10 years. May I ask what model of SSD you are using?
      BTW, not all SSDs are created equal. If one expects to write lots of data, look at the specs before buying. There are models with TBW in the petabytes.

    • @armyofninjas9055
      @armyofninjas9055 Před rokem +35

      I always disable hibernate, sleep, fast startup, and fast shutdown options. My PC is on or off. And it'll always give fresh boots and no hibernate writes.

    • @noahcarver6072
      @noahcarver6072 Před rokem +2

      Question does a restart restore the stored memory of the hibernation file, if not is there any way to free it back up from using hibernate?

  • @bobstuckrath1805
    @bobstuckrath1805 Před 8 měsíci +1

    True. Very true. Shutting down, and/or rebooting your computer is a bad idea. In fact, using your computer in any way may be really bad for it.

  • @chuckbecker8735
    @chuckbecker8735 Před 2 lety +237

    This channel informs us of vital things which we would never become aware of on our own. Makes our lives better.

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +12

      thanks Chuck!

    • @oliverjohnson2507
      @oliverjohnson2507 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah this guy is great

    • @WAINTDEIR
      @WAINTDEIR Před 2 lety

      "powercfg /h off" in an admin CMD is what i use cos i dont need hibernate and it disables fast startup as well 😉

  • @MassiveJetGrind
    @MassiveJetGrind Před 2 lety +12

    For a few months, my computer has been starting slowly. After turning the computer on, it would sit on a black screen for about 3 minutes before showing the boot screen. Immediately after watching this video, I held shift while turning my PC off, and voila! My PC starts instantly again! Thank you! I love you so much.

  • @jager3090
    @jager3090 Před rokem +65

    NOTE:
    Reducing the hiberfile using cmd might prevent your PC from hibernating. With my 8gb ram PC, after reducing the hiberfile size, the Hibernate option disappeared from the power menu. Even the setting to turn it on also disappeared from Control Panel. However both returned after I set the hiberfile size back to full

    • @Duke49th
      @Duke49th Před rokem

      Aaaaaand why not deactivating hibernation altogether? Would've been smarter than just reducing it to an useless size lol.

    • @bandora948
      @bandora948 Před rokem +8

      I think it's because there's a minimum requirement and since your PC only has 8 GB reducing that will not be enough to hibernate therefore Windows disables it.

    • @ladyhawke1357
      @ladyhawke1357 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Thank you sooooo much! I reduced the size and then followed loads of instructions to try get hibernate back. Nothing worked until I found your suggestion. Much appreciated👏👏👏

    • @user-me8xb1wi5g
      @user-me8xb1wi5g Před 2 měsíci

      This video has the most valuable comments. Thanks for testing both ways and sharing.

  • @Raikuthedragon
    @Raikuthedragon Před rokem +3

    I always use hibernate, but I also recommend to do a restart from time to time. Restarting can correct a lot of issues and keep your PC fresh.

  • @TTerribleK
    @TTerribleK Před 2 lety +474

    Wow, this was unusually refreshing. Straight to the point, Title matches content, and no unwanted blabbering. Also very informative in a way that's easily digestable. Great job.

    • @criznittle968
      @criznittle968 Před rokem +4

      agreed, and same for this comment *applauds*

    • @karande75
      @karande75 Před rokem

      he literally did blabber for like 2 minutes

    • @Ugh718
      @Ugh718 Před rokem

      Dude did u seriously try to eat the freaking video XD

    • @channell1238
      @channell1238 Před rokem +1

      @@Ugh718 yeah don't you eat videos for a living

  • @yulashwind7553
    @yulashwind7553 Před 2 lety +12

    I just discovered you sir and I have to tell you I'm hyped for you videos. No non-sense advertising, no useless intro, clear concise information. You sir are a legend! I subscribed and liked the video after only 2 minutes! Keep it up!

  • @parad0x-625
    @parad0x-625 Před rokem +3

    Very simplified, but this is a great tutorial for the masses and very easy for pretty much anyone to follow with no false or missed information

  • @jackem8922
    @jackem8922 Před rokem +2

    Brilliant! 'Hibernate' is the function I've been looking for for years. And so well explained. Great job Liron!

  • @samwisegamgee4659
    @samwisegamgee4659 Před 2 lety +192

    Excellent explanation of a phenomenon I've noticed. After some days of only using SHUTDOWN the computer begins to act sketchy using some programs (...accumulating junk in memory that begins to conflict?). For the past couple of years I will purposely use the RESTART function to periodically clear everything out and I've even noticed in the TASK MANAGER that there is less baseline memory being used that slowly gets higher after repeatedly using merely SHUTDOWN, starting the cycle over. Thanks!

  • @markcondrey2297
    @markcondrey2297 Před 2 lety +137

    I have been working with computers since the days of the 8088. I build and sell systems and consider myself a power user. The information you provided me in this video cleared up a lot of confusion about sleep vs hibernation and the whole fast start routine. Thank you!

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +3

      awesome - thank YOU for being here!

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +2

      @@FlyboyHelosim you have to know to even ask 🤦 and thanks for sharing your valuable insight. You can piss off now

    • @TheRatlord74
      @TheRatlord74 Před 2 lety +1

      I became aware of this only a few weeks ago and discovered that there are 5 levels or type of shutdown. For me it is desirable to keep it on fast start because certain software (mostly peripherals) keep resetting themselves every time I went into full shutdown mode. One fix I found was logging out and back in again fixed everything but since using fast start I don't have to do this anymore.

    • @markcondrey2297
      @markcondrey2297 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheRatlord74 For me this was something that I had not paid much attention to, and this video was certainly able to bring me up to speed

    • @TheRatlord74
      @TheRatlord74 Před 2 lety +2

      @@markcondrey2297 like you I have been in the game for years and unfortunately gone are the days when we actually knew what our computer were up to. It's quite surprising what your computer can do when it's not even switched on. that's why these shutdown features exist and probably why most are not aware of them. Anyway my tinfoil hat need adjusting.

  • @0xF81
    @0xF81 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The actual difference between sleep and hibernate is:
    - "Sleep" option saves all your current work in memory barely consuming power, starting your PC again is very fast but keep in mind if you lose power your work is lost
    - "Hibernate" saves all your current work on hard drive so you're safe to completely disconnect your PC from power source but powering on takes a bit more time (hard drives are slower than memory)

  • @user-ld4nm7xo7x
    @user-ld4nm7xo7x Před rokem +3

    Seems to me like this was only a part of his topics. But it's still quite short and the most important got to the point so quickly. Clearly he didn't like dancing around. He is a genuine user-friendly, the word that most people misuse. 👍👍

  • @reghunt2487
    @reghunt2487 Před 2 lety +41

    Yeah I've always disabled Fast Startup. Fast Startup also keeps drives mounted, so if you do a dual boot, it might make them inaccessible to another OS.

  • @Blood-PawWerewolf
    @Blood-PawWerewolf Před 2 lety +146

    Fast Startup is a extremely redundant feature that should be always disabled. SSDs are fast enough to boot up Windows as fast as Fast Startup does.

    • @darrennew8211
      @darrennew8211 Před 2 lety +7

      This is not universally true. I have laptops that take about 15 seconds to cold boot and about 3 seconds to boot from hibernate. Agreed that most tower-style machines won't see a difference, but I suspect some BIOSes are optimized for the laptop it's in. My ASUS BIOS machine makes no significant difference, but also spends about 40 seconds either way.

    • @sillymesilly
      @sillymesilly Před 2 lety +1

      That’s not how redundancy works.

    • @Blood-PawWerewolf
      @Blood-PawWerewolf Před 2 lety +3

      @@darrennew8211 40 seconds isn’t that bad IMO

    • @violent_bebop9687
      @violent_bebop9687 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, it's redundant , and mislabeled.
      Use one or the other

    • @sillymesilly
      @sillymesilly Před 2 lety +1

      @@violent_bebop9687 not how redundant works

  • @lavawingsplays1627
    @lavawingsplays1627 Před rokem +2

    Wow. No grandiose intro, just right to the point. Bravo. Liked this video.

  • @user-me8xb1wi5g
    @user-me8xb1wi5g Před 2 měsíci

    Glad I stumbled across this video. Now my shutdown is the same as restart. There are times I want the computer OFF and also want a fresh start when it starts back up. This will save time! Thank you!!!!

  • @cryzz0n
    @cryzz0n Před 2 lety +113

    Thanks. Especially for making the information very clear and accessible to non tech savvy users. High quality instruction, man.

  • @georgemertz7409
    @georgemertz7409 Před 2 lety +10

    This video is the most information dense, accessible tech video I've seen on this platform. 5 minutes well spent.

  • @SizzL424
    @SizzL424 Před rokem +1

    I was about to shut down my computer and I noticed this video , and the thumbnail . So till today I shut down the computer and sit quietly to watch all the led lights to go off , thanks man

  • @michael-wurzinger
    @michael-wurzinger Před rokem

    Thank you!! Years of 'not shutting down' my Laptop is solved. Excellent!

  • @monkeybarmonkeyman
    @monkeybarmonkeyman Před 2 lety +94

    Microsoft did this to 'fool' users into believing performance enhancements to Windows took place when in reality, all they did was cache things for a faster restart (paraphrased)..

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 2 lety +7

      I had to use 2 separate hard drives One is a NVMe 128. The other is 256 SATA. Windows is forced into the 128. It keeps whining not enough room to change to Win 11.
      Meanwhile Linux is the primary used drive.
      It sucks to have to change the boot drive in the bios. But windows does not corrupt the Linux install any more.
      Windows always has been the trouble maker, spoiled child.
      The reality If was not for games, Windows would be long gone. Linux is much more efficient and not something needs constant trouble shooting.
      Basically Linux is a more mature solution.. Windows is also the reason I have 6 Hard drives.
      Never know when the Redmond gremlins will do their classic coding again.
      You have ask why is a Linux primary load 1.2Gb and Widows bloated up to 5.3Gb? Sorry Bill but your company appears to have a problem making efficient code.
      But you did teach them how to code.

    • @_nom_
      @_nom_ Před 2 lety +1

      Windows still boots in like 6-10 seconds. Not sure instant booting is necessary.

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 2 lety

      @@_nom_ Maybe why I run a 3800X at 4500Mhz? I don't want win 11 until it is finished teething. But the boot times are not the issue. The exit. restart times is about 5 times what Linux requires. Redmond is trying to make a winders iPC clone. If wanted iMAC. I would have bought one.
      Winders is mostly for the olde lady. Her "games" don't work in Linux. i wonder why?

    • @monkeybarmonkeyman
      @monkeybarmonkeyman Před 2 lety

      @@_nom_ The six to ten seconds is the cached version. Try the Control key shutdown, let it go cold, then start it, see how long it takes.

  • @radok560
    @radok560 Před rokem +3

    Immediate subscribe. I had no idea of any of this, but you explained it in seconds with actual fixes and worarounds with no rambling. Top notch!

  • @dylanherron3963
    @dylanherron3963 Před rokem

    My friend, AMAZING and to the point. I thought I was "savvy" after having used computers and been a tinkerer/enthusiast for 15 years. I've always wondered why my Wifi card SOMEtimes never engages, despite enabling/disabling/installing drivers.
    Subscribed and belled.

  • @CrimsonThunder_
    @CrimsonThunder_ Před 2 lety +17

    This was one of the most informative tech vids I’ve seen. I never even considered any of this info before and now I have seen a bunch of issues resolved. Thank you sir.

  • @stevehood10
    @stevehood10 Před rokem +73

    Clear, concise and probably THE most helpful tips I've seen. Solved a problem that's been driving me nuts. Excellent work, subbed.

  • @laidbackjuan911
    @laidbackjuan911 Před rokem

    In your face straight to the point. No time wasted. Fast.
    I subbed FAST

  • @jnova3328
    @jnova3328 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for another great video. The information is very important and you are a fantastic teacher!

  • @haydenjohnwhite
    @haydenjohnwhite Před 2 lety +438

    I’m really enjoying your videos mate! For someone who uses a computer for work and study, these are a great 5-10 minute learning blast for me. Keep up the great work!! 😊

  • @Bluelady4848
    @Bluelady4848 Před 2 lety +38

    I just wanted to say that I've learned a LOT watching your videos! You tell us stuff without using a bunch of computer "Geek" terms, and take it step by step! You make things so easy! Thanks so much! I've watched other channels, and hate having to stop the video to google a term that they use, and they don't bother to explain what it is exactly. I guess those channels just think everyone who watches should know computer terms.

  • @tgere79
    @tgere79 Před rokem

    I found out about this a year or so ago. I work in support for a large tech company, and I've been trying to educate my end users as we can't change the setting due to IT controls.

  • @MinhBui-vr2oz
    @MinhBui-vr2oz Před 3 měsíci +2

    I shut down my computer everytime after I finish using it for the day for 30 years already .
    Even when it is in use . Sometimes it is sluggish and it need a restart to refresh itself .
    By shutting down and start it in the morning , I have a fresh computer to use everyday .

  • @EpicBongZilla
    @EpicBongZilla Před rokem +154

    This actually makes alot of sense to me. I have a nice laptop and I always shut it down after use. But I have always noticed that when I turn it back on I will have some strange performance. Like frame hitching in games specifically. So I'd restart the laptop and it resolves the performance issues. So now when I start my laptop up, I always restart it one time before use. Never have issues with performance.

    • @ninoobejero614
      @ninoobejero614 Před rokem +6

      I think ill just do it like this instead of using hibernation that uses 70-80 of ram, and my laptop has just 8gb of ram.

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman Před rokem +3

      Would doing a restart before a shut down do the same thing? I ask because I tend to have more time to do a restart at the end of a session on my laptop than at the beginning so if it's the same effect, I'll try doing that in the future.

    • @SanjitNagi
      @SanjitNagi Před rokem +7

      @@Dargonhuman A shut down is not a true shut down, a restart is, it is linked to some complex subjects, but restarting will solve all issues, shuttign down wont

    • @PhO3NiX96
      @PhO3NiX96 Před rokem +1

      Just disable the fast boot option of Windows, so when you turn off you PC, it actually turns it off instead of putting it to hibernation. It will have the same effect as a restart.
      Go in settings > What does the power button do > options that are not visible right > And then select the proper turn off computer option.

    • @mistixfrozz640
      @mistixfrozz640 Před rokem

      @@SanjitNagi hold left shift and pres shut down with mouse that is true shut down

  • @TimothyWStar
    @TimothyWStar Před 2 lety +143

    Woah, this is mind blowing. I always was using shut down to restart the kernel and was wondering why I still had a lot of hangups and performance issues until my computer was force rebooted for updates. I remember learning in the Windows 95 days that you should always do a full shut down to reset the kernel and not restart. Thank you for the video! I was getting worried there was something seriously wrong with my computer, and now everything's how I expect it to be!

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 Před rokem +8

      That's the same thing for me.
      That's mind boggling to realize that things have been completely switched around and I never was even aware of it

    • @gentuxable
      @gentuxable Před rokem +1

      Windows 95 had two restart methods. There was a warm restart where the GUI would close and it would start from DOS again (i.e. when you change the color depth of your monitor) and there was a cold reboot where you rebooted DOS and Windows. Difference was, did you the BIOS or did it only show a text mode line with something like "Restarting windows". Before ATX, even better was to shut down, wait for the Safe to power off message and hit Reset on the case, that way you were sure to have the RAM cleared. I sometimes was able to play DOS games that won't run in the DOS Box of WIn95 with sound cards that came with no DOS drivers by loading the drivers in Windows and the drivers would actually survive a cold reboot.

    • @brianwest2775
      @brianwest2775 Před rokem +3

      It's crazy. Why doesn't Microsoft include a "Full Shutdown" menu item? I understand that they want to limit options (limit clutter) wherever possible but when it results in the computer doing something different from what most users assume that it would do, that's not useful. Win11 has taken this objective so far that many things that used to be one or two clicks away are now buried. (For a long time, I've been using Win-r shutdown /s /f /t 0 when I want to fully shut down but if shift-shutdown is the same, that's faster..)

    • @SinsBird
      @SinsBird Před rokem +1

      @@brianwest2775 Because this is a marketing trick to make it seem like it boots faster than for example Windows 7 to make people think that it's better.

  • @oliviarinaldi5963
    @oliviarinaldi5963 Před rokem

    I am a new subscriber and I really like your style. As others have said, you are straight to the point without a bunch of wasted BS. Thank you. I will recommend you to my son.

  • @ying6020
    @ying6020 Před 7 měsíci +2

    For the people who don't feel like typing it
    powercfg /h /type reduced

  • @randomcanadian6298
    @randomcanadian6298 Před 2 lety +20

    Great video and gets right to the point. Disabled quick startup since my computer sometimes has issues, and when checking my computer has been "on" for almost 9 days straight. Hopefully proper shutdowns will help my computer run better, since fast startup doesn't seem to do much anyway.

  • @JRMH-X
    @JRMH-X Před 2 lety +37

    Such a very quick and simple video yet incredibly helpful, useful, and informative. Thank you

  • @Grid21
    @Grid21 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for bringing this up! FINALLY someone knows about this! I learned about this about 2 years ago and ABSOLUTELY HATED IT! Thanks for making a video about it!

  • @PaleMist
    @PaleMist Před rokem

    Thank you! Also, for being quick, short, and to the point, thank you again!

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 Před rokem +74

    I'm standing here in awe of the fact that it was 5 minutes and 40 seconds of actual information. Absolutely awesome.

    • @penfold7800
      @penfold7800 Před rokem +5

      Yeah. Now wouldn't it be fantastic if the rest of the internet was like that. We might actually get rapid progress again. Imagine that!!

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před rokem +6

      😂 😂 😂 True Story

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před rokem +2

      @@penfold7800 I may well faint from the shock if that actually happened.

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Před rokem +2

      @@LironSegev I use Linux and my days of servicing Windows computers is over, so I wasn't aware that Microsoft had changed the "Shut Down" options - so this was a very educational video.
      The fact that it was also direct and to the point - and delivered in about the same amount of time other channel spend on their intro sequence and telling you to like and subscribe - was much appreciated.

    • @penfold7800
      @penfold7800 Před rokem +1

      @@wolf1066 Im In the process of shifting over to Linux myself, but haven't found a version yet that doesn't need updating every day and isn't full of bling that I'm not going to use, but is still secure as possible from hijack threats and bot viruses.

  • @threeballedtomcat9380

    My gaming PC recently died, it was a Win 7sp1 OS PC I built in 2014, and due to some money issues I got a Dell Optima 9010 that a friend gave me. It was refurbished with an SSD, a 2 TB HDD and has the Win 10 OS. It was a Legacy setup, not UEFI so of course that had to be changed in order to use a video card for gaming.
    I have been trying to learn this Win 10 OS and how to change things to make it work better/faster and this video was a great help and answered a few questions for me, so thanks for the upload.

  • @leshie687
    @leshie687 Před rokem

    4:31 thanks for showing the Hibernate file location!
    5:18 I think it is rare someone would show us how to *REVERT* settings in Command Prompt! thanks again!

  • @1369Stiles
    @1369Stiles Před 2 lety +104

    it might be worth mentioning as well that sometimes unplugging the computer from the power completely might fix things. if you have a laptop and the battery is removable, remove it for a couple of minutes. sometimes doing a full power cycle can solve your problem.......sometimes

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ Před 2 lety +4

      In addition to unplugging / flipping the power switch, holding the power switch (the one you press to turn it on and off, not the one on the power supply) to discharge the system.. the first time I cleaned my computer many years ago I didn't realize I shouldn't allow the fans to spin while it's off, and when I plugged it back in, it wouldn't boot. It took me ages (and another computer) to find out discharging the electricity that way was even a way.

    • @1369Stiles
      @1369Stiles Před 2 lety +4

      @@VeggyZ yeah, but you really should keep the power off for 30-60 seconds anyway......just to make sure all of the juice is out.

    • @iglesianifuhuaw4228
      @iglesianifuhuaw4228 Před 2 lety +4

      @Karl with a K sorry for being a newb in PC 😭

    • @synical13
      @synical13 Před 2 lety +41

      @Karl with a K I know, grandpa, everyone's a fool. Now let's get you back to the home.

    • @cody_the_rat
      @cody_the_rat Před 2 lety +1

      I feel like this should only apply to laptops, if you're unplugging your tower/pc after shutdown to get it running better you're an idiot and if you're unplugging it while it's running your an even bigger idiot

  • @Ken_James_SV
    @Ken_James_SV Před rokem +10

    NOTICE! Windows 11 doesn't have 'Hardware and Sound' in 'Control Panel'. It is just called 'Power Options'. After opening Power Options the tab for 'Choose what the Power button does' is up top on the left side of the screen.

    • @hempelchamp
      @hempelchamp Před rokem

      I Got Rid Of My Computer! Too Much Drama!

  • @Shadzyy5
    @Shadzyy5 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The guide was amazing! I love that you were straight to the point, I just have one question: Will any of these processes or methods slow down or affect gaming or programming in any way?
    I was looking into these things since I'm building a pc next month, I just want to see how I can make it last longer as a whole.

  • @Quetzietse
    @Quetzietse Před rokem

    Loving this format.

  • @michaelblanchette1793
    @michaelblanchette1793 Před rokem +30

    I have had a computer for 20+ years and consider myself an above-average computer user...and I honestly had no idea that this was happening on my computer, awesome, and thank you for all this valuable information!!

  • @George-hj4xg
    @George-hj4xg Před 2 lety +56

    I've found that sometimes with certain programs fast start up might cause problems. But never shutting windows down by using sleep certainly will screw it up at some point. Personally never had much of a problem shutting down with fast boot enabled, but it can break some with certain combination of things starting up. Which is probably bad programming but conflicts happens at times.

    • @nocare
      @nocare Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah at some point, though I almost never reach that point. Normally hit an update before something breaks.
      Means I only get about a month between shutdowns since security update comes the second tuesday of each month.
      Though I have ignored it for up to a full extra month before actually updating.

    • @montearmstrong4652
      @montearmstrong4652 Před 2 lety +2

      Restarting allows the PC to finish updates. Shut down just tells the computer to stop everything and turn off, which is like clearing your desk off and starting a new day instead of piling more stuff on a crowded desk. Bad programming creates memory leaks, and a shutdown is the best method of clearing those up. A restart will not always release allocated memory in RAM.

  • @Buaam
    @Buaam Před rokem +4

    This man made a video, he sticks to the topic and gives the information you are looking for without brute forcing his personality or brand into the video. Subscribed, liked and commented

  • @velation
    @velation Před 9 měsíci +1

    Just want to say thanks for this video. I had an issue that windows suddenly stopped detecting the bluetooth on my motherboard. For some reason it thought the adapter wasn't connected even though it's literally attached to the motherboard. I tried everything and nothing worked. I even tried unplugging the computer and holding the power button for 30s to get rid of the static. Anyway this video popped up in my recommendations, I watched it, turned off fast startup, shut down my computer and voila. When I turned it back on and logged on to windows there was the bluetooth icon.

  • @viddork
    @viddork Před 2 lety +14

    I found out about this not too long ago, and I, too, thought it seemed backwards. Then I realized that, if you shut down, it's probably because you're simply finished your session at the computer, with everything working fine, and are likely to want it to boot up pretty much the same as it was when you left it. On the other hand, you generally do a restart specifically _because_ there's a problem you hope to clear up, so the full reset makes total sense.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před rokem +2

      Exactly, both functions do exactly what they are supposed to - shut down the computer or restart the operating system.

  • @ConwayBob
    @ConwayBob Před rokem +14

    I discovered your channel only today, and it already has changed my life for the better! Thank you, Liron, for some of the best Windows tips I have ever seen on CZcams.

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před rokem +5

      Welcome aboard and thank YOU for hanging out here!

  • @vinicius_nunes
    @vinicius_nunes Před rokem +1

    I believe that even if you turn off that option via the configuration in windows, the system will still create a hibernation archive that will consume disk space and make your computer take longer to start over time. I think if you turn off hibernate via a cmd command (powercfg /hibernate off) it should disable the whole hibernate system and won't create the archive either.

  • @akinde576
    @akinde576 Před rokem +2

    Nicely explained. Clear and to the point 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @Throgmoyd
    @Throgmoyd Před rokem +22

    Brilliant video - direct and to the point with no waffle. Clearly, your priority is to communicate the message to your audience rather than monetize having done so. If only every channel behaved similarly.

  • @Greedman456
    @Greedman456 Před rokem +16

    Wow, actually great advice. So much bloatware and unnecessary "help" from operating systems these days. Thank you so so much for the consize advice. I was really bewildered from the basic usage changes going from xp,w7 and Ubuntu on windows 10... So many automatic things we have no use for....

  • @fourbyfourblazer2
    @fourbyfourblazer2 Před rokem

    Thanks! Press Ctrl-Alt-Delete and click on Performance inside Task Manager to see if your up time was reset to verify that your computer has properly restarted.

  • @renesbbwi
    @renesbbwi Před rokem

    Simply thank you!

  • @greybeardza9197
    @greybeardza9197 Před rokem +5

    Every one of these options has its uses.
    Both Sleep and Hibernate are useful if you need (or want to) leave one or more programs open while your computer is "off".
    You often see people simply closing their laptop without saving anything. This generally puts the laptop to Sleep (but keeps the memory alive). It Wakes Up as soon as the cover is opened and they can continue where they left off. But beware! If you battery is almost dead it may not have enough power to keep the memory alive until later!!!
    I live in a country where power cuts happen quite frequently. (They are infamously called "load shedding".) Because of this, when I need to leave something open, I rather choose to hibernate. I have never had any problems when re-starting from hibernate.
    I also see the warnings about hibernate wearing out your SSD. While that is true, it is no more harmful than writing any other big file such as a video or movie file. If you need to hibernate, your SSD is there to serve your needs. Remember that it does not write the hibernation file to the same location each time - it is much smarter than that.

  • @curtisgrissett4686
    @curtisgrissett4686 Před 2 lety +22

    Thank you for this video. I had a problem with some "glitches" with my windows 10 computer and nothing I would do would fix the glitches. I took it to the local repair shop, and after $100, it was still doing the same thing. In this video, you recommend a "reset shutdown" to "kill the kernal." I am not anything close to a computer whiz but I tried it and, amazingly, the glitches were gone or fixed. I wish you had posted this video 4 months ago, you would have saved me $100. Thank you so very much!

    • @SMartinTX
      @SMartinTX Před 2 lety +1

      I recently took my computer to the shop for some glitches with Windows 10 such as Desktop Windows Manager memory leak and forked out $200. After getting it back I found that Desktop Windows Manager still has a memory leak, which the only way to remedy it is to hit reset. The shop guy also tried to get me to replace the hard drive with a solid state drive for an additional $100 but I said I do believe in fixing something that is not broken.

    • @enadegheeghaghe6369
      @enadegheeghaghe6369 Před 2 lety +5

      All you have to do is restart your computer every few days and you won't have any problems. The restart button shuts everything down (including the kernel) and restarts it all again. I thought everyone knew this

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Před 2 lety +3

      @@SMartinTX The SSD makes the boot process a LOT faster in Windows 10; not all that different in 7. The reason is that Windows 10 is very sloppy in task management and assumes you have an SSD so it throws everything at it in parallel. SSD does not care but spin disk can really only service one task at a time and jumping among them wastes a LOT of time. When it came time to replace the hard drive in my HP laptop, that drive is no longer available so I was compelled to go SSD. Time to be ready to work went from about 30 minutes to 2 minutes. Oh, it would give me a login screen quick enough, then it would index the disk, do an antivirus sweep, stuff like that which makes the hard disk so busy that forget running a Zoom meeting until about 20 minutes have elapsed. But a fairly simple swap followed by not so simple sector for sector copy (using Linux and DD) and it works like a charm and usually I can do Zoom in two minutes from start up. Unless there's an update!
      SSD can and will be SLOWER than a spin disk if you are copying into it large numbers of small files.

  • @emilschneider9974
    @emilschneider9974 Před rokem

    Thanks for your help. Much appreciated. Its so nice to keep learning about my PC.

  • @ilangilang7185
    @ilangilang7185 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for being so straight to the point.

  • @LanggerDangger
    @LanggerDangger Před 2 lety +4

    very straight forward, nicely refreshing with no needles fluff. I'll tremendously remember this channel next time I have a question.

  • @Amelia_PC
    @Amelia_PC Před rokem +3

    Wow, I've been changing buttons' funcionality for over a decade to shut down my computer and assumed everybody knew that o__o
    Lovely video. Straight to the point. Thanks!

  • @lordcockula683
    @lordcockula683 Před rokem +5

    Hello Liron, Windows 11 upgrade really changed how my speakers sound. It went from being crisp clear and lough enough, to having what feels like listening to audio through a phone in the middle of a call. Could you possibly make a video on how to revert this please? I reverted to an older audio driver and it only partially rectified the situation.

  • @Phrv199217
    @Phrv199217 Před rokem

    You probably just helped eliminate the source of so many headaches, including mine.
    Thank you so much.

  • @robh5695
    @robh5695 Před 2 lety +28

    Thanks, Liron. You are a source of amazing information. I had no idea of these things. Thanks for providing clear, concise information in short videos. It's why we love you. Cheers!

  • @delicrux
    @delicrux Před 2 lety +38

    Psa: Sleep hybernate and fast boot have been broken and breaking stuff for years. For those wondering ms made these modes and turns them on almost every update.
    It was created to say they have faster boot times to compete with mac os.
    Its dumb and causes so many IT problems i cant list them.
    This is because sleep hybernate and fast boot copy whatever is on ram to disk.(sleep might just low power but the errors are similar)
    And when you load your pc again the programs open but they cant completely find the reloaded memory so it creates loads of problems with things that are time sensitive or secured sessions need to reconnect or the program has no clue where or how to find the location of the memory(thread) or that it should be looking for it.
    In programing world this is known as a zombie process.
    So please save your documents and shutdown properly.

    • @xxovereyexx5019
      @xxovereyexx5019 Před 2 lety +1

      true, in my case sometime hibernate make my overlocked pc bsod,
      never encounter bsod after choosing sleep.

    • @Erlisch1337
      @Erlisch1337 Před 2 lety +1

      makes one wonder how the f you are using hibernate so badly?
      why are you shutting/hibarnating if you are doing something time sensitive? makes no sense.

    • @nocare
      @nocare Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah all 3 create problems but that is no reason to not use them. It's just a reason to be aware that if you encounter problems and especially because you are using one of the 3. Do a full restart first, to try and fix it.
      I sleep and only actually restart about once a month for the windows security update and I very rarely ever have any sleep related problems.

    • @delicrux
      @delicrux Před 2 lety

      @@nocare do what you want... If i had something that was known to be more destructive then helpful, i know it would be unwise to use it unless i didnt care about what im doing.
      But the number of times in a fortune 500 company i have had angry users scream at me because of a broken feature that causes them to loose their documents right before a meeting is unacceptable so i educate the user with a version of the above statement and ask them if they are ok with me disabling that feature.
      They may have fixed sleep im not entirely sure thats why i had a comment in ().
      But i have had users with over 200day uptime due to these features that means 200days of security patches/updates and possibly broken or corrupted data or programs that haven't fully been installed because the system failed to reboot.
      This is not the intended result or design Philosophy and many programs like antivirus require a proper reboot for settings to take.
      Im done fighting on this if you know what your doing then obviously do what you want just dont get mad if your pc ram gets filled with garbage and force quits a program freezes or bsods out of the blue.
      Edit What your doing should be fine personally i know in some business settings depending on what software is running this is not always the case.
      But my comment was mainly a rant explaining why IT has to ask people to reboot all the time.

    • @UniversalCypher
      @UniversalCypher Před 2 lety +1

      Wouldn't this all really depend on what you're using your computer for?

  • @campbellsoup1981
    @campbellsoup1981 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I didn't know this. I'm going to try it now. Thank you so much!

  • @stephenwright3501
    @stephenwright3501 Před rokem

    Thank you! Very helpful. Subbed.

  • @justjacqueline2004
    @justjacqueline2004 Před 2 lety +6

    Mr Segev has become an invaluable source for my tech,where I excel at ignorance.Thank you and more please.

  • @lacro5686
    @lacro5686 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been dealing with a startup issue for over a year where my wired internet connection would start, then immediately drop, then reappear 5 minutes later. This happened upon every boot. Since disabling fast startup, the internet connects normally, and stays connected. Thank you sir!!!

  • @jfdomega7938
    @jfdomega7938 Před měsícem

    excellent tutorial video, thank you so much Liron. subbed!

  • @NPOCrushader
    @NPOCrushader Před 2 lety +6

    If you wonder if your machine has actually been turned off or not in a while I usually check the "Performance" tab on the Task Manager. On the CPU you can check "Up time" and if the up time is days then you can assume that you haven't actually turned off your computer.

  • @rcmrcm3370
    @rcmrcm3370 Před 2 lety +42

    Great video, short and sweet. However could you possibly add an explanation about the difference between the small and full file size in hibernate in terms of impact on performance?

    • @mda5003
      @mda5003 Před 2 lety +4

      With the operating system on an SSD, shutdowns and restarts are fast, so you won't even need the hibernate file and can be deleted with a similar command: powercfg /h /off

  • @monicabello3527
    @monicabello3527 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you very much, the perfect answer to what I was looking for

  • @sampeter8987
    @sampeter8987 Před rokem

    i needed this tutorial. thank you a lot.

  • @LathyrusRoots
    @LathyrusRoots Před 2 lety +5

    i have witnessed you for all of five minutes, prepared to close the video at any moment, any -slight- distraction that prompted me.
    and there wasn't a moment of interference. at all.
    all information, all on point, all the editing done perfectly well to cover any lapses in communication.
    i don't say this in vain: you're out here doing the Lord's work, man. excellent!

  • @LususSaule
    @LususSaule Před 2 lety +8

    I've noticed my PC starts up slower from a reboot. Now I know why. The shutdown and shift key tip is very handy 👍
    It was also good to see behind the scenes a little with the old PC screen and messy room 😄

    • @LironSegev
      @LironSegev  Před 2 lety +6

      Glad it helped! and yeah I just moved into my new studio and its not all set up yet but also, this is real-life so who cares lol

    • @LususSaule
      @LususSaule Před 2 lety +1

      Personally I agree, but your mum called and said you can't go out to play until you tidy your room 😉

  • @multifaceteddoall
    @multifaceteddoall Před rokem

    Just perfect straight to the point and just the necessary information. Here is my subscription and like!

  • @bpdmf2798
    @bpdmf2798 Před rokem +1

    Fast startup is one of the first few things I turn off on a new windows install. So many issues I've seen online that get fixed by turning it off that I decided the extra 0.2 seconds it saves during boot wasn't worth the minutes to hours of troubleshooting some issue that needs a complete shutdown.

  • @breadfan_85
    @breadfan_85 Před 2 lety +6

    Since it wasn't mentioned in the video, if anyone wants to know exactly what hibernation and sleep are, I'll explain here.
    Basically, when you put a computer to sleep, a minimal about of power is used to hold your session in RAM so that it can be quickly resumed. In hibernate, your session is dumped from RAM to the hiberfile on disk and the system is completely shut down (except for the kernel as explained). When you wake from hibernation, the contents of the hiberfile are restored to RAM in order to resume your session. This process is a slower because the full boot process is required, and the system also needs to access the hiberfile to copy it's contents to RAM.
    Sleep is intended for times when you don't need to be concerned with draining your battery, such as for very short periods of non-use, or when running on mains power. Hibernation is more useful when you are worried about draining your battery such as when using a laptop and need to turn it off for long periods of time but don't want to lose your session. Thus, hibernation is pretty much useless on a desktop.
    Additionally, you should use sleep whenever possible, instead of hibernation or a full shutdown, as repeatedly putting your computer through a full startup sequence puts more wear in your hardware. For example, use sleep when turning off your mains powered computer for the night, and use shutdown/hibernation when turning it off for the weekend.

    • @kingineazzy
      @kingineazzy Před 2 lety +1

      What about the fast start up ? Should that be disabled or left on

    • @breadfan_85
      @breadfan_85 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kingineazzy fast startup is similar to hibernate but it doesn't save your entire session, only Windows in a freshly booted state, so like system processes and things like that. It doesn't really make a difference for normal day to day usage but it will allow you to boot Windows a little faster. You can leave it on but you might want to turn it off while troubleshooting, or if you prefer a full shutdown and startup as explained in the video.

    • @kingineazzy
      @kingineazzy Před 2 lety

      @@breadfan_85 Ight thanks for the info brotha 🙏🏽💯

    • @breadfan_85
      @breadfan_85 Před 2 lety

      @@kingineazzy np. Have a killer day
      EDIT: or evening/night, I guess lol

  • @joergbock1976
    @joergbock1976 Před 2 lety +3

    Highly informative video without BS. Thanks, man!

  • @alfredovukic1342
    @alfredovukic1342 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks Liron, I followed your advice and finally cured a problem with my TV cable service playing on my Surface Pro tablet.