• @[email protected]
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    104 hours ago

    this meme is especially true for students and the likes 😂 whenever you share a one-room flat with a laptop made by clueless techbros for clueless techbros, the increased fan whirring really shines.

  • @[email protected]
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    238 hours ago

    “My PC” was even replaced with “this PC” since Windows 11, which feels almost too symbolic…

  • @[email protected]
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    98 hours ago

    🤭and sometimes, if you wake your linux things go to shit and all you see is black screen and white mouse on it

    Sometimes super+ctrl+alt+F8 saves me and I can restart PC from TTY, and sometimes, there is only a flashing cursor. In second case, I have to take hard measures and forcefully manually restart it

    (Yes nvidia card with latest proprietary driver and kde on wayland) -> everything latest meaning from endeavour/arch/aur repos.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 hour ago

          All my hybernation issues went away after i switched to an AMD GPU. Not evidence in itself, just an experience an opinion.

          • @[email protected]
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            123 minutes ago

            I like how you corrected opinion to experience 😃👌🏻

            And yes, I would call that an evidence, not a proof but clearly an evidence, especially if you did not change anything else (hardware or start from scratch setting up Linux distribution).

  • Poplar?
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    58 hours ago

    Another day of learning about Linux from the comments under a meme.

  • @[email protected]
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    2411 hours ago

    To be fair, Linux has not been especially awesome at suspended/hibernate/resume, historically.

    • @[email protected]
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      158 minutes ago

      My linux PC used to be unable to hibernate/sleep at all, and my current laptop occasionally gets some kind of backlight burn-in from sleeping when the lid’s closed

    • @[email protected]
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      49 hours ago

      Yea, I like to suspend my machine, but rather than hit suspend and walk away I have to wait to find out what has prevented suspend from suspending. That and it trying to goto sleep when I don’t want it to. Drives me nuts

  • Balon_Josaca
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    26 hours ago

    I agree with some comments here, hibernation/suspension has been tricky, I’ve always had minor bugs and like kinda major, screen… lines? popping up and just not even working sometimes, welp. I suppose it’s better knowing what’s breaking than wrestling control between you and microsoft…

    • @thespcicifcocean
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      26 hours ago

      Mine just doesn’t suspend/hibernate at all. Probably some dependency not installed, but I’m not assed to find out which one

      • Balon_Josaca
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        25 hours ago

        Yeah I think it’s going to show up in some log what exactly is causing that but I usually search what I’m supposed to do so… do that if you have time I guess

  • @Evotech
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    27 hours ago

    Me with my computer in a different room

  • @[email protected]
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    610 hours ago

    I started down the Linux route over the weekend and put my computer in hibernation and couldn’t figure out how to wake it up from its torpor without restarting. So I’m going with suspension for the time being

    • @[email protected]OP
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      69 hours ago

      Firstly, welcome :)

      Secondly, hibernation on Linux requires swap partition 2x size of the RAM. If you didn’t set it big enough or did not set at all, hibernation wouldn’t work. However if you set it correctly, there should be another reason to consider.

      If you are not sure, you can use this command on terminal to compare your RAM and swap sizes. free -m

  • @ShotDonkey
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    1413 hours ago

    Nope. My Linux Mint randomly wakes up from sleep mode all the time. It’s just a bug. Tried to fix it, never found solution. I guess I am fine with it. Well. Not really. Help me if you can!!11!!

    • @[email protected]OP
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      711 hours ago

      Apparently you can see which devices can wake your PC with cat /proc/acpi/wakeup. S3 should be sleep and S4 hibernation. Though I have no idea which device is which.

      • @LordKitsuna
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        410 hours ago

        Lspci and lsusb will help you match up with the list

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      My first guess world be unplug your mouse and keyboard and see if it still happens. Your mouse or keyboard could be sending phantom inputs sometimes. If it’s a laptop maybe not though or you’d have to test it another way at least. But it’s the first thing I’d do.

  • @OldChicoAle
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    613 hours ago

    Windows is too self-important. Daddy, chill.

  • I Cast Fist
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    714 hours ago

    Windows would always wake from hibernation/suspension by itself after 2 or 3 hours. Truly a feature, not a bug

    • @chiliedogg
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      1413 hours ago

      I love how they wake up in my backpack so they can overheat AND drain the battery at the same time.

      That’s efficiency.

    • @jackyard
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      11 hours ago

      “My” in My PC means “Microsoft’s”. All the Windows PCs in this world are all their’s.

  • @[email protected]
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    1091 day ago

    The main thing I’m learning from this thread is that a surprising number of people don’t shut their machines down when they’re done using them. Which is wild to me.

    • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮
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      411 hours ago

      As someone who knows how to manage the power and update settings in Windows to prevent this from happening, I am learning that Linux users may not understand how to actually configure Windows to their liking. Which is wild to me.

    • @highball
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      312 hours ago

      No point. Sleep works great and live updates are flawless.

    • @[email protected]
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      6024 hours ago

      A lot of modern windows laptop don’t let you shut them down.

      They use something called Windows Hybrid Sleep and it should be illegal. Selecting shut down in windows will keep the machine in a state where it will turn on at random times to check for updates. Especially fun whrn in your backpack creating a furnace.

      Thankfully it can be disabled via AD policy.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 hours ago

        You dont need to use group policy.

        Admin console: powercfg.exe /hibernate off

        Now its off. Hybrid sleep is just a faster Hibernate.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 hours ago

          Or just turn off fast Startup in the power settings.

          I meant that you can thankfully disable it with group policy so that the 3000 laptops I manage at work don’t all cook in backpacks every day.

      • @[email protected]
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        2720 hours ago

        Shouldn’t have to use fucking group policy just to stop your machine updating at inopportune times. Fucking Windows.

        • @[email protected]
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          1411 hours ago

          It’s always funny to me when people call Linux complicated and in the next sentence say shit like that

          As if doing registry edits and group policy stuff is acceptable for basic features and settings

      • @HStone32
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        515 hours ago

        Ah yes, the greek hydra of IT. Disable one policy, two more shall take it’s place.

      • @[email protected]
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        1123 hours ago

        Ah yeah I forgot about hybrid sleep as I turned if off years ago and forgot it existed. Such a nonsense feature.

      • @MadBigote
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        321 hours ago

        I remember you have to press either Shift or Alt for the shutdown button to actually shut down the PC.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 day ago

      Why would you? Sleep uses so little power and the resume is instant.

      If it wasn’t for S0 standby being such a piece of shit I’d never shutdown my computer unless it was for an update or hardware maintenance.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 hours ago

        Have you seen how fast computers turn on these days (from complete shutdowns)? It’s 2-3 seconds (if hibernation is completely off). Barely an inconvenience - specially not one worth risking the pc turning on by itself on random times.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 hours ago

          If S0 standby wasn’t so shit, or we could go back to old reliable S1-3 that wouldn’t be an issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        3223 hours ago

        I mean since the advent of SSDs I’ve not found the boot times of computers to be all that slow and I typically quite like coming back to a clean desktop on a new day rather than having junk from yesterday being thrown at me.

        • Farid
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          1222 hours ago

          Even if the boot time is fast, you lose a lot of the program states. Not only it takes extra time to load those applications, it’s also a fair amount of effort to put everything back where it should be.

          If it was necessary to shut computers down, no problem, it’s not too much time and effort. But there’s normally no need to shut computers down, it’s just wasted time with no benefits (usually).

          • @[email protected]
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            320 hours ago

            yeah if ur working on something you should sleep the computer, but if you’re working with, like, one app, or if youre not working on anything, i see no reason not to shutdown ur pc

            • Farid
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              118 hours ago

              Even if it’s only one app, what is the purpose? To save on electricity that powers RAM?

                • Farid
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                  13 hours ago

                  I was mostly talking about stationary computers, but even in case of a laptop (unless it runs Windows which has terrible sleep management) the benefits of starting your work immediately once you open the lid outweighs the cons of losing a couple percent of battery overnight.

              • @[email protected]
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                26 hours ago

                sure? i could bring the same argument back to you:

                why wouldn’t you shut it down? so that you can wait a couple of seconds less?

                there’s basically no difference. it only depends on what you’re used to doing and maybe if you care about the little electricity that’s being used constantly for little to no reason

                • Farid
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                  3 hours ago

                  But you can’t bring the same argument back to me. Cold booting requires more time and effort. Thus to make that argument, one needs to provide the benefits that compensate for the downsides. Some people provided possible benefits that matter to their specific case, like, PSU makes noise (actually, that was you in a different thread), or they want to save laptop battery, etc. But if we are taking about a modern stationary computer with mains power, there’s practically no benefit to shutting it down, only downsides.

                  Of course it’s completely valid for somebody to do it out of habit, but they can’t expect to use that as a valid argument for others to do it.

                • Farid
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                  17 hours ago

                  But a sleeping computer is just as quiet as a shut down computer… Which is totally silent. I don’t get it.

          • @CaptnNMorgan
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            122 hours ago

            For me the only thing I needed to “put back where it should be” was my VPN. Bu I switched to wireguard from Eddie, so now I don’t need to adjust anything on startup

      • exu
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        1123 hours ago

        Just like the brain computers need off-time to calm their electrons and unflip their bits.

        /s but a lot of issues really are solved by a reboot

    • @[email protected]
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      318 hours ago

      Sign in states for tokens expire when you power cycle. If you’re in IT or moving between classes, not only would you have to wait for power down and power on each stop you make,you’d also need to sign into every tool you use that requires credentials. I work as a field tech for an MSP. If I had to shut down at the end of each stop and boot back up then I’d have to spend 20-30 minutes signing back into my RMM, ticket system, azure portal, knowledge base etc on top of the site specific stuff I’m already going to have to sign into for that stop. Sleep great. Just disable S0 sleep.

        • @[email protected]
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          132 minutes ago

          Shitty software? The software is great. It sucks that we live in a world that needs MFA to be secure. I also don’t think any software exists in the IT space that doesn’t require some sign in. Every RMM on the planet is going to require secure sign on and so will every knowledge base software. You also need to sign in to access things like domain DNS. Most of my job is locked behind half a dozen sign ins. That’s how it goes for MSPs anything else would be unsecure.

    • @[email protected]
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      622 hours ago

      The only reason why my uptime is only a month is because I took my PC with me on a work trip which involved packing it.

    • @[email protected]
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      320 hours ago

      me too. i see no reason not to shut it down, unless boot time takes way too long (you dont have an ssd), you use windows (always takes too long), or you have a bunch of apps open and don’t want to lose the workflow.

      though i just have to shutdown anyway because my pc is right under a couple of roof leaks and it might rain while i’m sleeping or not at home

      • @SolidShake
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        220 hours ago

        honest question, because i use windows and i shut down every day. is 20 seconds really “too long” for a full boot up?

        • Lv_InSaNe_vL
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          419 hours ago

          I think a lot of people are still stuck in the HDD days where windows could take 15-20 mins for a cold boot.

          But I only sleep windows because I like to get game updates while I sleep.

        • @[email protected]
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          019 hours ago

          Look, I used to work with computers that would take 5 minutes to turn on. I’m done waiting for computers to boot, I want it to take the least time it can. If hibernation takes just 1 second off, I’m gonna use it.

    • @[email protected]
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      422 hours ago

      When I got my first (and only) PC, it was outright SUGGESTED to never power it down. By HP. So yeah I just sleep my computer, and yes I have to deal with the bullshit in the meme lol

      Always wondered why the fuck my PC is awake before I even touch it.

      • Spaniard
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        Back in the day we did that because it too long to boot so we never shut it down.

        20 years later we have servers at home that we never shut down.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      11 day ago

      To be fair I don’t always use it like that but suspend is convenient if I have a continuous work that is scattered all around.

      • @[email protected]
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        320 hours ago

        what i’d day is “always turn off your computer when you’re done using it”, meaning you sleep it when you have work you don’t want to lose.

  • @[email protected]
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    3821 hours ago

    Linux users when their computer won’t boot because they fucked up their grub config again: (Totally not me)

    • @MadBigote
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      1021 hours ago

      Are you distro hopping? That’s when my grub would fail on me on a monthly basis.

    • @spookex
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      621 hours ago

      Or just installed few months of missing updates, looking at you my broken Manjaro dual-boot

        • @AnUnusualRelic
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          13 hours ago

          Tumbleweed will update six months of packages or more without breaking a sweat. It’s all about using something sturdy.

    • Possibly linux
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      219 hours ago

      A lot of systems use systemd boot. Also, why would you be modifying Grub?

      • @chronicledmonocle
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        613 hours ago

        They’re trolling and have no idea what the fuck they’re talking about. I’ve literally not had a bootloader failure in a decade from multiple Linux OS installs.

        The only time I had an issue was when I was playing with a bleeding edge distro and it borked full disk encryption, but that was INTENTIONALLY bleeding edge and I knew the risks.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 hours ago

          Nah I was doing some virtualization troubleshooting and had to make some changes to grub. Luckily I had backups, but as a serial tinkerer I break stuff pretty often. Also fucked up my fstab when trying to automount drives, though that was an easy fix. I never claimed to be a clever man