Am 17.05.2012 22:23, schrieb Darryl L. Pierce:
On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 10:09:36PM +0200, Reindl Harald wrote:
i live in the world where someone starts his work in the morining and powers on his computer once each day and have all other machines running 365/7/24
waking up from suspend to disk takes much longer as a cold start
Can you provide some data to back this up? When I suspend my laptop it is far, far quicker to restore than a cold boot.
yes
A suspend-to-usable operation is on the order of seconds
reading 16 GB RAm image in seconds? not with slow disks
A cold boot is 10s of seconds.
currently 25 seconds including a lot of services not used on a typical end-user machine
and even if this is not interesting my expierience with applications and services having open network connections is that it sucks if they are woken up in another network
The machine should be able to handle it like any other interruption to networking (network down, switching APs, etc.). If it doesn't then that's a separate problem to be solved.
depends on your environment
if you are connected to a lot of LAn services and wake up the machine on another location where they are all not available or have different IPs it is not funny