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jodoherty | 1 year ago
Now I have to worry about my laptop randomly overheating itself in my backpack and even catching fire.
jodoherty | 1 year ago
Now I have to worry about my laptop randomly overheating itself in my backpack and even catching fire.
microtonal|1 year ago
That, but probably also to compete with Mac's Power Nap feature (2012) that updates Mail, Messages, and other applications during sleep (so that when you open up the laptop messaging apps are immediately up to date):
https://www.engadget.com/2012-06-11-apple-introduces-power-n...
Apple managed to do it without setting your laptop on fire. Meanwhile Dell recommends you to switch off a laptop when you put it in your backpack:
https://www.dell.com/support/kbdoc/en-us/000124304/notebook-....
0x457|1 year ago
Now i'm wondering if it's Apple fault that S3 got removed.
actionfromafar|1 year ago
goosedragons|1 year ago
4ad|1 year ago
pxeboot|1 year ago
dbtc|1 year ago
vladvasiliu|1 year ago
Is that actually a thing? On my Windows machine media stops playing when I put it to sleep. The machine is clearly not completely off, though, judging by the fan spinning like crazy from time to time.
Also, the whole "keep checking for e-mails" and whatever is clearly broken, since after waking up Outlook needs a while to come back to life and show new messages.
sim7c00|1 year ago
i know it didnt end up with this logic but it melts my brain as to why... is it cheaper to implement the hw without support for deep sleep?
most specifications have it included (pcie, nvme, ahci etc. etc.) so you'd expect most devices working via pc platform would implement these things :(
cant wait to push my OS onto real hardware and burn my fucking house down