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jodoherty | 1 year ago

The problem is platforms moved away from S3 sleep. I've heard people claim it was mostly so managed Windows laptops could force updates with the lid shut and the laptop suspended.

Now I have to worry about my laptop randomly overheating itself in my backpack and even catching fire.

discuss

order

microtonal|1 year ago

I've heard people claim it was mostly so managed Windows laptops could force updates with the lid shut and the laptop suspended.

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

Hold on, Apple used the same intel chips as everyone else when Power Nap was introduced. In fact, it was implemented via S0ix state. It's just almost no one except Apple figured how to utilize it correctly.

Now i'm wondering if it's Apple fault that S3 got removed.

actionfromafar|1 year ago

Perfect "we have PowerNap at home" moment for Dell and friends. Well played, Apple.

goosedragons|1 year ago

Nah. Apple's Intel implementation at least was equally crap. I've had my 2018 MBP cook itself in my bag a couple times.

4ad|1 year ago

My Macbook Pro lasts about two days on battery while doing work (in clamshell mode, with the screen off). My Thinkpad drains its battery in less time than that in sleep. The removal of S3 is a travesty.

pxeboot|1 year ago

I believe it came about during the "Windows must run on tablets" era. They needed a way for WiFi to stay on during sleep so things like notifications would continue to work. It also enabled media players to continue playing audio in sleep mode, similar to iOS and Android.

dbtc|1 year ago

Would be great to have a bios switch for it then.

vladvasiliu|1 year ago

> It also enabled media players to continue playing audio in sleep mode

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

weirds me out since acpi etc. is uaed to control power qnd such states why would devices even need to do such things to support some OS.. the OS should be able to manage states, its the controller and hw should listen... in this case, windows could simply not put the devices to sleep?

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