janrinok writes:
From an ARS Technica story:
Linux 3.15, expected to be released in mid-2014, "will feature a large number of ACPI and power management updates" and allow Linux-based computers to suspend and resume faster, Phoronix reported today.
'Visible to users with the Linux 3.15 kernel should be reduced time for system suspend and resuming, thanks to the enabling of more asynchronous threads,' the article said, pointing to a list of changes posted by Rafael Wysocki, an Intel employee who maintains the Linux kernel's core power management code. Basic support for Nvidia's Maxwell architecture is also in the works for Linux 3.15.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by Subsentient on Monday March 24 2014, @02:02AM
Hibernation is what I end up using most. Suspend on Linux has always been terrible, and it's hilarious that in 2014 it still is unstable on so many boxes. Thankfully, I usually just leave my towers running, but the netbook sometimes gets hibernated.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Grishnakh on Monday March 24 2014, @08:49AM
Suspend on my Dell E6400 laptop works perfectly. I just close the screen, and open it later and it comes right back after a short pause. It's great. It's a lot better than Windows in fact; I have an E6420 (later generation of same basic laptop) for work loaded with Win7, and this thing takes forever to un-suspend, with lots of screen flickering to boot.
(Score: 3, Informative) by tchuladdiass on Monday March 24 2014, @11:19AM
If you want the best of both worlds -- suspend for, say, a couple hours, then go into hibernate (so your battery isn't drained from being suspended for a couple days), take a look at this ask-ubuntu question, and the accepted answer:t omatically-from-suspend-into-hibernate [askubuntu.com]
http://askubuntu.com/questions/12383/how-to-go-au
This works by setting an rtc timer event to kick off a couple hours after suspend, to wake up and then go into hibernation.
Note, that it is highly recommended that you initially set the timeout to something low (such as a few minutes), and try it out with several different system loads, to make sure that hibernate works correctly after suspend. Otherwise, your laptop may come out of suspend, fail to hibernate, and then be left in a powered on state when it is in your laptop bag.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 24 2014, @07:03PM
my Dell
Oddly enough, when rudolph mentioned "warranty-replaced mobo", that brand was the first thing that came to my mind.
I remember a former Dell employee posting at the other site about that company's actions during the days of counterfeit lytics. [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [atariage.com]
He said that when MoBos were returned, they would give those a quick visual inspection and if nothing odd was spotted, they were instructed to ship those out as replacement boards to others who had problems.
-- gewg_