However, when in sleep mode, I'm sure the download is much faster because when I resume and check my torrent speed for stuff I'm downloading, it shows download rates in excess of 2Mb. I'm not sure what's happening because maybe it's a false reading... I've attached a screen print to give an example. You can see the the torrent shows a download of 2.37Mb...

Your MacBook Pro (MBP) has an option for Power Nap mode allowing it to perform a number of function when "sleeping." However, this does not directly affect your download speed that is provided by your ISP, but your Mac's CPU will have less to do and this may allow for more processing for downloads.


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I've checked it a few times by taking a screen shot of a torrent download... put it in sleep mode, come back after 15 or 20 minutes and it's downloaded about 25 Mb of data, so yes, it does download while in sleep mode.

Battery drains in about 10 hours when the computer is asleep with Ubuntu 18.04, it is a lenovo y520 (7700hq, 1060 with bumblebee).

When I tested no USB devices were plugged in, actually nothing was plugged in.

The sleep mode is s2 - deep. I am not interested in hibernation (it is quite slow and takes a lot of space).

In windows and Mac OS (hackintosh) sleep mode uses 1 or 2% of battery in a day.

There are many ways to shut down your computer: You can turn the computer off completely, make the computer sleep, or let the computer enters hibernate mode. The following article introduces the operation and description of each mode in a nutshell.

I own a Nintendo 2DS and I frequently download updates from the eShop. There is an option to download now or download later. If you choose the latter option, the 2DS downloads in sleep mode. I usually just use download now, but when I do use the download later option, there does not seem to be a difference in download time. Is there an actual difference in download time between these two options?

There will be a very small increase when downloading in sleep mode, because your system is not using as much internet as it would be if it was open (the more web pages open, games playing ect., the bigger this difference will be). But as I said this is very minimal and not really noticeable, so the short answer is no.

However I have another issue. When resuming from sleeping mode, all fans go full blast just like they do during the start-up phase; however they keep that speed and don't go back to their original state.

I wanted the fans to be a bit less noisy and used the Q-Fan calibration feature in the BIOS. I was quite happy with the end result before I used the sleeping mode in windows...now when I turn it back on the fan speed doesn't change as it does at startup, i.e. the normal procedure where they start full speed and then go quiet once the BIOS settles in.

I'll share what I know about this and we can see if matches your circumstances or if we need to look at something else. The Asus X99 A/Pro/Deluxe boards appear to have this problem. It is triggered after waking from sleep. My X99-PRO is a sister board to your A model and is nearly identical. My original deluxe model had this same issue. I asked in Asus forums and received the typical terse, unhelpful response. I asked again elsewhere and every time I received a completely different explanation. I returned that board for several reasons, including this. In total, I have experienced this on both the deluxe and two different X99-PRO models. It only happens to me when I am using 3 pin DC fans on the CPU_FAN header. Moving those fans to any other CHA_FAN header eliminated the problem. My 3 pin DC pump does not cause this, however I suspect this is because I only use it at "Full Speed" which eliminates the header from AI suite control. My best guess is this is a interaction problem between the X99 BIOS, AI Suite 3, and whatever happens when you wake from sleep. One possibility is the board's auto fan detect mode (PWM or DC) reverts to PWM mode (constant 12V) when it wakes. This causes the DC fans to run at 100%. I have always been able to stop it by restarting the system, but obviously that is not ideal.

It doesn't matter what it is, but I need to know the make and model to find an alternate set-up for you. I suspect it is going to be a 3 pin fan system. Otherwise the rear fan would run at 100% all the time if linked to a PWM fan on CPU_FAN. It is starting to look like the problem described above is the culprit. If so, that's a good thing. It has some easy fixes compared to motherboard or power supply testing and replacement.

The eShop is a prominent part of the Nintendo Switch's lightweight OS, and for our money, it certainly seems to be more efficient at downloading games than the Wii U or 3DS. Granted, there may be some minor issues with the download interface (i.e. no time estimates), but it does its job exceedingly well. And for those of you that just have to have your games as soon as possible, recent tests have proved that the Nintendo Switch actually downloads things a little bit faster when in sleep mode.

GameXplain recently did a video on this, running a series of tests after perceiving a change in download speed after getting a recent game. Though it was difficult to accurately collect results due sleep mode not having a method of viewing download progress, the number of tests seemed to prove that the sleep mode actually downloads games about 15% faster than if the console is in use. Not a whole lot of improvement, but still, that amounts to a lot of time as you scale up the download size.

I'm not sure what the problem on mine cuz it disconnects from the internet every single time I put my Switch into sleep mode which of course stops the download midway. Do you guys just press on the sleep/power button or did you set it on auto-sleep?

Haven't downloaded anything without sleep mode yet... buyed all my eshop stuff at work via the nintendo homepage and when I come home and turn on the switch the notification for "download finished" (or whatever it says in english) pops up.

I actually was thinking this very thing last night when I downloaded Snake Pass with the system on and it didn't seem that speedy. Then I put it in sleep mode because I wanted to check if it kept downloading that way (didn't know if that was a feature), and to my surprise a few minutes later it had downloaded the game almost completely!

"If an enabled interrupt occurs while the MCU is in a sleep mode, the MCU wakes up. The MCU is then halted for

four cycles in addition to the start-up time [see 9.2.2], executes the interrupt routine, and resumes execution from the instruction

following SLEEP. The contents of the Register File and SRAM are unaltered when the device wakes up from

sleep. If a reset occurs during sleep mode, the MCU wakes up and executes from the Reset Vector."'

I made a remote control with a Promini that wakes up from power-down sleep mode after every key press. The key press causes an interrupt, the processor wakes up, scans the 4x4 keypad, and never misses a key press - I think if it was taking 65mS the presses would be missed as they would debounce themselves in that time.

CrossRoads, if I understand you correctly, you're using the sleep mode formally named Power-Down. Why is the 65ms startup time absent in this case? It would seem this is the most-power-saving mode, in which case I'd guess the oscillator startup time WOULD add to making it the laziest wakeup.

from the data sheet: 9.2 BOD Disable (p.40)

"When the BOD has been disabled, the wake-up time from sleep mode will be approximately 60

s to ensure that the BOD is working correctly before the MCU continues executing code."

So it seems if you are looking for the best possible power-savings in sleep mode AND the fastest possible wake-up times... then your only option would be to permanently disable BOD (by changing the fuses).

For the last 1.5 years I've tended to put my laptop in sleep mode rather than turn it off. Recently I started to feel it's not as fast as it was when I bought it, even if I restore a fresh Windows 7 image (I made it 1 week after installing the system for the first time).

So without further ado, to fix it I discovered that when you choose "power off" after holding down the power button for afew seconds, the headset does not power off but goes into a sleep mode, which honestly like windows a hard shutdown option and sleep option should be implemented into the Meta Quest OS in my opinion. For some back story, my issue started after a mandatory update.

To fix it when in sleep mode"powered off" I held down the volume down " power button key and chose shutdown. Which truly powered it down. Then I held down the volume down " power button key again and chose the "boot device" option which is safe because no data is deleted and it only performed a clean initial boot of the new firmware. After that it charged great, oddly even the tracking was far better, and screen looked clearer, must be the update taking root. 17dc91bb1f

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