That definition applies to versions of Windows prior to Vista. Vista uses a
sleep or hybrid sleep mode. Sleep mode is what the majority use, and likely
yourself as well since the contents of ram are lost when you remove the
battery. The hybrid mode is closer to the true hibernate, but is disabled on
most systems - particularly laptops. Regardless of which you use, some
components will remain charged by a trickle from either the psu or cmos
battery, and many support a 'wake' feature that can reinitiate the os.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help -
www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts
http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
"Halexi" <> wrote in message
news:F1BE39D8-48F7-41BF-A19C-...
> WRONG !!...How do you explain then if the computer wakes up by itself from
> Hibernation...?? Mine does it everytime I put it to hibernation...It
> still
> draws some minimal power to run something in the background...It wont wake
> up
> if you remove and re install the battery which then loses it's memory
> contents....
>
> --
> Halexi
>
>
> "Anando [MVP]" wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> Sleep: Your computer runs in a very low power state and the RAM modules
>> still get power, therefore
>> retaining its contents. Resuming from sleep is quicker.
>>
>> Hibernate: The contents of the RAM are written to a file on the hard
>> drive and the mahine shuts down
>> completely. Resuming from hibernate is quicker than a cold boot, but
>> slower than a resume from
>> sleep.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Anando
>> Microsoft MVP- Windows Shell/User
>> http://www.microsoft.com/mvp
>>
>> Microsoft Certified Professional
>> http://www.microsoft.com/mcp
>>
>> My Blog
>> http://www.anando.org/blog
>> "Shilps" <> wrote in message
>> news:43999023-FA51-4774-AB9D-...
>> > HI,
>> >
>> > I would like to know whats the difference between Hibernation and Sleep
>> >
>> > Thanks
>>