I've said this previously, Lion used to be very quick in booting, much better than that of Mountain Lion. Lately, I've been cutting down on startup items, but even that doesn't make much difference in booting time. Previously, when I had a Windows laptop, I always used to hibernate rather than shut it down. But when I used OS X, it looked like there's no hibernate feature in it. As it turns out, you can enable hibernation in OS X, here's how you do it.
To hibernate your Mac, you hit the ? icon in menu bar, hit Sleep. Wait for 5-10 seconds and it'll hibernate. Internally, what happens during hibernation is, all the cache stored in your RAM is transferred to your hard disk, and when you boot your Mac, all that cache is again transferred to RAM – so you can continue where you left off. -- This Post Enable hibernation in OS X Mountain Lion for quick booting is Published on Devils Workshop . Related posts: | |||
| |||
| |||
|
Tuesday, 9 October 2012
Enable hibernation in OS X Mountain Lion for quick booting
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment