

So I think that if OP is having problems with slow start up of Windows then he's got something else going on. I've tried fiddling with settings (like disabling the service ) only to find that Windows detects a failure to restart from sleep (after a shutdown, not restart), then I lose all open data and it's slower. That said, it's a bit delicate, as I've found out.
Msi quickboot update#
Even then, the first update it gets re-enabled. You have to find the (renamed) service and disable it to really stop it. It used to be easily disabled but now even if you disable Fast Startup in the Power Config menus it's still working.
Msi quickboot drivers#
I really can't tell the difference between sleep and hibernate, though, as writing out a 16gig file takes time even on an NVME.Īnd then there's Superfetch: Applications, system files and device drivers all load super fast because the most-used areas of those files are stored sequentially on disk too. Only when I have data and apps open does it matter as a shutdown shuts down all open apps but hibernate just writes out all memory to hiberfil. Unless you disable all that the only way to lose data in a hibernate state is if you change something about the system: new/more memory or drives or something like that.īTW: starting up from shutdown, sleep or hibernation are essentially identical with no open apps. I think your system is safe from power outages because everything gets written to non-volatile stoarage. Unhide system files and 'hiberfil.sys' is always in the root of system drive. When it re-boots after a 'sleep' it can quickly recover the memory state re-booting after s hibernate reloads all apps that were open with date from the memory image in hiberfil.sys. Mine only has a 'sleep' or 'hibernate' option and even sleep is more like a 'shutdown' now and Windows actually goes into a hybrid sleep state and writes out active areas of memory to the NVME drive.
Msi quickboot Pc#
It takes my PC about 10 seconds to boot OK ready 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005 now were both booted.Ĭlick to expand.I don't think windows suspends that way anymore. Nothing personal but in no way do I understand your thinking or even the reason! You bought what you bought if you were looking for different features in the motherboard you should of actually looked at the boards to know what you were buying. With just the time to reinstall windows and then run the updates you could of booted in 15 seconds well over 500 times. This is sounding like a Epion thing where your looking to 1 up your friends saying My PC Starts in 5 seconds and your is 12 you have junk!ĮDIT Buy a new motherboard to cut a few seconds off your boot time, cost of the motherboard and having to reinstall windows. Your normal boot process is the motherboard checks each part then it will post then load windows. Click to expand.Dude really you can't take 15 seconds out of your life to boot the PC? Like I said the quick boot bypasses some things and can go to crap if you try to boot into BIOS.
