John G Posted December 31, 2017 Share Posted December 31, 2017 I recall that traditionally we were told to always do an orderly shutdown of a computer from the OS, rather than just "pulling the plug" or holding down the power button. For logistics reasons, it's easier for me to shut down the PC I use to play digital music at the power conditioner than at the PC itself. On a machine running WS 2012 r2, AO in Core Mode, and Roon Bridge, is there any reason to adhere to the old school admonition? I've tried it both ways and don't see any ill effects. Link to comment
WuNgUn Posted December 31, 2017 Share Posted December 31, 2017 I have a Logitec DiNovo mini BT mouse/keyboard, and I just to a sleep shortcut to power it off remotely...safer than just pulling the plug and not at all an inconvenience. Pulling the plug, I assume you'll lose whatever is in the RAM and corrupt whatever your disk was writing at the time. However, setting your BIOS option to power up your PC on power restoration, makes it pretty convenient to turn everything back on again from your PSU conditioner! mourip 1 Link to comment
dtb300 Posted January 3, 2018 Share Posted January 3, 2018 Depends what it going on at the time of "power off". From past experience, at first, probably fine for a few power offs, but over time - IMO - you will start to experience issues. But if you have an image of the drive and issues do arise, just blow the image back in and you are ready to go. DTB Rig: https://cgi.audioasylum.com/systems/9648.html Link to comment
John G Posted July 6, 2018 Author Share Posted July 6, 2018 If anybody's still interested in the post, I started shutting down the PC at the power conditioner as described above maybe 5 months ago. My thinking was that, since the computer had a solid state drive there was no risk of write errors. The other day I started getting random, brief interruptions in streamed music (from Tidal via Roon) and even from music on my own NAS. Rebooted the PC and the problem went away. So the lesson I take away is: yes, it is better to shut down the PC "correctly" than to just pull the plug. Link to comment
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