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30 seconds? That's WiiU territory... I honestly expected faster, but whatever, it's just 30 seconds.
except he equates suspend/resume to sleep mode, which doesn't appear to be correct.
suspend/resume refers to allowing a game to go into a suspended state so that when the console wakes up from standby, the game is back right where you left off. that's the missing feature. I would assume that this wouldn't work in the cold boot case since all of memory state (RAM) is lost on cold boot
standby is there at launch, so this whole talk about cold boot time means nothing as long as standby is there (unless you are super power conscious).
having suspend/resume available would only shorten the load time for the most recently played game, not the wake from standby (or cold boot) time.
that's where I was initially confused. unless I've gotten something wrong, I think this is how it works on day 1.
Argh, no it isn't and I see a lot of normally well informed people, like you, making the same mistake over this.
Multi-tasking, where you can pause a game, open the browser or an app and then go right back into the game from where you left off, is in the PS4 at launch. This should be obvious, seeing as the FAQ last week said that you can use the Music Unlimited app for custom soundtracks.
Suspend/resume is what we'd normally call sleep mode. It lets you pause a game, power down your PS4 (which provides enough power to keep your game in a suspended state), turn your PS4 back on and then immediately pick up your game right from where you paused it. This is the feature that will be patched in.
Yes, people are conflating a lot of terms here. To be clear:
Stand By: This is a low power state the PS4 goes into when you are not using it. It is equivalent to sleeping your PC or turning off the screen on your iPhone or tablet. While in this mode the PS4 can still ping your internet connection, download patches, firmware updates or games you've bought remotely through the website or phone app. Stand by will be available at launch.
Multitasking: This is the ability to switch to a different app without having to close a running game. It's like alt-tabbing out of a game on your PC, or hitting the home button on a Vita to check twitter or open the web browser. The game state is preserved exactly so when you switch back you are in exactly the same place and can keep going. PS4 can do this at launch, and even has a feature that lets you double click the PS button to quickly switch between the game and the last app you used.
Suspend/Resume: This is the ability to suspend a game you are playing and put the PS4 into Stand By mode without having to save so the next time you wake up the PS4 you can immediately start playing where you left off without having to relaunch the game or load a save. Like the multitasking feature above it would perfectly preserve your game state even while the system is in the low powered Stand By mode. This is what WILL NOT be available at launch.
And to reiterate - Cold Boot: This is the time it take for your system to boot into the OS from a no power state. You will only experience this the first time you plug in the PS4 and (presumably) whenever a firmware update needs to be installed. In normal use you will be using the Stand By mode to turn your PS4 "off". As such it's not that important how long it takes, just like no one worried about how long a cold boot takes on an iPhone or iPad. If you are experiencing a cold boot it's because the power was inadvertently interrupted, updating the operating system, or recovering from a system crash.
Yes, people are conflating a lot of terms here. To be clear:
Stand By: This is a low power state the PS4 goes into when you are not using it. It is equivalent to sleeping your PC or turning off the screen on your iPhone or tablet. While in this mode the PS4 can still ping your internet connection, download patches, firmware updates or games you've bought remotely through the website or phone app. Stand by will be available at launch.
Multitasking: This is the ability to switch to a different app without having to close a running game. It's like alt-tabbing out of a game on your PC, or hitting the home button on a Vita to check twitter or open the web browser. The game state is preserved exactly so when you switch back you are in exactly the same place and can keep going. PS4 can do this at launch, and even has a feature that lets you double click the PS button to quickly switch between the game and the last app you used.
Suspend/Resume: This is the ability to suspend a game you are playing and put the PS4 into Stand By mode without having to save so the next time you wake up the PS4 you can immediately start playing where you left off without having to relaunch the game or load a save. Like the multitasking feature above it would perfectly preserve your game state even while the system is in the low powered Stand By mode. This is what WILL NOT be available at launch.
And to reiterate - Cold Boot: This is the time it take for your system to boot into the OS from a no power state. You will only experience this the first time you plug in the PS4 and (presumably) whenever a firmware update needs to be installed. In normal use you will be using the Stand By mode to turn your PS4 "off". As such it's not that important how long it takes, just like no one worried about how long a cold boot takes on an iPhone or iPad. If you are experiencing a cold boot it's because the power was inadvertently interrupted, updating the operating system, or recovering from a system crash.
Someone put this in the OP please.
except he equates suspend/resume to sleep mode, which doesn't appear to be correct.
suspend/resume refers to allowing a game to go into a suspended state so that when the console wakes up from standby, the game is back right where you left off. that's the missing feature. I would assume that this wouldn't work in the cold boot case since all of memory state (RAM) is lost on cold boot
standby is there at launch, so this whole talk about cold boot time means nothing as long as standby is there (unless you are super power conscious).
having suspend/resume available would only shorten the load time for the most recently played game, not the wake from standby (or cold boot) time.
that's where I was initially confused. unless I've gotten something wrong, I think this is how it works on day 1.
What motherboard do you have? 8 seconds is how long it takes for most motherboards to get past POST, not even counting booting into os.My PC cold boots in 8 seconds![]()
Grimløck;89500331 said:Yeah, but the PS4 takes 30 seconds. We're doomed. Cue the apocalypse.
basically you're saying you can't standby while in a game, you have to quit the game and then standby?
My PC cold boots in 8 seconds![]()
Yes, people are conflating a lot of terms here. To be clear:
Stand By: This is a low power state the PS4 goes into when you are not using it. It is equivalent to sleeping your PC or turning off the screen on your iPhone or tablet. While in this mode the PS4 can still ping your internet connection, download patches, firmware updates or games you've bought remotely through the website or phone app. Stand by will be available at launch.
Multitasking: This is the ability to switch to a different app without having to close a running game. It's like alt-tabbing out of a game on your PC, or hitting the home button on a Vita to check twitter or open the web browser. The game state is preserved exactly so when you switch back you are in exactly the same place and can keep going. PS4 can do this at launch, and even has a feature that lets you double click the PS button to quickly switch between the game and the last app you used.
Suspend/Resume: This is the ability to suspend a game you are playing and put the PS4 into Stand By mode without having to save so the next time you wake up the PS4 you can immediately start playing where you left off without having to relaunch the game or load a save. Like the multitasking feature above it would perfectly preserve your game state even while the system is in the low powered Stand By mode. This is what WILL NOT be available at launch.
And to reiterate - Cold Boot: This is the time it take for your system to boot into the OS from a no power state. You will only experience this the first time you plug in the PS4 and (presumably) whenever a firmware update needs to be installed. In normal use you will be using the Stand By mode to turn your PS4 "off". As such it's not that important how long it takes, just like no one worried about how long a cold boot takes on an iPhone or iPad. If you are experiencing a cold boot it's because the power was inadvertently interrupted, updating the operating system, or recovering from a system crash.
Pretty much. I'm guessing that if you try to put it into standby mode while you're still playing a game, it'll pop up a warning that tells you that if you proceed, your game will be killed.
Calling BS.
You go from a power off state to OS in eight seconds?
My Win 7 on SSD even with an eliminated splash screen takes 20-30.
Windows 8 is way faster to bott on an SSD (about the only major advantage over 7). 8 seconds sounds pretty realistic.
yeah, that was pretty much my understanding as well, i just didn't realize that "multitasking for games" is a separate thing from "suspend/resume".
Yeah, I don't think Sony did a great job of clarifying exactly what they meant by suspend/resume, as it can easily be mistaken for multitasking (even though there are videos out there showing the multitasking working right now).
I'm still wondering if the Xbone even has the suspend/resume feature, as it seems like everyone that's talked about it was actually talking about multitasking.
So if stand-by's there who cares?
Windows 8 is way faster to boot on an SSD (about the only major advantage over 7). 8 seconds sounds pretty realistic.
Windows 8 is way faster to boot on an SSD (about the only major advantage over 7). 8 seconds sounds pretty realistic.
Windows 8 is way faster to boot on an SSD (about the only major advantage over 7). 8 seconds sounds pretty realistic.
The Xbox One is an always on device, it never goes into an equivalent low power state to the PS4's Stand By mode so there is no situation where the game would be interrupted in the same manner. As such the multitasking capabilities of the Xbox One give it the same functionality as a suspend/resume feature.
I just turned on my Wii U (patched and everything) and it took 20 seconds. Kinda funny how the Wii U boots faster than the PS4.30 seconds? That's WiiU territory... I honestly expected faster, but whatever, it's just 30 seconds.
That's not my understanding, nor Penello's from what I've read:
http://www.examiner.com/article/microsoft-director-xbox-one-turns-on-faster-than-tv-from-standby
Windows 8 isn't going to change the POST speed. I'm calling it BS too.
Not to mention that W8 doesn't actually fully load until you sign in.
That's not my understanding, nor Penello's from what I've read:
http://www.examiner.com/article/microsoft-director-xbox-one-turns-on-faster-than-tv-from-standby
Calling BS. My apologies if true, not sure how you are getting through POST so quickly. Just saw a video on youtube and he is getting around 8-10. How are you skipping POST?
You go from a power off state to OS in eight seconds?
My Win 7 on SSD even with an eliminated splash screen takes 20-30.
Just because they both have something called "stand by" does not mean they are equivalent power states. On the Xbox One the main APU is always active. It throttles down and shuts off parts, but it never turns off. On PS4 the main APU goes completely inactive and the custom secondary background processor takes over to manage the system. The challenges of ramping up an active processor versus activating one that is off are completely different.
lol @ unbelievers
You need to have motherboard with UEFI BIOS. That BIOS is not checking for every component, you set it up once, and then it uses that setting for as long as every component is working fine.![]()
But that wasn't the argument, was it? The xbox does have stand by from a consumer's standpoint. How much power it consumes in that state is a different debate, right?
Yes, people are conflating a lot of terms here. To be clear:
Stand By: This is a low power state the PS4 goes into when you are not using it. It is equivalent to sleeping your PC or turning off the screen on your iPhone or tablet. While in this mode the PS4 can still ping your internet connection, download patches, firmware updates or games you've bought remotely through the website or phone app. Stand by will be available at launch.
Multitasking: This is the ability to switch to a different app without having to close a running game. It's like alt-tabbing out of a game on your PC, or hitting the home button on a Vita to check twitter or open the web browser. The game state is preserved exactly so when you switch back you are in exactly the same place and can keep going. PS4 can do this at launch, and even has a feature that lets you double click the PS button to quickly switch between the game and the last app you used.
Suspend/Resume: This is the ability to suspend a game you are playing and put the PS4 into Stand By mode without having to save so the next time you wake up the PS4 you can immediately start playing where you left off without having to relaunch the game or load a save. Like the multitasking feature above it would perfectly preserve your game state even while the system is in the low powered Stand By mode. This is what WILL NOT be available at launch.
And to reiterate - Cold Boot: This is the time it take for your system to boot into the OS from a no power state. You will only experience this the first time you plug in the PS4 and (presumably) whenever a firmware update needs to be installed. In normal use you will be using the Stand By mode to turn your PS4 "off". As such it's not that important how long it takes, just like no one worried about how long a cold boot takes on an iPhone or iPad. If you are experiencing a cold boot it's because the power was inadvertently interrupted, updating the operating system, or recovering from a system crash.
Someone asked a technical question and I gave a technical answer. There is no "argument" being made, I'm just explaining how it works. The Xbox One works differently so the PS4 terminology does not directly apply.
Pre-ordering my 10 second sandwich.
Just because they both have something called "stand by" does not mean they are equivalent power states. On the Xbox One the main APU is always active. It throttles down and shuts off parts, but it never turns off. On PS4 the main APU goes completely inactive and the custom secondary background processor takes over to manage the system. The challenges of ramping up an active processor versus activating one that is off are completely different.
Really needs to be in the OP, it amazes me how complicated people have made this.
I just turned on my Wii U (patched and everything) and it took 20 seconds. Kinda funny how the Wii U boots faster than the PS4.
30 seconds ain't a lot, but I expected better.