Power Options

1.6 Given a scenario, configure Microsoft Windows settings

📘CompTIA A+ Core 2 (220-1202)


Power Options in Microsoft Windows control how a computer uses electricity and manages hardware power.
Technicians configure these settings to save energy, extend battery life, improve performance, and control how a system behaves when idle or shut down.

You can access Power Options from:

  • Control Panel → Power Options
  • Settings → System → Power & sleep

For the exam, you must understand what each option does, when to use it, and how it affects system behavior.


1. Hibernate

What Hibernate Does

  • Saves the entire contents of RAM (open programs, files, system state) to the hard drive
  • Then completely powers off the computer
  • Uses zero power while off

When the computer turns back on, Windows restores everything exactly as it was.

Key Points for the Exam

  • Hibernate is slower than Sleep to enter and exit
  • Uses no battery power
  • Requires free disk space (hiberfil.sys file)
  • Common on laptops

IT Environment Use

  • Used when a laptop will not be used for a long time
  • Protects open work during battery drain
  • Useful when systems must resume work without reopening applications

Exam Tip

  • Hibernate = Save RAM to disk + power off
  • Not the same as Sleep

2. Power Plans

What Power Plans Are

A power plan is a group of settings that controls:

  • CPU performance
  • Display timeout
  • Sleep behavior
  • Hard drive power

Default Windows Power Plans

Balanced (Default)

  • Automatically adjusts performance and power use
  • Best for most users

Power Saver

  • Reduces system performance
  • Saves energy and battery life
  • Dims display faster

High Performance

  • Maximizes system speed
  • Uses more power
  • Keeps hardware running at higher levels

Custom Power Plans

  • Technicians can create custom plans
  • Used in environments with specific needs

IT Environment Use

  • High Performance for systems running heavy applications
  • Power Saver for battery-dependent devices
  • Balanced for general office use

Exam Tip

  • Know differences between plans
  • Understand when to choose each one

3. Sleep / Suspend

What Sleep Does

  • Saves current work to RAM
  • Puts system into low-power mode
  • System wakes very quickly

Key Characteristics

  • Uses small amount of power
  • Faster than Hibernate
  • If power is lost, unsaved data is lost

IT Environment Use

  • Short breaks or temporary inactivity
  • Frequently used on laptops and desktops
  • Keeps applications ready instantly

Exam Tip

  • Sleep = RAM powered
  • Faster than Hibernate
  • Risk if battery fully drains

4. Standby

What Standby Means

  • Older term for Sleep mode
  • Windows now primarily uses the term Sleep

Exam-Relevant Information

  • Standby and Sleep are functionally the same
  • Older exam questions may still mention Standby

Exam Tip

  • If you see “Standby,” think Sleep mode

5. Choose What Closing the Lid Does

What This Setting Controls

Determines what happens when a laptop lid is closed:

  • Do nothing
  • Sleep
  • Hibernate
  • Shut down

Settings can be configured separately for:

  • On battery
  • Plugged in

Where to Configure

  • Control Panel → Power Options
  • Choose what closing the lid does

IT Environment Use

  • Prevent accidental sleep during presentations
  • Control power behavior for mobile workers
  • Ensure safe system state during transport

Exam Tip

  • This applies only to laptops
  • Can behave differently on battery vs AC power

6. Turn On Fast Startup

What Fast Startup Does

  • Combines Hibernate and Shutdown
  • Saves system kernel state to disk
  • Speeds up boot time

How It Works

  • User sessions close
  • System kernel is hibernated
  • On startup, kernel loads quickly

Advantages

  • Faster boot
  • Improved startup performance

Disadvantages

  • Can cause driver or update issues
  • Dual-boot systems may have problems
  • Full shutdown is not performed

IT Environment Use

  • Enabled on most modern systems
  • Disabled when troubleshooting boot or driver issues

Exam Tip

  • Fast Startup = Hybrid shutdown
  • Uses hibernation file
  • Not a full shutdown

7. USB Selective Suspend

What USB Selective Suspend Does

  • Allows Windows to turn off idle USB devices
  • Saves power without disconnecting the device

Examples of USB Devices Affected

  • External keyboards
  • Mice
  • USB storage
  • Webcams

Advantages

  • Improves battery life
  • Reduces power usage

Possible Issues

  • USB devices may stop responding
  • Some older devices may not wake correctly

IT Environment Use

  • Enabled on laptops for battery saving
  • Disabled when USB devices fail to resume

Exam Tip

  • USB Selective Suspend controls individual USB ports
  • Used for power management and troubleshooting

Exam Summary Table

FeaturePower UseSpeedSaves RAM?Best Use
SleepLowVery FastYes (RAM)Short breaks
HibernateNoneSlowerYes (Disk)Long downtime
ShutdownNoneFull bootNoSystem off
Fast StartupLowFastKernel onlyFaster boots
Power SaverLowReducedBattery saving
High PerformanceHighFastMaximum performance

Key Exam Takeaways

  • Understand differences between Sleep, Hibernate, and Shutdown
  • Know where to configure Power Options
  • Recognize Fast Startup behavior
  • Understand USB Selective Suspend troubleshooting
  • Know power plan purposes
  • Laptop-specific features are frequently tested
Buy Me a Coffee