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What part of a computer can you do without?
Maccabee
post Jul 12 2009, 03:29 PM
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There is not program that requires you to turn off your computer. Restarting yes, but you dont need a button to restart your computer.
 
Mikeplyts
post Jul 12 2009, 03:37 PM
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Forrealz? damn.



What about if it's like a computer update? I had a computer update thing once that shut down my computer, but not restart it. I had to manually turn it on again. mellow.gif
 
datass
post Jul 12 2009, 09:31 PM
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why would you keep it on 24/7? reduce electricity man.
 
Mikeplyts
post Jul 12 2009, 09:41 PM
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QUOTE(doughnut @ Jul 12 2009, 10:31 PM) *
why would you keep it on 24/7? reduce electricity man.

yeah, that too.



You would save more money too. rolleyes.gif
 
Maccabee
post Jul 12 2009, 09:42 PM
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QUOTE(Mikeplyts @ Jul 12 2009, 03:37 PM) *
Forrealz? damn.
What about if it's like a computer update? I had a computer update thing once that shut down my computer, but not restart it. I had to manually turn it on again. mellow.gif

Thats why windoze is wack mang.

QUOTE(Mikeplyts @ Jul 12 2009, 09:41 PM) *
yeah, that too.
You would save more money too. rolleyes.gif


This is one thing i have never gotten. How much money would you actually save if you turned off your computer? 5 cents a day?
 
synapse
post Jul 12 2009, 09:45 PM
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QUOTE(jcp @ Jul 12 2009, 10:42 PM) *
Thats why windoze is wack mang.
This is one thing i have never gotten. How much money would you actually save if you turned off your computer? 5 cents a day?

Depends on your power supply.
 
Maccabee
post Jul 12 2009, 09:53 PM
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Approx? more towards 5 cents a day or 500 dollars a day.
 
mipadi
post Jul 12 2009, 10:13 PM
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QUOTE(jcp @ Jul 12 2009, 10:53 PM) *
Approx? more towards 5 cents a day or 500 dollars a day.

My last electric bill showed that my electricity cost $0.10 per kilowatt hour, which is fairly typical for residential areas.

Let's say you have a computer that draws 200W of electricity, on average. That means that after one hour of use, you will have used 0.2 kWh, which cost $0.02. To run the computer for a full day, you will spend $0.48 a day or $175.20 a year.

If instead you run your computer for only 8 hours a day, it will cost you $0.16 a day or $58.40 a year to run the computer.

That's just a rough estimate. Basically, for every hour you turn off your computer, you could save around $0.02.
 
Maccabee
post Jul 12 2009, 10:14 PM
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holy crap...electricity is expensive...thats why I live at home! haha
 
Mikeplyts
post Jul 13 2009, 12:41 AM
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uh-oh.
 
medic
post Jul 13 2009, 07:00 AM
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QUOTE(mipadi @ Jul 12 2009, 09:13 PM) *
My last electric bill showed that my electricity cost $0.10 per kilowatt hour, which is fairly typical for residential areas.

Let's say you have a computer that draws 200W of electricity, on average. That means that after one hour of use, you will have used 0.2 kWh, which cost $0.02. To run the computer for a full day, you will spend $0.48 a day or $175.20 a year.

If instead you run your computer for only 8 hours a day, it will cost you $0.16 a day or $58.40 a year to run the computer.

That's just a rough estimate. Basically, for every hour you turn off your computer, you could save around $0.02.


Your electricity costs also depend a lot by your location. How new are the power lines, how long ago was the grid updated, who is your provider, do you use a co-op or a not, are your power grid upgrades funded by government grants, does your state require companies to use a X amount of renewable energies or do they rely on coal etc, how old is your power plant?

My electric in Illinois by a small co-op runs less than $.05 a kilowatt, they actually state it on the bill, and show how much you used.

Suprisingly I have found that companies with "greener" technologies charge more per kilowatt , which makes perfect sense due to the cost of these newer technologies. Like my aunt near Chicago, they run her entire grid on solar panels and it costs her around $.20 a kilowatt. But, overtime her energy costs will go down while mine stay up, but that amount of time will be around 10-15 years if I did the math correctly with the amount of customers in the area.

But to get back on track, I leave my computer on 24/7 365, not to mention all my other computer related crap.
 
Uronacid
post Jul 13 2009, 07:03 AM
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QUOTE(medic @ Jul 13 2009, 08:00 AM) *
Your electricity costs also depend a lot by your location. How new are the power lines, how long ago was the grid updated, who is your provider, do you use a co-op or a not, are your power grid upgrades funded by government grants, does your state require companies to use a X amount of renewable energies or do they rely on coal etc, how old is your power plant?

My electric in Illinois by a small co-op runs less than $.05 a kilowatt, they actually state it on the bill, and show how much you used.

Suprisingly I have found that companies with "greener" technologies charge more per kilowatt , which makes perfect sense due to the cost of these newer technologies. Like my aunt near Chicago, they run her entire grid on solar panels and it costs her around $.20 a kilowatt. But, overtime her energy costs will go down while mine stay up, but that amount of time will be around 10-15 years if I did the math correctly with the amount of customers in the area.

But to get back on track, I leave my computer on 24/7 365, not to mention all my other computer related crap.


Don't forget delivery charges... :?
 
mipadi
post Jul 13 2009, 07:42 AM
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QUOTE(medic @ Jul 13 2009, 08:00 AM) *
Your electricity costs also depend a lot by your location.

True, but I think jcp just wanted a rough breakdown. My electricity is supplied mostly by hydroelectric power (hence the slightly higher cost), and the figure includes delivery charages, tariffs, etc. (maybe yours does, too -- in which case, $0.05/kWh is a real bargain).
 
Uronacid
post Jul 13 2009, 08:33 AM
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I could live without OPTICAL and FLOPPY drives.
 
illriginal
post Jul 13 2009, 09:38 AM
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QUOTE(doughnut @ Jul 12 2009, 10:31 PM) *
why would you keep it on 24/7? reduce electricity man.


No. stubborn.gif

I can afford my bills.
 

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