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This is sad. I’m just updating this blog with a new “Best of” article. Whatever happened to promising two blog posts every week. Even The Bookish Pinoy hasn’t got an update for more than a month now! So much for New Year resolutions…
Anyway, I’ll write about my (hopefully valid) excuses some other time. For now, let me give you the Best of Pinoy Web for the past week.
2010 Philippine Elections
How to vote in the May 10, 2010 automated elections
The Philippines and the world of electronic voting
Drink and Vote with the 7-Elections
Newsworthy
Charice to Sing RP National Anthem in Pacquiao vs Clottey Bout
(Photo) Thousands of tilapia float lifeless in a fish cage near the Magat Dam in Isabela
(Photo) A park attendant at the Cebu City Zoo rests his head on one of his wards, a boa constrictor
My Pilipinas is… Photo Contest (Win a My Pilipinas Moleskine)
“We’re brown and should be proud,” says Binay, bashes companies selling whiteners
(Photo) Children enjoy the cool shade and dirty water at an estero along Mindanao Avenue
(Photos) Pyromusical Photos & Videos – Week 1 (USA)
Entertainment: Music, Movies and TV
Top reasons to love Miss You Like Crazy
Backstreet Boys concert in Manila 2010 (photo coverage)
Paramore concert live in Manila 2010 – get your SVIP tickets here!
(YouTube) Pilipinas Got Talent Faithfully by Jovit Baldivino 16-year old boy February 27 Episode
Charice breaks into US Billboard charts again
MYX Music Awards 2010 Winners and Photos
Technology
If You Spend Too Much Time Playing PC Games…
Watchpad preps for Pacquiao-Clottey Fight
Top 10 Facebook games for March 2010
Notable Tweets
Try this: While seated, draw a clockwise circle with your right foot , while draw ing the number 6 in the air with right hand. Impossible!
~ jimparedes
Just saw the final rap-song of a Sunday noontime show. Gulat ako sa claim nung singer na di sila “matalo talo kailanman” nung kabilang show?
~ jovefrancisco
Using precint finder I found out my voter status is still deactivated. I have to contact local office. What about you? http://bit.ly/aNP9Ic
~ momblogger
salamat sa tax ko, kaya may footbridge na ganyan.lol http://tweetphoto.com/12890949
~ trinz
The 1960 tsunami generated by the Chile earthquake killed 32 people in the Philippines. http://bit.ly/yeTXY
~ ageofbrillig
Praying for chile. Hope the tsunami causes no major damage. We need some water for our crops, but not a tidal wave please.
~ 1ricoblanco
may kudeta ba sa pinas? bakit may blackout? ahahaha reminds me of the 80s.
~ jonijavier
Oratio Imperata at today’s Mass re El Nino, power shortage. Prayers asked for wind, water.
~ tonyocruz
Aurelio on the lessons from the recent quakes: Understand the phenomenon, the hazards that come with it and know how to live with them.
~ ANCALERTS
Just continue to do good & u will get what is due. God is watching
he knows what’s in ur heart & can read ur soul.
~ kingbianca
Life
Essay: Playing Tricks with eBooks
Can You be Ambitious and a Christian at the Same Time?
Think I missed something really cool last week? Feel free to share it in the comments.










Filipino Catholic · Hobby Blogger · 
I never turn off my computer.
Okay, that was an exaggeration but important thing is I got you reading. Now don’t stop just because I tricked you. This tip I’m giving today could potentially save you a lot of time and electricity too.
What I mean is I rarely ever use the Turn Off or Shutdown option in Windows.
Why? Well, there’s no reason for me to.
I use the same programs every day. Visit the same websites. And it’s my personal computer. No one else will actually use it besides me.
So does this mean that I get soaring high electric bills because of an always-on computer? No. Because I use this awesome feature called Hibernation. I even have it set as the default button on my Start Menu.
Hibernation basically saves on the hard disk the “state” of a computer before shutting it down. Next time you turn the computer back on, the hibernation file is simply loaded up. After a few seconds, you have your computer up again as if you’ve never turned it off. You can even leave your computer in hibernation for weeks or months and everything will still be there like they used to. (Well, except for the system date and time.) Amazing, really.
With Hibernation, I don’t ever need to wait for programs to close before shutting the computer down. A real shutdown is a huge waste of time. I bet most computer users would open the same programs when they turn their computer back on anyway.
So why can’t I afford to do frequent real shutdowns?
First, the Opera web browser.
I love this browser to no end. It’s blazing fast and I keep several windows of it open. Shutting the computer down (with no hibernation) would mean that the next time I open Opera again, all those tabs will have to be reloaded and that takes a significant amount of time. I use Opera like a file folder to keep all the stuff I’ll take care of at some later time. If there’s one non-native Windows application I have open all the time, it’s Opera.
Second, the Mixero Twitter client. This nifty program enables me to sift through all the noise in the Twitterverse.
If I close this program, all the tweets it loaded that I haven’t read yet will automatically be marked as read. I can’t let it do that for this reason.
But the most important reason of all: I’m a heavy computer power user. (Redundant, I know.) My notification tray is filled with a ton of stuff.
There’s the antivirus, firewall, WordWeb, PicPick, Workrave, Wakoopa, Dropbox and Direct Folders, just to name some. Loading all of these at Windows startup would mean that I’d have to wait no less than 5 minutes before I could actually start using the computer.
It’s also unproductive to have to try to remember which programs I need to have open. Sometimes I start doing something the hard way only to remember a few minutes later that I have a program for doing it the faster way. It’s better that I just have them all open and ready but running there in the background.
The only times I ever do a true shutdown is when I need to restart the computer for Windows updates to take effect. But the great thing is I can postpone that for as long as I want. I don’t need to restart the computer right away just because it got a few minor updates from Microsoft.
I have to tell you though that the computer I’m talking about is a laptop. I’ve been using a laptop as my main computer for almost seven years. Laptops, to me, have become synonymous to computing that every time I use a desktop computer, it feels like I’m in a new world. It’s weird, I know.
Anyway, the bottom line is: any heavy computer user (especially laptop users) would hugely benefit from the Hibernation feature. Use it!
But if you’re on a shared computer, most likely you won’t have much use for this feature. If that’s the case, be sure to turn this feature off to save a few gigs of your hard disk space.
Here are links that would teach you how to enable or disable hibernation on your Windows computer:
Windows 7 – Enable or disable hibernation
Enable/Disable Hibernation in Windows Vista
Windows XP: Disable or Enable Hibernation