
Badger
Active member
Ive worked with computers since before thier were PC's, I have worked in enviroments where the machines were left on, and some where they were shut down. As far as I can see, it doesnt make much differance.
I leave mine on 24/7 because I am impatient. I dont like to wait for it to boot.
Computers dont use much power. THe monitors do, but just set the power settings to power it off after an hour or so.
Hard drives are mechanical devices, and with all mechanical devices, the more hours they run, the sooner they die. BUT, most harddrives outlive thier usefullness. I old 20 meg drives laying around that still work...So, even if you leave them on all the time, most of them will be thrown away long before they break
Montitors should be shut down, they use more power, and they die more often. Burn is not much of an issue anymore, modern monitors arent effected by burn in like the old ones. It still happens, but screen savers are more for entertainment than saving the screen. Having your power management kill them is a good idea
If you are worried about a CPU fan failure, install a monitoring proggy to shut the system down for you if it fails.
At work, we have aprox. 13-14000 workstations, and probably 10,000 or so of them are left on constantly. In fact, its company policy to do so to make sure they get updates.(many people ignore this and shut them down anyway). We really dont have that many hardware failures, considering the number of machines we have.
The box on my desk goes for months at a time without reboot, and no problems with it.
I leave mine on 24/7 because I am impatient. I dont like to wait for it to boot.
Computers dont use much power. THe monitors do, but just set the power settings to power it off after an hour or so.
Hard drives are mechanical devices, and with all mechanical devices, the more hours they run, the sooner they die. BUT, most harddrives outlive thier usefullness. I old 20 meg drives laying around that still work...So, even if you leave them on all the time, most of them will be thrown away long before they break
Montitors should be shut down, they use more power, and they die more often. Burn is not much of an issue anymore, modern monitors arent effected by burn in like the old ones. It still happens, but screen savers are more for entertainment than saving the screen. Having your power management kill them is a good idea
If you are worried about a CPU fan failure, install a monitoring proggy to shut the system down for you if it fails.
At work, we have aprox. 13-14000 workstations, and probably 10,000 or so of them are left on constantly. In fact, its company policy to do so to make sure they get updates.(many people ignore this and shut them down anyway). We really dont have that many hardware failures, considering the number of machines we have.
The box on my desk goes for months at a time without reboot, and no problems with it.