If you hate waiting for Vista to load when you start your computer, hibernation is one way to significantly speed up boot. It basically copies your memory to disk and then shuts down. When you start the computer again, it just loads your RAM from disk, and you're up and running where you left off previously. The downside of this is that a file must be created on your hard drive to hold this memory, and the file will be as large as the amount of RAM you have. On my computer that's 2GB, and if you've got 4GB of RAM, well, you do the math! If you don't use hibernate, you can turn it off and save yourself this disk space.
Disable Hibernation in Vista
To disable hibernation, simply click on your Start menu, and type powercfg.exe /hibernate off in your search box. Then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter, which will run the command line you typed in as an administrator. If you have UAC active, it will prompt you to approve the elevation of privileges, and you'll probably see a quick flash of a command line window appearing and then disappearing. Your work is done!

Enable Hibernation in Vista
To enable hibernation, simply click on your Start menu, and type powercfg.exe /hibernate on in your search box. Then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter, which will run the command line you typed in as an administrator. If you have UAC active, it will prompt you to approve the elevation of privileges, and you'll probably see a quick flash of a command line window appearing and then disappearing. Your work is done!

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