I have a laptop that is constantly on, it has lasted 4 years. How much longer can I expect it to last if it is constantly on.
Why is it constantly on? Who are you watching?I have a laptop that is constantly on, it has lasted 4 years. How much longer can I expect it to last if it is constantly on.
The majority of electric and electronic devices fail more in direct proportion to power-ups than to uptime.I have a laptop that is constantly on, it has lasted 4 years. How much longer can I expect it to last if it is constantly on.
And this.The majority of electric and electronic devices fail more in direct proportion to power-ups than to uptime.
Something tells me you're going to have to explain PSU. Just saying.You shouldn't sweat it. The two things that come to mind are that if a system has too little memory swap will almost always grind in windows, and that's not great for your hard disk (this is rare in the 2+ GB of RAM era), and if the PSU is too small the average draw will kill it quicker. So hours of unattended uptime can matter there, but they shouldn't with any recent sensibly built system. Assuming you aren't living in swap or don't have an underpowered PSU, the individual components will fail when they fail, and even on commodity stuff that can be years...
Not as long as if it were on 24 hours a day.I have a laptop that is constantly on, it has lasted 4 years. How much longer can I expect it to last if it is constantly on.
My desktop runs 24/7/365 and has been for as long as I have had a desktop... (1992 I think...)My desktop is on 24/7 for the last 2 years and it is running as smooth as butter.
Yup that's why it's lasted so long. What really wears out computers is heating and cooling. They get hot when you turn them on, and cool when you turn them off. If you leave it on all the time it's actually better.My desktop runs 24/7/365 and has been for as long as I have had a desktop... (1992 I think...)
Only reason I shut it down is for maintenance and/or upgrades...
So which is it? Constantly on? Or turned on 8 to 10 hours a day? They are different scenarios, they put different stresses on the machine and the outcomes will differ.I have a laptop that is constantly on, it has lasted 4 years. How much longer can I expect it to last if it is constantly on.
I should maybe qualify this with the fact that my PC is in a constant state of flux, as I am regularly upgrading parts on it... The original one was a 486DX if memory serves... I regularly swapped processors, memory, graphics cards, I/O cards, hard drives even power supplies... Only thing that has remained constant in the last 10 years is the case.Yup that's why it's lasted so long. What really wears out computers is heating and cooling. They get hot when you turn them on, and cool when you turn them off. If you leave it on all the time it's actually better.
Is what I have heard also.Yup that's why it's lasted so long. What really wears out computers is heating and cooling. They get hot when you turn them on, and cool when you turn them off. If you leave it on all the time it's actually better.
That, and spinning magnetic media up and down isn't terribly good for it. Actually spinning pretty much any moving part up and down isn't good for it (for anything). Then there's the process of electrify things...Yup that's why it's lasted so long. What really wears out computers is heating and cooling. They get hot when you turn them on, and cool when you turn them off. If you leave it on all the time it's actually better.