I'm curious about the differences between restarting my computer and shutting it down only to power it back up again. Are there any technical differences aside from the fact that restarting seems slower? Specifically, does a computer ever really fully shut down during the reboot process?
5 Answers
When you reboot, the power stays on for certain devices, while a full shutdown cuts off power completely. If your system has quick boot settings enabled, it may not fully reset. If you're troubleshooting hardware issues, doing a complete power cycle is usually recommended.
Basically, during a shutdown, Windows saves the memory state, similar to hibernation, while a restart doesn't preserve that state. This is why after a shutdown, your Windows drive might be read-only in Linux, but after a restart, it works just fine.
Windows 10 and 11 have a feature that changes the shutdown procedure to something more like hibernation. That's why shutting down feels fast—it doesn’t fully shut down the OS. Restarting is a true clean restart where everything resets, even if it takes a bit longer!
It turns out that when you shut down a Windows PC, it often doesn't completely shut down in the traditional sense. Instead, it tends to go into a hibernation state to allow for quick startups. Restarting, on the other hand, clears all the cache and memory, giving you a fresh start for your system.
When your computer boots up, it performs a POST (Power-On Self-Test) before the OS loads. If you restart and skip the POST, it's not a complete reset. That's why some folks just prefer to power off completely; it feels more reliable.

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