Re: Diff. between Shutdown and Restart



Since the OP didn't say RESET, but specifically said "Restart", and the Shutdown dialog provides a "Restart" button. Then you are still incorrect. So please put your hand back down, you are just flat out wrong, accept it.

NobodyMan wrote:

The button on the computer is known as the RESET button, not the
RESTART button.  So I DID answer the question.

Care to play again?

On Mon, 09 May 2005 13:12:00 -0500, Bob I <birelan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


The OP said Restart NOT "RESET", YOU didn't answer the question.

NobodyMan wrote:


On Sat, 7 May 2005 01:31:03 -0700, "Tony Norman"
<eatmyshorts@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



"yakis" <yakisGenghis@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:427c6c01$0$95297$dbd41001@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


Hi all,
Was wondering what is the difference between "shutdown
the computer and turn it on again after 10 seconds" and "pushing the Restart button".
My OS is Windows XP Pro SP2 IE 6
Thanks,
yakis




Shutting down turns it off completely. Restarting reboots the system, which is similar to shutting down, only you don't have to turn it back on again.

--
Have a great day!

-Tony Norman


You didn't really answer the question.

If you choose the "restart" option from the shutdown dialog, your
system performs an orderly shutdown, closing open files and generally
cleaning up after itself before shutting down and rebooting.

When you just press the reset button, the system will restart, but you
will lose any pending data not saved, likely strand various data
files, and could possibly corrupt certain system files depending on
their state when you hit the reset button.  Best to save the reset
button for situations where you don't have an option to restart using
the shutdown dialog.


.


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