That just pushes the question back by one switch, though... I mean, I guess there's a small amount of energy savings by turning them off at the socket instead of leaving them plugged in, but there's a perfectly good power switch on the face of any monitor or CPU I've ever seen just for the purpose. At worst, on a thin-frame HDMI TV being used as a monitor, you do a Vulcan neck-pinch in the right spot to squeeze the power button set on the back side of it instead of fumbling with the remote.
Eh, that's up to you I guess; what it comes down to is that if you're stuck on Windows and on turning the router off, you're probably stuck with either the stupid 'doze troubleshooter running or turning on the router a minute or two before the computer to give it time to boot up.
Eh, that's up to you I guess; what it comes down to is that if you're stuck on Windows and on turning the router off, you're probably stuck with either the stupid 'doze troubleshooter running or turning on the router a minute or two before the computer to give it time to boot up.
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‎noli esse culus
‎noli esse culus