Timur wrote:They already did. fryingpan
RME Support wrote:I've been able to reproduce the problem on an XP laptop - we are looking at it...
Meanwhile, if you can't live without hibernation or standby, try safely removing the BF before putting the PC to sleep, and disconnect the USB. Reconnect after the computer wakes up. Works on my laptop...
Regards
Daniel Fuchs
RME
So in your world, being able to reproduce a problem is equivalent to solving it? Fascinating.
(Generally speaking "we are looking at it..." is typically followed up with a "we have fixed it, here's a patch," hence my inquiry).
And no, a workaround is not a solution; it is a workaround. The problem with this workaround is that if you forget to unplug the UFX before you hibernate, you will be unable to restore it, and will be forced to reboot your computer. This means you've lost your work if it wasn't saved.
The potential for losing your work in this way makes hibernation an unappealing option; the aforementioned loss of work has already happened to me once using this workaround.
Masaaki wrote:My gut reaction is "Why use hibernate/sleep functions for audio DAW?"
I turn off every possible power saving functions, from screen saver, hard disk/monitor power, to system hibernate/sleep functions for both desktop and laptop machines. I turn on my machines, work with them, turn off when I'm finished. During breaks, like 30 min for lunch, I just leave them ON, and they don't start screen saver either.
Hibernate does not use any power; it is equivalent to saving the state of the machine and powering down. The next time you turn your computer on, the state is restored. The advantage of hibernation is speed of startup; restoring the state of a hibernated machine is a very fast operation, whereas opening your DAW and loading up all your plugins, etc. is not.
So again, RME, can you please respond? Is there any progress regarding this issue? I'd very much like to be able to hibernate my machine...
Thanks.