Version: 2008

Comments on: MacBook Air major annoyance--when sleep doesn't mean sleep

I really like the MacBook Air, especially when the battery doesn't run itself out of juice.

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by brandon2084 April 2, 2008 9:35 PM PDT
You might be having a SafeSleep issue. The Wifi shouldn't even be active while it is sleeping. Try resetting the power manager (the Air's documentation should say how, or somewhere on the apple support site)

You can also disable safesleep with the following terminal command:
sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 0

Keep in mind that this will disable hibernation, so if your battery completely drains you will loose data. Sleep and Wake are much faster and more reliable though.
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by brandon2084 April 2, 2008 9:35 PM PDT
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by garry_k April 2, 2008 9:45 PM PDT
As I reads Blogs like this and many others as well as the tech news item about Apple products that aren't meeting expectations, I have detected a slow but certain downward spiral. Apple is slipping because it can't keep up the quality of it's wide ranging products and the fact it's has "bitten of more than it can chew". They desparately want business recognition and still want to hold the attention the "Gadget Toy Crowd", but they are slipping down the slippery slope of bad engineering in order to keep pumping out new products that will keep them in the news. Maybe they should worry less about glitzy new products and worry more about quality.
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by mreiher April 3, 2008 1:46 PM PDT
gary_k.... just so you know, there is nothing wrong with his MBA... he has a setting wrong or other software interfering. One guy's complaint about a problem does not mean they are all like that. None of the 4 MacBooks in our house run like that... BUT, we did have one that did the same thing (i.e. drained the battery in sleep mode).... it was an issue with some software my son-in-law had installed that was the culprit. I think if Dave digs a little deeper he'll find one of a couple things... an application causing the problem... a setting wrong in his OS... or some sort of odd corruption to a system file that is not letting his MBA really go to sleep.
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by saunderscc April 3, 2008 2:22 PM PDT
my macbook has this same problem. i have to close it, open it, and close it again to get it to sleep. it doesn't recognize on the first close. i can't find any setting that says only go to sleep on second close. it's a software glitch that hasn't been addressed/fixed.
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by john55440 April 3, 2008 6:53 PM PDT
A problem made worse by the fact that MacBook Air doesn't have a user replaceable battery, like other computers.
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by daverosenberg April 3, 2008 8:06 PM PDT
Thanks all, I found a page (http://paulstamatiou.com/2007/12/06/how-to-quickly-sleep-your-macbook) that showed me a command line way to turn off the safe sleep mode.

sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 0
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by J.G. April 5, 2008 1:29 AM PDT
I have had two MacBook Air laptops. The first was purchased Feb. 6 online, so I have as much experience as just about anyone. Neither of my MacBook Air computers had a problem with sleep, whether Airport was on or off.

My recommendation is that you make sure your MacBook Air is really closed since there is no feedback from a locking mechanism. Try putting the computer to sleep and then closing the lid.

BTW, naysayers, NYT tech columnist David Pogue admitted he was so smitten by his review loaner that he purchased a MacBook Air of his own in his most recent column.
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