And the next time you start it up, you’ll get a clean boot with a full reload of Windows. The next time you shut down your Windows PC, it will shut down completely without any hibernation. Then click “Save Changes” and close Control Panel. Note: If you don’t see the Fast Startup option, it means your PC doesn’t support Fast Startup and is already shutting down completely. If you see “Turn on fast startup (recommended),” remove the checkmark beside it. Then look under the “Shutdown Settings” section near the bottom. On the “Define power buttons and turn on password protection” page, first click the “Change settings that are currently unavailable” link near the top of the page. Under “Power Options,” click “Change what the power buttons do.” When Control Panel opens, click “Hardware and Sound.” To disable Fast Startup, first open Control Panel in Windows 10 or Windows 11 by opening the Start menu and typing “control panel,” then clicking the Control Panel icon when it appears. (Restarting bypasses Fast Startup, as you’ll see below.) You’ll see another way to tell in the steps ahead. One way you can detect a traditional “slow startup” is if your PC takes longer to restart than it takes to perform a cold boot when you first turn on your machine. So your PC might already be shutting down completely.
#LINKEDIN DOWN HOW TO#
RELATED: How to Turn Off a Windows 11 PC How to Disable Fast Startup Mode and Shut Down Completelyįirst, it’s important to know that not all PCs support Fast Startup mode.
![linkedin down linkedin down](https://techboomers.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/closing-your-linkedin-account.png)
So if Fast Startup is enabled on your PC and you select “Shut Down” in the Start menu, you’re not getting a clean restart when you power it back up again.
![linkedin down linkedin down](https://getjob.fr/wp-content/uploads/post-linkedin-recherche-dalternance.jpg)
This lets Windows load quickly when you power up your PC again. With a feature called Fast Startup, introduced in Windows 8 and still present in Windows 10 and Windows 11, many PCs that support hibernation mode actually “shut down” to a state similar to hibernation, which saves the state of the operating system (in RAM) to a file called hiberfil.sys.