No.
The computer uses a lot of power when first booting, but this only lasts a couple seconds before it reduces considerably. It will reduce further when the system is on and idle after booting.
The amount of power saved by turning the PC off for 5 minutes is equivocal, approximately, to the power used in 1 minute of it being on and idle.
An idle PC uses typically 80 to 400 watts of power. And a PC that is off uses typically less than 10. (If unplugged, none at all.) A PC on and in-use, such as gaming, typically uses 150 to 2500 watts, varying vastly.
These figures are for desktops. Laptops use less power overall. But it ALWAYS uses less power to turn a PC OFF, than to leave it on.
no leaving your computer on uses some energy
No, unless you count the energy used in recharging the battery when the computer is off.
it will use less electricity if you turn the brightness lower
It depends. If you're turning the computer on and off more than twice in an hour, it's more cost effective to simply put the machine into sleep mode.
Leaving it on.
It depends on the computer and the company that gives you your electricity. The simple answer is way too much.
60%
It depends on how much electricity it is using. Most electricity is generated by burning fossil fuels, which produces carbon dioxide.
12
gigabytes is a measurement of memory. so basically, how many gigabytes you have left on your computer is how much memory you have left.
you fuart
depense on how old it is, is it a laptop, what is running on the computer, is the monitor on.about $25 a day
The battery stores just so much electricity. The lights use this electricity. Sooner or later the supply is depleted.
Most YJs the engine computer is mounted on the firewall. In my 89 it was mounted behind the glove box, but I believed that changed when they switched to the 4.0 in 1991.
If you changed completely then whatever amount your electricity bill came to. Some installations allow you to feed back to the grid and you get paid for the electricity you supply.There is of course the installation cost so that would have to be taken into account.
Technology can indeed save money. An electricity monitor is a good example. It is able to tell you how much electricity a given appliance is using. When used with a computer monitor, it will be able to tell you how much electricity you are saving by powering the monitor off completely instead of leaving it on standby. When you save electricity, you save money.
65-250 depending on the computer source: http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/computers.html