Keeping or changing...that is the question!

I have a macbookpro 13" early 2011 should i upgrade my Ram and get an SSD or buy the new macbookair???

As a pilot, you probably also know that the 11" Air, like the iPad, no longer needs to be removed from the bag during security checks. Yet another plus of this little but powerful machine. Do check out the 11" vs. the 13" Airs side-by-side before buying, to see what size screen is for you (also, the 11" has a 5 hour battery life compared to the 13" 7 hour battery life). But if portablity is what you're after, the 11" Air is the way to go, it's not that much larger or heavier than an iPad, yet has a full keyboard and can do pretty much all a comparable pro could do.

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  • Ok i have been trying to download albums, songs, apps, etc. and my itunes keeps asking me for the security question and for the life of me i cant remember the answers. I dont know what the email is that receives the question reset.

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  • Hi, I have a PPC Running OSX 10.5.4 and I want to delete the User "Guest"and "Shared"Folders on my HD, they won't let me change the permissions and I keep getting errors that say the permissions should be 0 and are 501 and having files i can't delete that

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    mattmakesvidiots wrote:
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  • I adobe acrobat 7.0 professional. When I open or save a PDF it reverts to Adobe Reader XI. How can I change that to the pro as it has far more editing options.

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  • HD Upper or lower interlace or not that is the question

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    PremiereProPedia   (
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  • To RAID or not to RAID, that is the question

    People often ask: Should I raid my disks?
    The question is simple, unfortunately the answer is not. So here I'm going to give you another guide to help you decide when a raid array is advantageous and how to go about it. Notice that this guide also applies to SSD's, with the expection of the parts about mechanical failure.
     What is a RAID?
     RAID is the acronym for "Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks". The concept originated at the University of Berkely in 1987 and was intended to create large storage capacity with smaller disks without the need for very expensive and reliable disks, that were very expensive at that time, often a tenfold of smaller disks. Today prices of hard disks have fallen so much that it often is more attractive to buy a single 1 TB disk than two 500 GB disks. That is the reason that today RAID is often described as "Redundant Array of Independent Disks".
    The idea behind RAID is to have a number of disks co-operate in such a way that it looks like one big disk. Note that 'Spanning' is not in any way comparable to RAID, it is just a way, like inverse partitioning, to extend the base partition to use multiple disks, without changing the method of reading and writing to that extended partition.
     Why use a RAID?
     Now with these lower disks prices today, why would a video editor consider a raid array? There are two reasons:
    1. Redundancy (or security)
    2. Performance
    Notice that it can be a combination of both reasons, it is not an 'either/or' reason.
     Does a video editor need RAID?
    No, if the above two reasons, redundancy and performance are not relevant. Yes if either or both reasons are relevant.
    Re 1. Redundancy
    Every mechanical disk will eventually fail, sometimes on the first day of use, sometimes only after several years of usage. When that happens, all data on that disk are lost and the only solution is to get a new disk and recreate the data from a backup (if you have one) or through tedious and time-consuming work. If that does not bother you and you can spare the time to recreate the data that were lost, then redundancy is not an issue for you. Keep in mind that disk failures often occur at inconvenient moments, on a weekend when the shops are closed and you can't get a replacement disk, or when you have a tight deadline.
    Re 2. Performance
    Opponents of RAID will often say that any modern disk is fast enough for video editing and they are right, but only to a certain extent. As fill rates of disks go up, performance goes down, sometimes by 50%. As the number of disk activities on the disk go up , like accessing (reading or writing) pagefile, media cache, previews, media, project file, output file, performance goes down the drain. The more tracks you have in your project, the more strain is put on your disk. 10 tracks require 10 times the bandwidth of a single track. The more applications you have open, the more your pagefile is used. This is especially apparent on systems with limited memory.
    The following chart shows how fill rates on a single disk will impact performance:
    Remember that I said previously the idea behind RAID is to have a number of disks co-operate in such a way that it looks like one big disk. That means a RAID will not fill up as fast as a single disk and not experience the same performance degradation.
    RAID basics
     Now that we have established the reasons why people may consider RAID, let's have a look at some of the basics.
    Single or Multiple? 
    There are three methods to configure a RAID array: mirroring, striping and parity check. These are called levels and levels are subdivided in single or multiple levels, depending on the method used. A single level RAID0 is striping only and a multiple level RAID15 is a combination of mirroring (1) and parity check (5). Multiple levels are designated by combining two single levels, like a multiple RAID10, which is a combination of single level RAID0 with a single level RAID1.
    Hardware or Software? 
    The difference is quite simple: hardware RAID controllers have their own processor and usually their own cache. Software RAID controllers use the CPU and the RAM on the motherboard. Hardware controllers are faster but also more expensive. For RAID levels without parity check like Raid0, Raid1 and Raid10 software controllers are quite good with a fast PC.
    The common Promise and Highpoint cards are all software controllers that (mis)use the CPU and RAM memory. Real hardware RAID controllers all use their own IOP (I/O Processor) and cache (ever wondered why these hardware controllers are expensive?).
    There are two kinds of software RAID's. One is controlled by the BIOS/drivers (like Promise/Highpoint) and the other is solely OS dependent. The first kind can be booted from, the second one can only be accessed after the OS has started. In performance terms they do not differ significantly.
    For the technically inclined: Cluster size, Block size and Chunk size
     In short: Cluster size applies to the partition and Block or Stripe size applies to the array.
    With a cluster size of 4 KB, data are distributed across the partition in 4 KB parts. Suppose you have a 10 KB file, three full clusters will be occupied: 4 KB - 4 KB - 2 KB. The remaining 2 KB is called slackspace and can not be used by other files. With a block size (stripe) of 64 KB, data are distributed across the array disks in 64 KB parts. Suppose you have a 200 KB file, the first part of 64 KB is located on disk A, the second 64 KB is located on disk B, the third 64 KB is located on disk C and the remaining 8 KB on disk D. Here there is no slackspace, because the block size is subdivided into clusters. When working with audio/video material a large block size is faster than smaller block size. Working with smaller files a smaller block size is preferred.
    Sometimes you have an option to set 'Chunk size', depending on the controller. It is the minimal size of a data request from the controller to a disk in the array and only useful when striping is used. Suppose you have a block size of 16 KB and you want to read a 1 MB file. The controller needs to read 64 times a block of 16 KB. With a chunk size of 32 KB the first two blocks will be read from the first disk, the next two blocks from the next disk, and so on. If the chunk size is 128 KB. the first 8 blocks will be read from the first disk, the next 8 block from the second disk, etcetera. Smaller chunks are advisable with smaller filer, larger chunks are better for larger (audio/video) files.
    RAID Levels
     For a full explanation of various RAID levels, look here: http://www.acnc.com/04_01_00/html
    What are the benefits of each RAID level for video editing and what are the risks and benefits of each level to help you achieve better redundancy and/or better performance? I will try to summarize them below.
    RAID0
     The Band AID of RAID. There is no redundancy! There is a risk of losing all data that is a multiplier of the number of disks in the array. A 2 disk array carries twice the risk over a single disk, a X disk array carries X times the risk of losing it all.
    A RAID0 is perfectly OK for data that you will not worry about if you lose them. Like pagefile, media cache, previews or rendered files. It may be a hassle if you have media files on it, because it requires recapturing, but not the end-of-the-world. It will be disastrous for project files.
    Performance wise a RAID0 is almost X times as fast as a single disk, X being the number of disks in the array.
    RAID1
     The RAID level for the paranoid. It gives no performance gain whatsoever. It gives you redundancy, at the cost of a disk. If you are meticulous about backups and make them all the time, RAID1 may be a better solution, because you can never forget to make a backup, you can restore instantly. Remember backups require a disk as well. This RAID1 level can only be advised for the C drive IMO if you do not have any trust in the reliability of modern-day disks. It is of no use for video editing.
    RAID3
    The RAID level for video editors. There is redundancy! There is only a small performance hit when rebuilding an array after a disk failure due to the dedicated parity disk. There is quite a perfomance gain achieveable, but the drawback is that it requires a hardware controller from Areca. You could do worse, but apart from it being the Rolls-Royce amongst the hardware controllers, it is expensive like the car.
    Performance wise it will achieve around 85% (X-1) on reads and 60% (X-1) on writes over a single disk with X being the number of disks in the array. So with a 6 disk array in RAID3, you get around 0.85x (6-1) = 425% the performance of a single disk on reads and 300% on writes.
    RAID5 & RAID6
     The RAID level for non-video applications with distributed parity. This makes for a somewhat severe hit in performance in case of a disk failure. The double parity in RAID6 makes it ideal for NAS applications.
    The performance gain is slightly lower than with a RAID3. RAID6 requires a dedicated hardware controller, RAID5 can be run on a software controller but the CPU overhead negates to a large extent the performance gain.
    RAID10
     The RAID level for paranoids in a hurry. It delivers the same redundancy as RAID 1, but since it is a multilevel RAID, combined with a RAID0, delivers twice the performance of a single disk at four times the cost, apart from the controller. The main advantage is that you can have two disk failures at the same time without losing data, but what are the chances of that happening?
    RAID30, 50 & 60
     Just striped arrays of RAID 3, 5 or 6 which doubles the speed while keeping redundancy at the same level.
    EXTRAS
     RAID level 0 is striping, RAID level 1 is mirroring and RAID levels 3, 5 & 6 are parity check methods. For parity check methods, dedicated controllers offer the possibility of defining a hot-spare disk. A hot-spare disk is an extra disk that does not belong to the array, but is instantly available to take over from a failed disk in the array. Suppose you have a 6 disk RAID3 array with a single hot-spare disk and assume one disk fails. What happens? The data on the failed disk can be reconstructed in the background, while you keep working with negligeable impact on performance, to the hot-spare. In mere minutes your system is back at the performance level you were before the disk failure. Sometime later you take out the failed drive, replace it for a new drive and define that as the new hot-spare.
    As stated earlier, dedicated hardware controllers use their own IOP and their own cache instead of using the memory on the mobo. The larger the cache on the controller, the better the performance, but the main benefits of cache memory are when handling random R+W activities. For sequential activities, like with video editing it does not pay to use more than 2 GB of cache maximum.
    REDUNDANCY(or security)
    Not using RAID entails the risk of a drive failing and losing all data. The same applies to using RAID0 (or better said AID0), only multiplied by the number of disks in the array.
    RAID1 or 10 overcomes that risk by offering a mirror, an instant backup in case of failure at high cost.
    RAID3, 5 or 6 offers protection for disk failure by reconstructing the lost data in the background (1 disk for RAID3 & 5, 2 disks for RAID6) while continuing your work. This is even enhanced by the use of hot-spares (a double assurance).
    PERFORMANCE
     RAID0 offers the best performance increase over a single disk, followed by RAID3, then RAID5 amd finally RAID6. RAID1 does not offer any performance increase.
    Hardware RAID controllers offer the best performance and the best options (like adjustable block/stripe size and hot-spares), but they are costly.
     SUMMARY
     If you only have 3 or 4 disks in total, forget about RAID. Set them up as individual disks, or the better alternative, get more disks for better redundancy and better performance. What does it cost today to buy an extra disk when compared to the downtime you have when a single disk fails?
    If you have room for at least 4 or more disks, apart from the OS disk, consider a RAID3 if you have an Areca controller, otherwise consider a RAID5.
    If you have even more disks, consider a multilevel array by striping a parity check array to form a RAID30, 50 or 60.
    If you can afford the investment get an Areca controller with battery backup module (BBM) and 2 GB of cache. Avoid as much as possible the use of software raids, especially under Windows if you can.
    RAID, if properly configured will give you added redundancy (or security) to protect you from disk failure while you can continue working and will give you increased performance.
    Look carefully at this chart to see what a properly configured RAID can do to performance and compare it to the earlier single disk chart to see the performance difference, while taking into consideration that you can have one disks (in each array) fail at the same time without data loss:
    Hope this helps in deciding whether RAID is worthwhile for you.
    WARNING: If you have a power outage without a UPS, all bets are off.
    A power outage can destroy the contents of all your disks if you don't have a proper UPS. A BBM may not be sufficient to help in that case.

    Harm,
    thanks for your comment.
    Your understanding  was absolutely right.
    Sorry my mistake its QNAP 639 PRO, populated with 5 1TB, one is empty.
    So for my understanding, in my configuration you suggest NOT to use RAID-0. Im not willing to have more drives in my workstation becouse if my projekts are finished, i archiv on QNAP or archiv on other external drive.
    My only intention is to have as much speed and as much performance as possible during developing a projekt 
    BTW QNAP i also use as media-center in combination with Sony PS3 to run the encoded files.
    For my final understanding:
    C:  i understand
    D: i understand
    E and F: does it mean, when i create a projekt on E, all my captured and project-used MPEG - files should be situated in F?  Or which media in F you mean?
    Following your suggestions in want to rebulid Harms-Best Vista64-Benchmark comp to reach maximum speed and performance. Can i use in general the those hardware components (exept so many HD drives and exept Areca raid controller ) in my drive configuration C to F. Or would you suggest some changings in my situation?

  • I'm trying to transfer the files from my ipod touch to my new computer itunes keeps telling me that all the apps and music won't be transferred that the computer is authorized.  Then it brings up a previous apple id which is no longer valid.

    I'm trying to transfer the files from my Ipod touch to my new computer.  It is saying that not all of the files will be transferred because the computer isn't authorized.  I have authorized it several times but it keeps bring up a previous apple id that I had but when I try to log in using that id it tells be it is no longer vailid and then it stops and won't let me transfer any files.  Any suggestion are welcome.  Thank You

    The computer has to be authorized for the account that purcchased the media.
    What error message are you getting when you try to lauthorize the computer for that account?
    Is there a way to find my Apple ID Name if I can't remember it?
    Yes. Visit My Apple ID and click Find your Apple ID. See Finding your Apple ID if you'd like more information.
    How do I change or recover a forgotten Apple ID Password?
    If you've forgotten your Apple ID Password or want to change it, go to My Apple ID and follow the instructions. SeeChanging your Apple ID password if you'd like more information.

  • To backup or not to backup...that is the question

    ok, of course we should all back up regularly, that's not really the question. I'm wondering specifically what the benefits are of backing up the OS if you have your original install discs.
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    Thanks in advance!

    1. Kevin wrote: "What's the difference between a Backup Set and duplicating a volume in a folder?"The differences between Duplicates and Backup Sets are discussed in my "Backup and Recovery" FAQ.
    Basically:
    - Backup Sets save all the files one has backed up in a single file, similar to a disk image, but without all the time required to create a disk image. A Catalog file of the contents of the Backup Set is also created. One accesses the contents of a Backup Set through the Restore function of Retrospect. So, the files in the Backup Set aren't "in the clear" i.e. you can't simply copy them from the Backup Set in Finder. Backup Sets can also be compressed and encrypted. Duplicates cannot.
    - As noted in my prior post, a Duplicate to a folder permits you to to access the files you've backed up via Finder. The volume you've Duplicated to the folder is copied to the folder, just as if it was copied to another volume, but isn't bootable (assuming the volume you duplicated was bootable) since you can't boot from a folder.
    2. You wrote: "In SuperDuper! you can create a disk image with Disk Utility and clone to that disk image and, I think you can boot from the disk image as well. A partition is better but the disk image is good in a pinch."Yes, with SD you can duplicate to a sparse image, but you can't boot from that image. It will work in a pinch, but not every basic backup app supports this function.
    It's also unclear (not addressed specifically in the SD documentation) if you can Smart Update a backup to a Sparse Image: I suspect not. Sparse images are tricky. For example, deleting files from them does not recover the space the files occupied: one has to use hdiutil compact to recover the space occupied by deleted files in a sparse image. The compact operation is what FileVault is doing when it periodically prompts users to recover space from their encrypted Home folders.
    Backup Sets can be updated incrementally: new or changed files can be added to the Backup Set. Each incremental backup to a Backup Set is known as a session. This can be a useful feature since it does not replace the originals from previous backups. This has some nice attributes:
    - If you regularly backup to a Backup Set and want to get an earlier version of a file you've been working on that has been regularly backed up to a Backup Set, you can restore a prior version of that file from the Backup Set. If you Smart Update a duplicate in SD, no old versions are saved.
    - Likewise, if you trash a file, empty the trash, and use SD Smart Update to backup the volume on which that file resided, the file is gone from the backup and your hard drive. If you've regularly backed up that volume to a Retrospect Backup Set, you can restore that file — in the state it was in at any prior time it was backed up to that Backup Set — from the Backup Set.
    The Restore function of Retrospect lets you access the individual sessions (incremental backups) saved in a Backup Set. You can restore one or more files or folders —  or an entire disk — to any point in time within the time span of the sessions in the Backup Set. This is very useful in project-based work, where one may have many versions of documents and need a copy of an earlier version of some project file that was either updated (without first saving a copy) or trashed.
    So, SD's sparse image capability is good in a pinch, but not as flexible or versatile as Retrospect's Backup Sets.
    I'm a big fan of Backup Sets.
    Good luck!
    Dr. Smoke
    Author: Troubleshooting Mac® OS X
    Note: The information provided in the link(s) above is freely available. However, because I own The X Lab™, a commercial Web site to which some of these links point, the Apple Discussions Terms of Use require I include the following disclosure statement with this post:
    I may receive some form of compensation, financial or otherwise, from my recommendation or link.

  • To EAR or not to EAR? That is the question.

    Ok, I'm near the tail-end of a long upgrade process from 5.1 to 6.1,
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    number
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    seperate from my SOAP WAR file (which was also in the EAR). Then
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    Second, we use Toplink. And in one case, we actually serialize an
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    classes
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    system classpath again. But I was able to modularize some things a
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    So... with all this in mind... my real question is this???
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    stuff, and it's very annoying. And I'm not sure what I REALLY get
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    -Michael J. Hudson
    [email protected]

    As far as I know, one of the main advantages of ear files is that WLS can
    undeploy applications in a clean manner. This can give you the
    possibility of having hot upgrades on a production system amongst other
    things.
    Stephane Vaucher
    Research professional
    CIRANO
    "Michael J. Hudson" wrote:
    Ok, I'm near the tail-end of a long upgrade process from 5.1 to 6.1,
    and man,
    were there some major bumps to get over. And the thing is... a good
    number
    of the problems were dealing with the new J2EE packaging specs, i.e.
    EAR,
    WAR files.
    First, I had a heck of a time getting Apache SOAP to integrate with
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    needs a reference to the class it's being deserialized into... well,
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  • To upgrade or not to upgrade....that is the question.

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    So here is the question. Do I spend the $90 for the same phone with no upgrades and the capability of keeping my current service plan (only $60/month) or do I upgrade to the newest iPhone for only an extra $100 but then have to pay an additional $15 or more per month for the same service? Is the newest phone really worth that extra money?

    That's a decision only you can make. Personally, it would be worth it to me to go from a 2G to a 3GS (assuming I was in a good 3G coverage area) but if you can limp along for another few months, Apple may come out with a new iPhone this summer, considering they have for the last 3 summers.

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    This discussion stems from two posts:
    {message:id=3786432} (Billy)
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    ...>
    {message:id=3914362} (Sven W.)
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    >
    I tried to respond to the thread Billy posted in, so I'll cut and paste my response here:
    Discussion
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    Now with LISTAGG, PIVOT and UNPIVOT all available to us would these be considered correct uses of SQL?
    Where does this leave the TO_CHAR function? Is this considered rendering?
    I'm fully expecting a fuzzy answer with something along the lines of "do the work where it makes the most sense" from a ease of development and maintainability perspective but I just wanted to ask.
    Hopefully this is a valuable discussion.
    Thanks!

    Let me give a simple example. You can store images in a table as a LOB. You can serve these images to a web browser client via mod_plsql.
    However, the data is static. It requires I/O (and some hefty ones for larger images). What is the biggest performance penalty we have in Oracle? I/O? What is affected by doing I/O to read these images? The buffer cache (which will age out other data in the cache).
    Where else can we store this data? The web server. At what cost to the performance of Oracle? None. Impact on web server? Heck, web servers are designed at their very core to do this!
    So where is the best place to storage static images in this specific case? Not the database, but the web server.
    Now simply extend this concept to the client - where is the best place to render data?
    Should the data be formatted for rendering (e.g. converted into HTML) in the database layer, or should it rather be done in the presentation layer?
    Now I can already hear the argument that the former is exactly what we are doing using APEX. We create dynamic HTML pages on the Oracle server side and then dish that up to the rendering layer to display.
    Two issues that need to be considered. Firstly, this is not done using SQL. This is done using a procedure language called PL/SQL - not using native SQL. PL/SQL in this case is used exactly as Java or PHP or Perl or any other "+app layer+" language would be used. It only happens that PL/SQL resides in the database too. But do not mistake it for what it really is - the application layer.
    The second issue drives home the point that even in 3 tier client server, the application layer is not the best place to do the formatting for the rendering layer. Web 2.0 aka AJAX.. Where the app layer delivers a dynamic rendering engine (as Javascript) to the rendering layer. After which rendering and formatting are done solely inside that rendering layer. And interaction between that and the app layer is requests for new/fresh data to be rendered.
    Why is AJAX becoming so popular? Key issues and concepts like performance, and a rich client interface and so on.
    This all points that the fundamental principle of using the rendering layer to do its thing and using the SQL layer to do its (separate and different) thing, still holds true.
    Yes, we may not always stick to this principle - as we do with doing the rendering (creating HTML) in PL/SQL using APEX for example.. but this is not because the principle is unsound. It is because of technology reasons (different browsers, different behaviour), lack of support for W3C standards (hello IE) and so on.
    It is only recently that these problem areas have been meaningfully addressed.. and why rendering frameworks like extJS is the (rendering layer) future of 3 tier client server.
    If the concept of using SQL to perform rendering and formatting had any substance.. then there would have been a lot of resistance to AJAX for example. The reverse is true.. as we all want to use SQL to do SQL and want the rendering layer to do its thing without us having to code in SQL to specifically support rendering and formatting. It is clunky. It slows down the SQL (every formatting function is a tiny overhead that adds up). It does not bode well for maintenance and changes to the presentation layer. And all those tiny overheads can spell doom for scalability.
    I do not see any gray lines here, or a question of "+opinion+", or "+it depends+". The architecture is clear. The fundamentals are sound.
    The real issue is how we choose to apply these. But (the "+incorrect+") application (of these fundamentals) does not invalidate the fundamentals.

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    I believe leaving it on all the time causes less long-term stress on the hardware, for a Mac that is used every day for at least half the day.
    I think the second best approach, and better approach for energy conservation, is to use Computer Sleep. However, it should be used so that when you start using the Mac at the start of the day, your Mac stays ON (with Display Sleep only) for the rest of the day. At the end of the day (when you will not be using it again until the next day), use Computer Sleep.
    Periodically, for leaving it on all the time or using sleep, restart the Mac; you can make it weekly if you want a routine, but my iMac is fine for about three weeks. After that, I often notice some oddities with general performance, so I do a restart. I don't think about too much, because there is usually some other reason to do a restart within a three week period.
    I think the worst approach, which a lot of people use, is have Energy Saver set to do Computer Sleep after a relatively short inactive period. Then, the Mac is repeatedly powering on and off (sleeping/waking) throughout the day, and that probably puts more stress on the hardware.
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