Should i shut down my macbook air each night

how often should i shut down my macbook air?

if youre not using it for a few hours
leaving your macbook both ON charge AND in sleep mode is bad on the battery
merely in sleep is another matter, which is fine.
Considerations for the long life of your MacBook. Handling and environmental care tips
General consideration of your MacBook battery
Contrary to popular myths about notebook batteries, there is protection circuitry in your Macbook and therefore you cannot ‘overcharge’ your notebook when plugged in and already fully charged.
However if you do not plan on using your notebook for several hours, turn it off (plugged in or otherwise), since you do not want your Macbook ‘both always plugged in and in sleep mode’.
A lot of battery experts call the use of Lithium-Ion cells the "80% Rule", meaning use 80% of the full charge or so, then recharge them for longer overall life. The only quantified damage done in the use of Lithium Ion batteries are instances where the internal notebook battery is “often drained very low”, this is bad general use of your notebook battery.
A person who has, for example, 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 40% remaining of a 100% charge has a better battery condition state than, say, another person who has 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 10-15% remaining on a 100% charge. DoD (depth of discharge) is much more important on the wear and tear on your Macbook’s battery than the count of charge cycles. There is no set “mile” or wear from a charge cycle in specific. Frequent high depth of discharge rates (draining the battery very low) on a Lithium battery will hasten the lowering of maximum battery capacity.
All batteries in any device are a consumable meant to be replaced eventually after much time, even under perfect use conditions.
If the massive amount of data that exists on lithium batteries were to be condensed into a simplex, helpful, and memorable bit of information it would be:
1. While realistically a bit impractical during normal everyday use, a lithium battery's longevity and its chemistry's health is most happy swinging back and forth between 20% and 85% charge roughly.
2. Do not purposefully drain your battery very low (10% and less), and do not keep them charged often or always high (100%).
3. Lithium batteries do not like the following:
A: Deep discharges, as meaning roughly 10% or less on a frequent basis.
B: Rapid discharges as referring to energy intensive gaming on battery on a frequent basis (in which case while gaming, if possible, do same on power rather than battery). This is a minor consideration.
C: Constant inflation, as meaning always or most often on charge, and certainly not both in sleep mode and on charge always or often.
From Apple on batteries:
http://www.apple.com/batteries/notebooks.html
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1446
"Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time."

Similar Messages

  • Why i can't shut down my Macbook Air? it says quit safari how do i do that?

    i can't shut down my macbook air it asks for quiting safari and i can't quit safari tooo what is the problem????/

    If it continues to happen go with Option-Command-Esc. That will bring up the force quit menu and you can choose Safari from there.
    Hope this helps.
    Jim

  • Is it necessary to shut down my new imac each night?

    is it necessary to shut down my new imac each night?

    NOPE! 
    Read the user manual for recommendations on when to sleep & shut down. 
    CLICKY CLICK---> iMac (2012/2013) PDF Manual (direct download) 

  • Should you shut down your macbook every time you're not using it?

    I've had my macbook for five years now and I was never told if I should be shutting it down whenever I'm not using it. Now after five years of doing this and never really having an problem I'm noticing that there is a lag in time and it does take forever to start back up once I turn it on, also my battery life is horrible I could probably go two hours (if that) without having to attach it a power soucre. I've started to notice it more since I've downloaded mavricks, so I'm wondering is this just because it's an older model and I've using it so much that it's just geting used to new software; or is this simiply a result of me shut it down and turning it on when using the macbook? The macbook itself is still great and I have no real issue with it, it's more of a worry I have with it. I'm starting grad school in the fall and I want to know if it's time that I should get a new macbook or if this puppy still has a lot more years with me.

    If you've never replaced the hard drive, it could be slowing down - 3 to 5 years is the typical lifespan for a notebook hard drive.
    Do you know how much RAM is in the computer?
    If the computer mostly works OK, you may just need to invest in it a little - replacing the hard drive & upgrading the RAM will breathe new life into it, most likely!
    You do not need to shut it down each time you're done using it - in fact, I leave my MacBook asleep 90% of the time and reboot it every couple of weeks or when it seems to be getting a bit sluggish. I've been doing that for the last 7 years and she's still chugging along.
    ~Lyssa

  • Plugging in Superdrive shuts down the MacBook Air

    I have a brand new MacBook Air. When I attach a SuperDrive to the Air it shuts down within a second. I've tried this with two different SuperDrives - a new one and one that I've already used. If I boot the Air with the drive attached the screen lights up and within 3 seconds the machine shuts down. Attaching a USB ethernet adapter to the Air works just fine. Suggestions?

    Powered off is different from Shutdown. If it went to shutdown then it will run the processes. Powered off is more like the computer shut off.
    From your description, it sounds like the safety switch turned off the system to prevent it from shorting out. I suspect that somehow when you connect your dvd drive to the usb port, it shorted the circuit. I am not sure about the details. But sounds like you need to visit the genius and get it fixed.

  • I try shutting down my MacBook Air but it wont let because the application "Mail" is still open but it will not let me close Mail so i can shutdown my computer

    I try shutting down my mac but it says that it cant because "Mail" is open. so i try quitting mail but it will not let me!

    Force quit Mail app. Apple logon in the menu bar select Force Quit. A dialog window will open select Mail.app and click the force quit button.
    If that doesn't work hold down the power button until the system turns off. Then press it again to restart your Mac.

  • How can I unlock the remote desktop to shut down my MacBook Air?

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    Hi sunburnhaven,
    I understand that you may have applications that are unresponsive. If the applications are still running, they may be preventing your computer from shutting down. Here is some information on how we can quit those applications:
    Mac OS X: How to quit an unresponsive application using Force Quit
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3411
    Mac OS X 10.6: If you can’t quit an application
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH6642
    Thanks,
    Matt M.

  • Why does Mountain Lion take a long time to shut down my MacBook Air when I chose "Shut Down?"  Much longer than before the upgrade.

    Mountain Lion takes a long time to shut down.  Much longer then Lion.
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    The honeymoon is over?

  • Should I shut down my mac pro every night

    Just purchase a Macbook Pro, should I shut it down every night?

    leroydouglas wrote:
    Never heard that advice before. The kb certainly does not say that. 
    Big difference from your statement compare  ""Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time." 
    I think using the battery regularly is a better interpretation.
    I would submit  that is the way most people use their Portables, close the lid.
    You absolutely misunderstood I referred to BOTH  "on power AND in sleep mode"
         not to:  "closing the lid ,... sleep mode"
    Using the battery regularly can mean anything as a generalization.
    That advice on parasitic charging is correct.   Which referres to BOTH in sleep AND on power...   not however to merely "in sleep mode"
    There is no etrecheck for parasitic battery charging,   ..... NOR is there any such check for both:
    1. fast discharges
    3. low discharges
    As such that battery information you provided above doesnt report bad abuse / misuse of a battery.
    Nor does / can Etrecheck report on physical abuse of any macbook, logically.
    Battery abuse / misuse is a type of physical abuse, chemistry of the battery abuse, however its internal.
    I did not say the KB article said that,    what it says:
    http://www.apple.com/batteries/notebooks.html
    "Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time."
    So, you misunderstood.
    Apples recommendation refers to micro-cycling the battery and to parasitic charging in the above quote, that it doesnt elaborate on the specifics of same
    is irrelevant.
    The implication from same is exactly this
    *If you don’t plan on using it for a few hours, turn it OFF (plugged in or otherwise) ..*You don’t want your Macbook both always plugged in AND in sleep mode       (When portable devices are charging and in the on or sleep position, the current that is drawn through the device is called the parasitic load and will alter the dynamics of charge cycle. Battery manufacturers advise against parasitic loading because it induces mini-cycles.)
    Keeping batteries connected to a charger ensures that periodic "top-ups" do very minor but continuous damage to individual cells, hence Apples recommendation above:   “Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time”, …this is because “Li-ion degrades fastest at high state-of-charge”.
                        This is also the same reason new Apple notebooks are packaged with 50% charges and not 100%.
    Contrary to popular myths about notebook batteries, there is protection circuitry in your Macbook and therefore you cannot ‘overcharge’ your notebook when plugged in and already fully charged.
    However if you do not plan on using your notebook for several hours, turn it off (plugged in or otherwise), since you do not want your Macbook ‘both always plugged in and in sleep mode’.
    A lot of battery experts call the use of Lithium-Ion cells the "80% Rule", meaning use 80% of the full charge or so, then recharge them for longer overall life. The only quantified damage done in the use of Lithium Ion batteries are instances where the internal notebook battery is “often drained very low”, this is bad general use of your notebook battery.
    A person who has, for example, 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 40% remaining of a 100% charge has a better battery condition state than, say, another person who has 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 10-15% remaining on a 100% charge. DoD (depth of discharge) is much more important on the wear and tear on your Macbook’s battery than the count of charge cycles. There is no set “mile” or wear from a charge cycle in specific. Frequent high depth of discharge rates (draining the battery very low) on a Lithium battery will hasten the lowering of maximum battery capacity.
    All batteries in any device are a consumable meant to be replaced eventually after much time, even under perfect use conditions.
    If the massive amount of data that exists on lithium batteries were to be condensed into a simplex, helpful, and memorable bit of information it would be:
    1. While realistically a bit impractical during normal everyday use, a lithium battery's longevity and its chemistry's health is most happy swinging back and forth between 20% and 85% charge roughly.
    2. Do not purposefully drain your battery very low (10% and less), and do not keep them charged often or always high (100%).
    3. Lithium batteries do not like the following:
    A: Deep discharges, as meaning roughly 10% or less on a frequent basis.
    B: Rapid discharges as referring to energy intensive gaming on battery on a frequent basis (in which case while gaming, if possible, do same on power rather than battery). This is a minor consideration.
    C: Constant inflation, as meaning always or most often on charge, and certainly not both in sleep mode and on charge always or often.
    From Apple on batteries:
    http://www.apple.com/batteries/notebooks.html
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1446
    Bad discharging or battery use conditions:
    Heat (due to environmental conditions or due to rapid discharges from heavy use = gaming / video editing)
    Rapid discharging of the battery frequently causes chemical changes over time in the battery leading to decreased capacity and resistance of current flow.
    The very worst use of your battery is often draining the battery very low, and worse still letting it remain in such a state.
    *Most long-term rapid damage to the battery occurs from discharging it with high loading (gaming) conditions but paramount is avoiding deep and frequent low DOD (depths of discharge) in use.
    Undesirable charging or charged conditions:
    High perpetual SOC (state of charge), where the battery is always or very often connected to charge
    Parasitic loading where the battery is both usually on and charging or worse both always charging and in sleep mode, since this induces mini-cycling of the battery.
    Bad general handling conditions:
    Temperature use conditions when either too hot (95F and above) or too cold (50F and below)
    Storing your battery away with a low charge (40% and less) long-term.
    Considerations:
    Your battery is subject to chemical aging even if not in use. A Lithium battery is aging as soon as its made, regardless.
    In a perfect (although impractical) situation, your lithium battery is best idealized swinging back and forth between 20 and 85% SOC (state of charge) roughly.
    Further still how you discharge the battery is far more important than how it is either charged or stored short term.
    Ultimately counting charge cycles is of little to no importance.  Abuse in discharging (foremost), charging, and storing the battery and how it affects battery chemistry is important and not the ‘odometer’ reading, or cycle counts on the battery. 
    Everything boils down to battery chemistry long term, and not an arbitrary number, or cycle count.
    Keep your macbook plugged in when near a socket since in the near end of long-term life, this is beneficial to the battery.

  • I can't shut down my macbook air.

    The problem starts when suddenly I can't move my cursor using my track pad. It happens that I'm not able to use my keyboard too. I tried to use a mouse to move the cursor and it works. Then I tried to shut it down by clicking the apple icon with my mouse, the screen went black for a moment then the computer automatically turns on again. I tried it several times and I still can't shut it down.
    I would appreciate it if anyone could help me
    PS my macbook is running on os lion

    Press and hold the power button for about 10 seconds to force shutdown.
    Reset SMC.     http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3964
    Choose the method for:
    "Resetting SMC on portables with a battery you should not remove on your own".
    If this does not help, contact Apple.
    Best.

  • Should I shut down my macbook pro before putting it in a bag and walking around from class to class with it?

    I'm in high school and Im constantly running from class to class, and many I need my macbook pro for. The thing is though, I never shut it down when running from class to class with it in it case (the case is like a briefcase type thing), it is only in sleep mode. I'm just worried that all the swinging of the bag its in while I still have it running in sleep mode will break it? I mean, it glitches sometimes when I open it up from sleep mode, the screen sort of flashes and it freezes up a bit. Could this be a result of me not shutting it down when I move it?

    Without shutting it down, sleep mode suffice, of course you shouldn't bang or drop the Mac.

  • Should I shut down my OS X 10.9.4 Mac each night, yes or no? Explain why.

    Should I shut down my OS X 10.9.4 Mac each night, yes or no? Explain.

    I was just curious if there is any harm in shutting it down each night.
    That's the difficult part. You'll get answers both ways. You could call Apple's tech support and the person you have on the phone will tell you to leave it on. Call back, and someone else will tell you to turn it off.
    Back in the days of much flakier hardware (I mean, way back), our first computer was an IBM XT clone running DOS 3.1. We always turned it off when not in use. Never had a problem with it. Nor have I ever had an issue turning our various computers off over the past 30 years. I just don't see why I'd want to leave it on, uselessly using electricity sitting idle.
    If I have to walk away from it for a bit, I'll leave it on. But if I know it's going to be a couple of hours or more before I get back to the computer, off it goes. Whether it's first thing in the morning, or turning it on again midday, waiting a lousy minute for it to come to the desktop from a cold start rather than more quickly coming out of sleep mode isn't that big of a deal.

  • HELP! I shut down my macbook pro and now after applications have been in full screen mode for awhile they automatically minimize and it takes me back to the desktop. How do I fix this?

    I shut down my macbook and now while applications such as safari have been open for awhile, even while active, will automatically minimize and it take me back to the desktop.  How do I fix this?

    I should add that this has happened before and I feel like it was a quick un-toggling of a box in my settings, but I can not remember what to do.

  • I shut down my macbook pro and now I started up and it started in the safe mode

    I shut down my MacBook Pro yesterday and when I started up today, it keeps starting up in safe mode, what do I need to do?

    Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
    Does your Mac start properly in safe mode? If so, try resetting the PRAM > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1379 This will reset the "boot args", so OS X should start into safe mode. Also, you should verify that the storage of the computer is OK, so open Disk Utility, select "Macintosh HD" on the sidebar and verify the drive. If there's a problem, start in OS X Recovery (holding Command and R keys while your Mac is starting) and repair it

  • How to properly shut down your Macbook?

    Hello, I have been using a Macbook Pro for nearly a year now. I would like to know what is the proper way to shut down your macbook?
    I went to iStudy for some app instalment and the sales asisstant gave me a piece of (advice?) that whenever I want to shut down my macbook, i should just snap it close after I have quit all the running applications. I don't have to press the shut down button on the keyboard or choose shut down at the apple upper menu bar cause it may damage my RAM.
    Yet, I knew this girl who just paid 2K just to fix her motherboard due to improper way of shutting down her Mac.
    So, my problem is do you have to shut your Mac down JUST by snapping it close (and of course, quit all the running applications)? Or you shut your Mac down by simply go to the Apple in the upper menu bar and choose shut down?

    Hi alswaki,
    When you close all apps and then physically close it, you are putting the Mac into Sleep mode, not shutting it down. So, it depends on what you actually want to do. When you go to the Apple menu and select Shut Down, it literally shuts off the Mac, and you have to push the on/off button to start it back up. By closing the lid, you are putting it into Sleep mode so when you open the lid again, the Mac doesn't have to be powered back on to start up again.
    Both are correct things to do. I pretty much don't shut down my Mac at all. I close my apps, and close the lid, then plug it in to recharge. When I want to use it, I open it and it "wakes up". I only restart it when I need to for an update, I pretty much never shut it down.
    But again, either way is fine to do. If you want to completely power down your Mac when you finish using it for the day, then you would select the Shut Down option. Otherwise, just close it to put it into Sleep mode when not in use.
    Cheers,
    GB

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