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Standby

Standby is a term for a state of readiness in which a device, system, or service remains in a low-activity mode but can be activated quickly. It is used across consumer electronics, transportation, and industrial contexts to balance responsiveness with energy use.

In consumer electronics, devices enter standby (or sleep) to enable fast wake-up while drawing relatively little

Standby power, sometimes called vampire power, describes energy consumed by devices while in standby. Although individual

Within computing, standby commonly refers to sleep or suspend modes. Suspend-to-RAM preserves session data in memory

In travel and aviation, standby describes a passenger status where seats are offered if no confirmed ticket

Standby power systems include standby generators and uninterruptible power supplies that start automatically after a power

power.
Examples
include
televisions,
set-top
boxes,
and
computer
peripherals
that
remain
detectable
by
remote
controls
or
networks
when
not
actively
used.
consumption
is
small,
it
adds
up
across
households
and
appliances.
Regulatory
standards
in
many
regions
aim
to
limit
standby
power
to
roughly
0.5
to
1
watt
per
device.
for
quick
wake,
while
suspend-to-disk
saves
data
to
storage.
Both
reduce
active
power
but
differ
in
wake
time
and
persistence;
hibernation
is
often
separate
from
standby.
holders
are
available.
Standby
travel
can
be
time-dependent
and
is
subject
to
space
and
airline
rules.
outage.
They
provide
temporary
or
supplemental
power
until
primary
sources
return
or
a
permanent
backup
is
installed.