A short press of the power button shuts down almost any computer in existence, why would you use the OS?
It's still the OS doing it, it's just reacting to the power button press like any other input device.
Not if you hold the power button. Yeah if you single press a power button, the os can divert that, but long press, the SMC will cut power. Similarly how, pressing and holding the power and the volume down button on a phone, cuts power, even if the OS is hard frozen. Sometimes you just need an emergency exit.
True but that's extremely rare for people to do.
True but if you can't do it, you are pretty screwed.
Someone who isn't a pedant would interpret "using the OS" as going through the start menu, or equivalent.
You are unbelievably pedantic.
I was going to downvote you when I realized
Yeah, that isn't a important distinction in a discussion about power button locations
He really is pedantic
You raise a good point
Honestly for me it's muscle memory from the Windows 95 days of "it is now safe to turn off your computer" but I also don't trust the OS to correctly interpret the ACPI signal sent by the power button 100% of the time. Obviously I'm not an average user, but I could see where an average user might consistently single press the power button to turn off a computer
A short press of the power button shuts down almost any computer in existence, why would you use the OS?
It's still the OS doing it, it's just reacting to the power button press like any other input device.
Not if you hold the power button. Yeah if you single press a power button, the os can divert that, but long press, the SMC will cut power. Similarly how, pressing and holding the power and the volume down button on a phone, cuts power, even if the OS is hard frozen. Sometimes you just need an emergency exit.
True but that's extremely rare for people to do.
True but if you can't do it, you are pretty screwed.
Someone who isn't a pedant would interpret "using the OS" as going through the start menu, or equivalent.
You are unbelievably pedantic.
I was going to downvote you when I realized
Yeah, that isn't a important distinction in a discussion about power button locations
He really is pedantic
You raise a good point
Honestly for me it's muscle memory from the Windows 95 days of "it is now safe to turn off your computer" but I also don't trust the OS to correctly interpret the ACPI signal sent by the power button 100% of the time. Obviously I'm not an average user, but I could see where an average user might consistently single press the power button to turn off a computer