I just read in National Geographic that the US would save 8 million
metric tons of CO2 emissions every year if we all turned off our
computers when not in use.

Doesn't that strike you as a tremendous opportunity?   In this age of
stupendous memories, it seems that remembering the state of the kernel
and drivers in non-volatile memory would be eminently feasible.

Windows 7 will have built-in support for touch screens.  Why not
support non-volatile "startup" memory?  My guess is that far more
people would be interested in "instant on" than in touch screens.

Actually, a startup memory would practically erase the boundary
between on, off and sleeping.  Shutdown/restart could be relegated to
recovering from serious error.

I would like to see this project move forward.  Any ideas?

Edward
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