by Y-my-R » Fri Aug 23, 2019 7:21 pm
By all means - it's of course always safer to use the shutdown option that is offered (even though it's questionable if it actually does anything in the Mackie OS).
Having said that, though, Mackie OS is not Windows.
I'm not aware of a registry file in the Mackie OS that could get corrupted. From my understanding of how the D8B and its OS work, there's nothing written or read from the harddrive during regular work - only when manually saving or loading a project. Everything else happens in RAM. So, as long as you don't hit the power button right after trying to save, or trying to load a project, the Harddisk should be idle (I have no facts to back this up, other than thinking about what the Mackie OS needs to write to a disk, vs. all the stuff that Windows constantly reads and writes (e.g. constant memory swap-file handling, that Windows was always bad at).
Harddrives are generally designed, to lift that "arm" off of the disks with the last remaining power, if power gets interrupted. That should prevent head-crashes in most cases - but of course something like that "can" still happen.
Long story short - I'm not trying to convince anyone to forgo the shutdown command in the GUI. As I said, if I have the monitor on, I use it, too. However, I do truly believe that shutting the CPU down with the power button on the D8B, is about 1000 times more safe than doing the same thing on a Windows computer (again, because of the "dumb" memory handling in Windows, and as Old School pointed out, the potential to corrupt the Windows registry, that doesn't exist in Mackie OS, from all I understand). The Mackie OS is just a much simpler and leaner OS, than all the stuff Windows has going on all the time, for compatibility and to be able to run a wide variety of apps and services, etc.