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Applegeeky

macrumors regular
Original poster
Aug 30, 2014
107
6
Is there a difference?

Both are reboots but I see some website recommending the force reboot ( hold home and power ) for a cleaner reboot ?!?!
 

edlex

macrumors 68020
Apr 14, 2010
2,295
1,474
Miami
Is there a difference?

Both are reboots but I see some website recommending the force reboot ( hold home and power ) for a cleaner reboot ?!?!

The shutdown reboot is less harsh on the system. The hard reboot is the equivalent of unplugging your computer.
 

Applegeeky

macrumors regular
Original poster
Aug 30, 2014
107
6
The shutdown reboot is less harsh on the system. The hard reboot is the equivalent of unplugging your computer.
Then why would some websites recommend that ? Even the latest WhatsApp update recommends that due a iOS 10 bug -.-
 

now i see it

macrumors G4
Jan 2, 2002
11,250
24,268
A force reboot will reset the battery statistics. A normal restart won't. A force reboot function is required when the phone becomes unresponsive and needs to be shut down. Its considered a more drastic action and should be the last resort. Like pressing and holding the power button on a computer to force it to shut down when it has frozen.
 

C DM

macrumors Sandy Bridge
Oct 17, 2011
51,392
19,461
A force reboot will reset the battery statistics. A normal restart won't. A force reboot function is required when the phone becomes unresponsive and needs to be shut down. Its considered a more drastic action and should be the last resort. Like pressing and holding the power button on a computer to force it to shut down when it has frozen.
With iOS 10 a shutdown now clears battery usage/standby information too.
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Is there a difference?

Both are reboots but I see some website recommending the force reboot ( hold home and power ) for a cleaner reboot ?!?!
Theoretically they should do the same things and shutdown and restart should be the better way to go when possible. In practice though it does seem like the hard reset option somehow resets and clears things better/differently in one way or another. In one of the discussions in the past about this kind of thing there were a few people talking about some experiences where shutting down and restarting wouldn't clear up some issue for them (some app/service being stuck or something else like that), while a hard reset did.
 
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