Pues eso tengo mis dudas y no sé si es conveniente en un portátil. Pues viene desactivada en Windows en los portátiles.
Nadie mejor que un trabajador de Microsoft para aclararte tus dudas:
Hybrid sleep is a type of sleep state that combines sleep and hibernate. When you put the computer into a hybrid sleep state, it writes out all its RAM to the hard drive (just like a hibernate), and then goes into a low power state that keeps RAM refreshed (just like a sleep). The idea is that you can resume the computer quickly from sleep, but if there is a power failure or some other catastrophe, you can still restore the computer from hibernation.
A hybrid sleep can be converted to a hibernation by simply turning off the power. By comparison, a normal sleep requires resuming the computer to full power in order to write out the hibernation file. Back in the Windows XP days, I would sometimes see the computer in the next room spontaneously turn itself on: I'm startled at first, but then I see on the screen that the system is hibernating, and I understand what's going on.
Hybrid sleep is on by default for desktop systems but off by default on laptops. Why this choice?
First of all, desktops are at higher risk of the power outage scenario wherein a loss of power (either due to a genuine power outage or simply unplugging the computer by mistake) causes all work in progress to be lost. Desktop computers typically don't have a backup battery, so a loss of power means instant loss of sleep state. By comparison, laptop computers have a battery which can bridge across power outages.
Furthermore, laptops have a safety against battery drain: When battery power gets dangerously low, it can perform an emergency hibernate.
Laptop manufacturers also requested that hybrid sleep be off by default. They didn't want the hard drive to be active for a long time while the system is suspending, because when users suspend a laptop, it's often in the form of "Close the lid, pick up the laptop from the desk, throw it into a bag, head out." Performing large quantities of disk I/O at a moment when the computer is physically being jostled around increases the risk that one of those I/O's will go bad. This pattern doesn't exist for desktops: When you suspend a desktop computer, you just leave it there and let it do its thing.
Como puedes leer por ti mismo, primeramente se da el argumento de innecesariedad al comparar la fuente de alimentación/bateria de un laptop con la de un PC y su posible pérdida de datos en un corte de luz, y segundo se menciona la demanda de los fabricantes por posibles riesgos de pérdida de datos al realizar operaciones de lectura y escritura en disco por la sencilla razón de que el disco duro sigue funcionando en la suspensión híbrida y un laptop es portatil, el usuario podría ponerlo en estado de suspensión con la falsa seguridad de que al mover el laptop no se dañará, y dañarse... y por consiguiente tener que hacer uso de su garantia para que el fabricante "pierda dinero" entregándole un laptop nuevecito.
Entonces, ¿es conveniente activarlo o no lo es?: suponiendo que tu razón principal sea una reactivación rápida del sistema, y si pones el laptop en suspensión sin moverlo del sitio... entonces si.
Saludos