Microsoft says it has developed a hybrid shutdown and boot process for Windows 8 that merges the traditional cold boot approach with resume-from-hibernate functionality, reducing startup time by 30% to 70% and resulting in 10-second boot times for new PCs with solid state disks.

Startup time has long frustrated PC users, and the proliferation of smartphones, tablets and fast-starting laptops like the MacBook Air has given Microsoft even more reason to build software that allows computers to turn off and on almost instantly. In a new blog post describing the Windows 8 boot process, Windows program management director Gabe Aul said a hybrid cold boot and resume feature closes user-facing sessions but keeps kernel processes in hibernation mode. This allows PCs to power down and use “effectively zero” power but start up far more quickly than Windows 7 computers, he writes.

“Here’s the key difference for Windows 8: as in Windows 7, we close the user sessions, but instead of closing the kernel session, we hibernate it,” Aul writes. “Compared to a full hibernate, which includes a lot of memory pages in use by apps, session 0 hibernation data is much smaller, which takes substantially less time to write to disk.”

Microsoft claimed that boot times on Windows 8 are 30 percent to 70 percent faster “on most systems we’ve tested.” While Microsoft did not say exactly which computers were tested, the benefits will be most noticeable for “newer systems with fast SSDs.” An accompanying video demonstrates a Windows 8 PC starting up in approximately 10 seconds.