You all talk about "insane" settings. They not such bad. The hardware
manufacturers know what they are doing. If laptop harddisk go to "sleep"
after 30sec of inactivity, there is a reason for that (security, power
consumption). And it is perfectly ok. The problem is, the disk is not
supposed to be waken up immediately.

Info #1: Today I have witnessed very similar behaviour on two different
notebooks running Windows XP. That means, it doesn't have to be true
that windows somehow "correct" these settings. It behaved quite same,
after 20-30sec of hdd inactivity, the hdd went to sleep. The difference
was, under Ubuntu it wakes immediately. Under windows, it was sleeping
for several minutes, until some disk activity was needed (some system
service or user intervention). *This* is how it is supposed to behave
and how hdd manufacturers expect it to be, I presume.

Info #2: Laptop-mode is not enabled by default nor any settings are
applied to the disk (as Matthew Garrett said before). So do not blame
it. As a matter of fact, my notebook behaves correctly with laptop-mode
enabled. It is putting disk to sleep only on battery and it is not
waking it up immediately. It is working right like in Windows(!).
According to acpi configuration file, laptop-mode is not enabled due to
odd hangs on some machines.

What does it all mean? If your harddisk goes to sleep 10 times an hour,
always for a few minutes, it's perfectly ok, do the math. That's how the
manufacturers supposed it to be. Therefore Ubuntu should not tweak
harddisk default settings. Instead, it should detect these "aggressive
apm enabled" harddisks (or simply all laptops) and delay flushing
intervals and slow down daemons accessing the disk. That's what the
laptop-mode does. But it has some hardware compatibility issues. Ok, so
let's take only a hardware-independent and non-problematic subset of
laptop-mode and enable it on notebooks. It will help their disks a lot.

Simply: Do not touch the disk if you don't have to, Ubuntu. At least on
notebooks. That's all.

-- 
default value in power.sh potentially kills laptop disks
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/59695
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