Laptop turning itself on.


  1. Posts : 103
    Windows 7 Professional 32-bit
       #1

    Laptop turning itself on.


    I'm very confused by this. Twice now at my uni house where my computer stays out on the desk it has turned itself on. This hasn't happened to me while I was at home over christmas where it lives in a bag (thank god lol fire hazard).

    I told it to hibernate last night, turned off the plug and there were no lights on anywhere, but when I got up today it was on. I went to the event viewer but they only start at 13:45 (about when I got up).

    I thought it might mention when it was powered on or when something started but it started with browser.

    I'm very confused
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 17,796
    Windows 10, Home Clean Install
       #2

    You may find that you have to set to disable
    the abilty to wake from
    keyboard or mouse or Nic card
    Power Options and Sleep Mode Problems - Vista Forums
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 166
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
       #3

    mkr10001 said:
    I'm very confused by this. Twice now at my uni house where my computer stays out on the desk it has turned itself on. This hasn't happened to me while I was at home over christmas where it lives in a bag (thank god lol fire hazard).

    I told it to hibernate last night, turned off the plug and there were no lights on anywhere, but when I got up today it was on. I went to the event viewer but they only start at 13:45 (about when I got up).

    I thought it might mention when it was powered on or when something started but it started with browser.

    I'm very confused
    You will just have to stay up all night watching :)
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 2
    Win 7 64
       #4

    If all else fails, force a sleep-wake solution.


    Sleep-Wake Solution:
    This is a solution for those who want their computers to never wake from sleep on their own and simpler solutions have not worked. Nothing other than tapping a button or opening the cover will wake it. Not the planned tasks which are scheduled to wake up your system such as Windows Media Center or the unknown causes. The only negative I’ve found is that a laptop will not wake to hibernate if the battery is getting too low. It will just go dead and any unsaved information will be lost.


    1. Open a command-prompt and type the following lines of information. Press “enter” after each of the following.

    2. powercfg -setacvalueindex scheme_current sub_sleep bd3b718a-0680-4d9d-8ab2-e1d2b4ac806d 0

    3. powercfg -setdcvalueindex scheme_current sub_sleep bd3b718a-0680-4d9d-8ab2-e1d2b4ac806d 0

    4. powercfg -setactive scheme_current


    (there is a space after powercfg)


    These can be copied and pasted into the command-prompt by clicking on the header/edit/paste at the top of the command-prompt window.


    This changes the current power scheme defaults and stops the machine from being woken from sleep. It applies to the current power scheme on a computer which was the "balanced' power scheme on my latest test. This solution has worked on both Win7 and Win8.


    During my command-prompt test on a new Win8 system, it appears to have reset the power settings to default since things again have their default time-out settings after using the command-prompt solution. There have also not been any wakes reported during the test period in Event Viewer / system. I had rebooted the machine after entering the command-prompt solution, but I’m not sure if this was necessary or not after having entered step 4 into the command prompt.


    I also reviewed the Event Viewer on two other systems, and there have not been any wakes on those systems since I implemented the command-prompt solution on them two weeks ago.

    Important: The additional step of going to Control Panel / Power Options, and then resetting the current power scheme to the default values under advanced settings may also be necessary after implementing the config changes. The user can then readjust things back to their own preferences.

    If, for some reason, a user needs to revert back to the original values, re-enter the above lines in the command-prompt except change the last 0 to a 1 in each line. Then change back to default values in Power Options.
    Last edited by Pkinslow; 12 Feb 2013 at 02:26. Reason: Clarification
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 2
    Win 7 64
       #5

    Addendum: The additional step of going to Control Panel / Power Options, and then resetting the current power scheme to the default values under advanced settings may also be necessary.
      My Computer


 

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