New
#11
Looks like that I'm not the only one with that issue
Closing laptop should NOT hibernate after shutdown has been ordered - Windows 7 Taskforce
Looks like that I'm not the only one with that issue
Closing laptop should NOT hibernate after shutdown has been ordered - Windows 7 Taskforce
Microsoft do all they can to accommodate different user preferences, but they haven't mastered the "...read the user's mind to find out what they want to do this time..." problem.
It is expected to be here by Windows 11, about 4 years after it becomes incorporated it in Winbuntu 20.10
When the laptop is in it's "shutdown" processes, it isn't fully shutdown, so it will register things like a lid closing. It isn't an issue at all...it's doing what it is supposed to do. An OS can't make up for a user's impatience. Trust me, if it could, as an IT Manager, I'd be using that OS for years now. If you can't wait that long and are really that impatient, then follow the above steps for using hibernate. If you want to let your laptop shutdown...let it shutdown. Simple as that. Shutting down takes longer, because it does more and has more processes to do. Simple as that.
It's because your machine is still executing the command to shut off system processes, and the sleep mode, afaik, is read as an "interrupt" command, and orders the system to sleep, regardless of what it's doing at present. I don't there's an actual way to "fix" this, other than being patient.
I suppose you could go for a Solid State Drive, which would improve boot/shutdown times, but it won't by any means solve it.
*sigh*....why not just have it shut down when you close the lid and don't push the button at all?
I concur that the solution is likely Hibernate for closing the lid, as it works perfectly in WIn7 to save your work then effectively Shut down, but starts up twice as fast or faster.
It's not really even necessary to Shut Down as if you have Updates prompting for a Restart just act on those when you get to them.
Sleep is a bad choice for suspending because it drains power which can cause issues if it runs down the battery unnoticed.
I see that this post is rather old but maybe someone is still subscribed to it. I found this from google and from a Enterprise standpoint this is a rather big problem, especially when using roaming profile. We've dragged this through Microsoft and basically just got a link with the ID of the power event that occurs when you close the lid.
I developed a Windows Service that handles the "Close lid action" and this seems to be the only way to get what you are asking for if you don't want to lose the normal functionality when closing the lid. I made a light version on my free time which I have put up on the internet, so if you are looking for a way to get around this you could check out En helt ny inriktning - Miwca.se which sadly is written in Swedish, but the code speaks for itself. Just add whatever you need and compile it.
It is a legit problem and there's no need to be an asshole when someone asks a question. Sadly it seems like only way to get around this today is to code yourself to a solution.
It might be 2 years late, but I hope you got your answer! *Goes back to lurking in the shadow*
Thanks for updating the thread. I still think Hibernate is the best all-around solution as it is a sounder sleep that precludes the need to either Shut Down (it does that after saving your work) or Sleep (It doesn't use power but still starts up nearly as fast).
If you only have your laptop set to sleep and go away for six months, it has powered the RAM the entire time. Hibernate does not - it is as shut down as Shutdown, but saves your work to hard drive and starts up in half the time.
I wholeheartedly agree. I don't post much but often find solutions via Google on this forum. But the responses here have just been weirdly unreasonable and juvenile.
I don't get why a lot of people are so passionate about defending unnecessary crap, like shitty UI "improvements" or this issue.
Microsoft is too dumb/lazy to do something that simple that would make the use of millions of laptops a bit more comfortable and that really should have always been there and that's not worth complaining about? O_oCode:lid_close_event() if shutting_down return
Hehe*Goes back to lurking in the shadow*