- #Low power mode remote wake up etc. best performace setup how to#
- #Low power mode remote wake up etc. best performace setup Bluetooth#
Perhaps I just accidentally ran one of my S0-only commands on it while I was testing the other computer? In the middle of all this, my main computer decided to stop finding my other network computers. With the display off using the NirCmd & with connectivity disabled, the S0 computer disappeared from my network.
With the display off using the NirCmd & with connectivity enabled, the S0 computer remained on my network.
#Low power mode remote wake up etc. best performace setup how to#
How to Check if Connected or Disconnected Modern Standby - TenForumsTutorials I demonstrated its state by changing its network connectivity Įnable or Disable Network Connectivity in Modern Standby - TenForumsTutorials I use the same NirCmd that you do to turn off the display and that does send it straight into S0 Modern standby. I had found a command that put the computer into S0 Modern standby but I had forgotten all about it. I just tried to repeat an experiment to demonstrate that it is in S0 Modern standby as soon as the display is off but doing this has messed things up so I have to reboot - I'll finish this post afterwards. It is just an idle condition not a proper sleep state so the command you would need to find would be one that forced 'idle' on the computer and the nearest I have come to is a command to turn the display off.
I have never found a command to put the computer into S0 Modern standby. Similarly, I think that Classic shell might very well only have S3 Sleep in mind when it refers to bringing the display back on. I'm not surprised that that Device manager setting has no effect because I believe that it only relates to S3 Sleep. I don't think much of the available advice on the subject takes account of S0 Modern standby computers. None of them have the Device manager, Power management tab, Allow this device to wake the computer item set.
#Low power mode remote wake up etc. best performace setup Bluetooth#
I have tested 2 USB keyboards, 1 USB mouse & 1 Bluetooth mouse. I only have one S0 Modern standby computer and I am loathe to generalize from just the one experience but I have just conducted these tests:. (Wake on magic packet is enabled in the Ethernet adapter Advanced tab in Device Manager.) However, when sleeping, WOL won't wake it up either. I know the magic packet goes through because "WOL - Magic Packet Sender" receives it went sent from another device. I now tried to wake this computer by WOL (wake-on-lan). But no matter how many times I click the mouse, the computer doesn't wake up (and I made sure " Allow this device to wake the computer" is enabled). If I insert an old mouse into the USB-A port directly on the laptop, and go to sleep, the mouse does light up (gets power).
Also the laptop's integrated keyboard doesn't wake the computer and I have done " Allow this device to wake the computer" everywhere I can think of. When doing "powercfg /devicequery wake_armed" the keyboard and the mouse are listed. I tried maybe 15 different things already, nothing made any difference. So in the S0 mode at least I can resume from sleep using power button, but I can't resume with keyboard/mouse.
Only holding power down (shutdown) will help at that point. Fans turn on, power light turns permanently on, but nothing else happens, no image on the screen. However, when trying to wake from that state, not only keyboard/mouse doesn't work for wakeup, but also pressing the power button results in a crash. I see that if I force S3 (the HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PlatformAoAcOverride=0 trick), then sleep mode results in pulsating power button LED. Is that sleep state supposed to arm keyboard/mouse wakeup the exact same way than S3? That is a very confusing thing, I could not find satisfactory information by googling. Powercfg /a tells that the only supported sleep state is S0 Low Power Idle.