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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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I maintain two notebook computers at my home. They are different models,
different makes, and use different hardware. Basically, the only things they have in common is that they're both notebooks and they both use Windows Vista Home Premium, 32 bit, for an operating system. I am having the same problem with each one regarding the power plans they use: Whenever I create a customized power plan for either notebook to use, some of the settings I specify never get utilized. In fact, if I look at the plan settings after the ones in question fail, I find that some of the features of the power plan are changed to settings I never specified. To be clear, for the settings that end up changing inexplicably, these are the settings I initially choose for such power plans: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 20 minutes Plugged in: 40 minutes Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: 60 minutes Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 10 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Do nothing Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: Off Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing Now, I'm not sure when or how this occurs, but these are the settings that appear when I look at the same custom plan after the features in question fail to behave like I instructed them: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: Never Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 15 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Hibernate Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: On Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing What is going on to cause Windows to change these features specifically, and always to the same settings? No matter which of my notebooks is in question, the result is always the same: If I try to change them back the way I want, the same thing happens again. If I delete the affected custom plans and make new ones, the same thing happens to those, too. This seems to happen to any custom plan I make, but only affects the features described above. The plans customize other features, but those work the way I want them; they don't get nerfed by Vista the way the ones in question do. I can't imagine what I'm doing wrong with both notebooks, but whether the problem is with Vista or with the way I'm using it, if there is anything I can do to fix this, I'd be grateful to know. |
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Update to my own issue:
I believe this problem has recently resolved itself. For those reading who have had similar difficulties but found no solutions, the problem disappeared once I had installed the Windows Vista Service Pack 1 into each notebook's operating system. For one of the notebooks, though, doing this was difficult; the Windows Update feature failed each of multiple times to install the service pack into the operating system. For that machine, I had to download the service pack as a stand-alone installer and integrate it manually that way. If anyone else faces that issue, too, the primary stand-alone installer can be obtained at http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en Hopefully, those facing similar problems with the Windows Vista power plans will find the solution similarly simple. "PrimeSoup" wrote: I maintain two notebook computers at my home. They are different models, different makes, and use different hardware. Basically, the only things they have in common is that they're both notebooks and they both use Windows Vista Home Premium, 32 bit, for an operating system. I am having the same problem with each one regarding the power plans they use: Whenever I create a customized power plan for either notebook to use, some of the settings I specify never get utilized. In fact, if I look at the plan settings after the ones in question fail, I find that some of the features of the power plan are changed to settings I never specified. To be clear, for the settings that end up changing inexplicably, these are the settings I initially choose for such power plans: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 20 minutes Plugged in: 40 minutes Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: 60 minutes Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 10 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Do nothing Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: Off Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing Now, I'm not sure when or how this occurs, but these are the settings that appear when I look at the same custom plan after the features in question fail to behave like I instructed them: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: Never Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 15 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Hibernate Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: On Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing What is going on to cause Windows to change these features specifically, and always to the same settings? No matter which of my notebooks is in question, the result is always the same: If I try to change them back the way I want, the same thing happens again. If I delete the affected custom plans and make new ones, the same thing happens to those, too. This seems to happen to any custom plan I make, but only affects the features described above. The plans customize other features, but those work the way I want them; they don't get nerfed by Vista the way the ones in question do. I can't imagine what I'm doing wrong with both notebooks, but whether the problem is with Vista or with the way I'm using it, if there is anything I can do to fix this, I'd be grateful to know. |
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PrimeSoup;658430 Wrote: Update to my own issue: I believe this problem has recently resolved itself. For those reading who have had similar difficulties but found no solutions, the problem disappeared once I had installed the Windows Vista Service Pack 1 into each notebook's operating system. For one of the notebooks, though, doing this was difficult; the Windows Update feature failed each of multiple times to install the service pack into the operating system. For that machine, I had to download the service pack as a stand-alone installer and integrate it manually that way. If anyone else faces that issue, too, the primary stand-alone installer can be obtained at 'Download details: Windows Vista Service Pack 1 Five Language Standalone (KB936330)' (http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en) Hopefully, those facing similar problems with the Windows Vista power plans will find the solution similarly simple. "PrimeSoup" wrote: I maintain two notebook computers at my home. They are different models, different makes, and use different hardware. Basically, the only things they have in common is that they're both notebooks and they both use Windows Vista Home Premium, 32 bit, for an operating system. I am having the same problem with each one regarding the power plans they use: Whenever I create a customized power plan for either notebook to use, some of the settings I specify never get utilized. In fact, if I look at the plan settings after the ones in question fail, I find that some of the features of the power plan are changed to settings I never specified. To be clear, for the settings that end up changing inexplicably, these are the settings I initially choose for such power plans: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 20 minutes Plugged in: 40 minutes Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: 60 minutes Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 10 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Do nothing Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: Off Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing Now, I'm not sure when or how this occurs, but these are the settings that appear when I look at the same custom plan after the features in question fail to behave like I instructed them: Hard disk: Turn off hard disk after... On battery: 30 minutes Plugged in: Never Sleep: Sleep after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Allow hybrid sleep: On battery: Off Plugged in: Off Hibernate after... On battery: Never Plugged in: Never Display: Turn off display after... On battery: 15 minutes Plugged in: 20 minutes Adaptive display: On battery: Off Plugged in: On Display brightness: On battery: 100% Plugged in: 100% Battery: Critical battery action: On battery: Hibernate Plugged in: Hibernate Low battery level: On battery: 10% Plugged in: 10% Critical battery level: On battery: 5% Plugged in: 5% Low battery notification: On battery: On Plugged in: On Low battery action: On battery: Do nothing Plugged in: Do nothing What is going on to cause Windows to change these features specifically, and always to the same settings? No matter which of my notebooks is in question, the result is always the same: If I try to change them back the way I want, the same thing happens again. If I delete the affected custom plans and make new ones, the same thing happens to those, too. This seems to happen to any custom plan I make, but only affects the features described above. The plans customize other features, but those work the way I want them; they don't get nerfed by Vista the way the ones in question do. I can't imagine what I'm doing wrong with both notebooks, but whether the problem is with Vista or with the way I'm using it, if there is anything I can do to fix this, I'd be grateful to know. Thanks for the update. Glad to hear things are going smoother for you. Best wishes, -- .Joe _[image: http://uswave.net/vistax64/joetmvx64.png] (\"http://www.vistax64.com/index.php?referrerid=17621\")_ _*::Click_here_for_the_Vista_Forums::* (\"http://www.vistax64.com/index.php?referrerid=17621\")_ _Geekbench_Sco_4050 (\"http://browse.geekbench.ca/geekbench2/view/42901\")_ _CPU-Z_Verified (\"http://valid.x86-secret.com/show_oc.php?id=323179\")_ |