Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
I've bought Dell XPS M 1530 recently. Earlier with bios version A_05 my
notebook didnot detect wireless network if it became available while the
computer was already On. The computer had to be waking up or restarting in
the presence of network and then only it registered it.
The Dell technician downloaded the latest bios (version A_07) and the
wireless network problem got corrected.
But the new problem thats comeup now is that closing the lid doesnt put the
computer to sleep. I checked in the power options, thats correctly
configured. Even changed it to hibernate when i close lid. That doesnt work
either.
One more thing i must add - that it's not like my computer doesnt get to
know at all that the lid is closed. When i open the lid, everything is ON but
the mouse arrow behaves 'drunk' for a while before becoming normal. Can
someone help.
AK
Re: Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
I'd check the Dell forums to see if this new BIOS has this issue. There
will be a Dell driver that tells the OS when the lid has been closed, so
it's possible that an update for the driver is necessary for it to work with
the new BIOS. As the BIOS is the interface between the hardware and the OS,
this is a possible explanation.
Re: Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
Assuming you already knew that if you do have wireless mice/keyboards,
you'll need an optional Hid update.
That aside, please try this : -
Control Panel > System/maintenance > Power Options > Change Plan
settings > Change advanced settings > click the (+) sign in front of
Multi media settings > click the (+) sign in front of When sharing media
> PLUG IN, change to "allow computer to sleep".
Let me know if it's ok now.
Re: Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
Hello Tony,
The optional update is called " Hid Non-user Input Data Filter". It is
designed for wireless applications, particularly useful for machines Not
going to sleep mode.
It is/was initially available through Windows update, optional. If you
cannot find it there anymore, then you'll need to install Intellipoint
software first, then search for the optional
google Intellipoint in the search box. It's easy.
Re: Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
So it's been a while and I'm still having the same problem. My Dell XPS M1530 still will not sleep/hibernate when I close the lid - everything stays on.
Has anyone found a solution yet?
Re: Closing the lid does not enter hibernate or sleep mode
I have a Dell Studio 17 that recently developed a similar problem. It would start to sleep when I closed the lid, then it would suddenly pop out of sleep even when the lid was still closed.
Since sleep used to work fine and my power and other system settings were unchanged since that time, I figured a background program was telling the computer "hey, wake up, I'm doing stuff back here!" The only problem was, which one was doing that?
I opened the Task Manager and ended active processes until I was down to the bare minimum necessary to keep the computer running. The first time I did this, a few weeks ago, it worked and the computer stayed asleep. After that, I was able to gradually narrow down the number of processes I had to cancel, and eventually pinpointed the offending process. Then it was a matter of disabling the process so it wouldn't start up on its own--a quick search online gets you that info so you can disable it.
More recently, after I installed and uninstalled some programs, the computer stopped sleeping again. I used the Task Manager to stop processes again, but this time the computer kept popping out of sleep even after I'd ended all but the minimum processes. So after I shut the laptop lid, I listened for the hard drive to start up again.
Then I quickly opened the lid (I'd left Task Manager running) and saw that a process called mobsync.exe was trying to run. This process doesn't appear at any time other than when the laptop is popping out of sleep mode; it vanished from Task Manager in about four seconds. I wouldn't have known it was the culprit if I hadn't been paying attention. I disabled mobsync.exe by following some good online instructions here: I probably accidentally enabled mobsync while making some changes to Internet settings. Now my laptop is back to sleep with no problems.
So, in conclusion, I have learned that when my computer can't stay asleep or hibernating, it's probably a background process keeping it awake. However, it's not just one process, but many different processes, that could be the culprit. When I start experiencing sleep problems, I follow the above procedure to stop processes until I find the one that's keeping my computer awake. Then, I change system settings so that the process can't run by itself anymore.
I also keep a list of known guilty processes so that when I encounter this problem in the future, I can peruse the Task List for the usual suspects first.
I know this may not be exactly your computer's problem, but maybe it will help someone. :)