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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It
connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer |
#2
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
"Phil Gilmer" wrote in message ... I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer What XP 'power scheme' are you currently using ? "Always On" ? |
#3
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
-----Original Message----- From: Phil Gilmer ] Posted At: Sunday, January 11, 2009 8:22 PM Posted To: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell Conversation: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode Subject: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer I have used or been responsible for thousands of Dells. Most of them Optiplexes (Optipli?). I have NEVER seen this problem and never seen it mentioned on this newsgroup in the last 10 years. So, I would believe it is still your settings causing the problem. Can't tell you how or where, but I'd review if Dell Quickset or other apps are installed that might be overriding the XP settings. |
#4
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
"Tom Scales" wrote in message
news:000001c974c6$8999bb70$6a01a8c0@SFF... -----Original Message----- From: Phil Gilmer ] Posted At: Sunday, January 11, 2009 8:22 PM Posted To: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell Conversation: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode Subject: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer I have used or been responsible for thousands of Dells. Most of them Optiplexes (Optipli?). I have NEVER seen this problem and never seen it mentioned on this newsgroup in the last 10 years. So, I would believe it is still your settings causing the problem. Can't tell you how or where, but I'd review if Dell Quickset or other apps are installed that might be overriding the XP settings. like tom, this i feel this is not a hardware or os problem, but i have seen power management problems result from the use of certain programs. one that comes to mind is a utility to enhance the mouse pointer that for unknown reasons prevents the machine from going into sleep mode... which is the opposite of your problem. when you look in start-controlpanel-performanceandmaintence-poweroptions what are your settings under the 'power schemes' tab? |
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
Tom Scales wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: Phil Gilmer ] Posted At: Sunday, January 11, 2009 8:22 PM Posted To: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell Conversation: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode Subject: Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer I have used or been responsible for thousands of Dells. Most of them Optiplexes (Optipli?). I have NEVER seen this problem and never seen it mentioned on this newsgroup in the last 10 years. So, I would believe it is still your settings causing the problem. Can't tell you how or where, but I'd review if Dell Quickset or other apps are installed that might be overriding the XP settings. You Latin scholars are good for a laugh! Optipli? What about Optiplexorum? And don't forget the ablative! ... Ben Myers |
#6
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
Hi!
I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. GX-280 goes into sleep/hibernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. S1 and S3 are not timeouts, nor will they "force" a power saving mode to take place. S1 and S3 are simply different "sleep" levels...S3 being a "deeper" sleep than S1. It's still up to the OS to actually engage these modes. The BIOS does not do that. I strongly suspect you have a software problem of some sort...that for some reason, XP is ignoring the timeout values you have specified. Have you checked to make sure that the user making the changes actually has the right to do so? Are the machines sitting idle at the log-in screen? (Windows XP may not propagate your power settings to every user.) Is there any software running on these systems that might be enforcing a power policy, such as Dell QuickSet? You will find that a lot of systems only let you pick from S1 and S3, as just about every modern system supports these levels of power management. William |
#7
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode
Phil Gilmer wrote:
I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer Thanks for all the responses. I will respond to the questions asked. The power scheme selected is "Always On". I read a suggestion that the powersave GUI might be at fault. I have modified power options from the CLI with no difference. There are no Dell Quickset programs loaded, nor am I using any "auxiliary" programs, e.g. mouse enhancement programs. The user is authorized to make the change. It makes no difference whether any user (authorized or not) is logged in or not. I have seen this behavior with Windows XP loaded on Dell GX150, GX240, GX270, GX260. and GX270 machines. The GX150 A01 BIOS allowed you to disable power management altogether, which would eliminate the problem, but subsequent versions of the BIOS allowed only the S1/S3 selection. There is one other interesting item. This model has accepts USB keyboard and mouse only--no PS/2 ports at all. When the system emerges from sleep mode after pressing the on switch, it will not respond to the keyboard when you try to enter your password. It _will_ respond to a double Ctl-Alt-Del and pop up the traditional login, when you can then type in login ID and password. I have only seen one other machine do this. I don't and never did think that this might be a hardware problem. It has, however, been reported by many users at the site where I originally encountered the problem. The problem was reported to Dell at the time, who was unable to resolve the problem. Again, thanks for the input. |
#8
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Optiplex GX-280 and "sleep" mode - Solved
Phil Gilmer wrote:
Phil Gilmer wrote: I have a Dell GX-280 that my daughter uses for a video server. It connects to my LAN via Netgear wireless NIC. She accesses it from anywhere in the house and sometimes has to transfer very large files back and forth from her laptop. GX-280 goes into sllep/hybernate mode regardless of Windows XP SP3 power settings. Power management cannot be disabled in the BIOS (A08, the latest)--you have only the choice between S1 and S3. This is a problem with Dell machines in general--I have seen many models of the Optiplex systems with the issue. We can force the machine to remain active by playing an mpeg file in an endless loop, but despite the nominal 2.8 gHz rating the machine is pokey as crap and I hate wasting the CPU (yes, the machine is scanned and is malware free--it's just a dog). Has anyone ever found a way to actually disable power management? Thanks, Phil Gilmer Thanks for all the responses. I will respond to the questions asked. The power scheme selected is "Always On". I read a suggestion that the powersave GUI might be at fault. I have modified power options from the CLI with no difference. There are no Dell Quickset programs loaded, nor am I using any "auxiliary" programs, e.g. mouse enhancement programs. The user is authorized to make the change. It makes no difference whether any user (authorized or not) is logged in or not. I have seen this behavior with Windows XP loaded on Dell GX150, GX240, GX270, GX260. and GX270 machines. The GX150 A01 BIOS allowed you to disable power management altogether, which would eliminate the problem, but subsequent versions of the BIOS allowed only the S1/S3 selection. There is one other interesting item. This model has accepts USB keyboard and mouse only--no PS/2 ports at all. When the system emerges from sleep mode after pressing the on switch, it will not respond to the keyboard when you try to enter your password. It _will_ respond to a double Ctl-Alt-Del and pop up the traditional login, when you can then type in login ID and password. I have only seen one other machine do this. I don't and never did think that this might be a hardware problem. It has, however, been reported by many users at the site where I originally encountered the problem. The problem was reported to Dell at the time, who was unable to resolve the problem. Again, thanks for the input. I thought I would follow-up on this and let everyone know what I have uncovered in testing. The simple solution to the problem is for the user to change the power setting to "Always On" and to turn off the screen saver. This works for a couple of reasons. Firstly, _any_ user can change power settings (or at least "Power Users" can, which is what I have set up), not just administrative users, and those settings go into effect when that user logs in. Secondly, disabling screen saver insures that the user logged in remains in control. More below. I did not want the monitor on all the time, nor did I want the machine to sit unlocked for extended periods of time, so I configured it to turn on the screen saver _and_ to require the user to enter the password on resume. This latter fact was actually the real problem. The system would have remained on if the screen-save had been activated without having the user reenter a password. However, requiring a password caused the Administrator account to assume control of the system and so the system used its settings and put the machine to sleep. Logging in to the Administrator account and chaning its power setting to "Always On" solved the problem. Thanks to all of you who responded. It's nice to have this one out of the way. -- Regards, Phil Gilmer |
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