If you leave them Windows 10 σε αδράνεια, χωρίς να κάνετε τίποτα απολύτως, αυτά θα τεθούν τελικά σε κατάσταση αναστολής λειτουργίας. Πρόκειται για μια προεπιλογή του συστήματος, όπου δεν χρειάζεται να ρυθμίσετε τίποτα, αν και μπορείτε να προσαρμόσετε την περίοδο αδράνειας ή το πότε το system idles.
In order for a Windows 10 system not to be suspended, it is not only required that there be some user activity. The applications and background processes can prevent the system from suspending. Unfortunately, there isn't a simple GUI-based method to view which apps are blocking that particular process in Windows 10. However, you can use a simple command line command to get the job done.
To see which apps are preventing a system from going to sleep, you need administrator rights. This is because the command will examine the directives sent to the policy managementof the power of the operating system. Let's see how:
1. Open the command prompt with administrator privileges.
2. Execute the following command as it is. Do not change anything.
powercfg / requests
The command will return a list of processes and applications that prevent Windows 10 from entering sleep mode.
Understanding the results
The results are not presented in the most user-friendly format. To understand them consider the following:
Display: This section will show the processes that have taken over the screen, e.g. an application in full screen mode. This could be a rep programtreatmentmedia like the Movies & TV app or it could be presentation software like PowerPoint. It could also be a screen recording tool like OBS.
System: It will show the system procedures, although these procedures may be called by other running applications. For example, if an audio stream is playing, the audio driver to be used will appear to be preventing the system from shutting down. You will usually be able to see which applications are using the audio device on your system, so shutting down should not be too difficult.
Awaymode: This section displays applications exclusively. It is a command that applications send to Windows 10 and tell it to keep the system awake. Applications can do this through programming.
Conclusion
Some applications are designed to prevent shutdowns from working properly. The suspension of operation will not prevent the system from locking, but while the system is awake, all that is needed is the application e.g. edit a file, you will still be able to do it.