Score:0

Manually block sleep and screen locking - Suspend Problem

de flag

On Kubuntu 22.04
In the Battery and Brightness settings in the taskbar I have the following options and wonder what is the purpose:

(unticked): “Manually block sleep and screen locking.” “Activity Manager is currently blocking sleep and screen locking (This activity's policies prevent screen power management)”

And I have ticked the manual blocking but it returns back to unticked after each booting.

I never used that Activity Manager and wonder why is it doing that and what's the meaning and consequence of this?

Because sometimes I noticed when I close the laptop’s lid it seems not to be really in suspend (which is ticked in Power Management settings - sometimes I hear the hard drive starts spinning)

And the battery consumption is pretty high in suspend, which is about 12%/h which I never experienced in older laptops. This now is an VivoBook-ASUSLaptop-X513EA-K513EA.

Once the laptop battery was charged at 18%, I opened Firefox (having around 7-8 tabs open from last session) and suddenly really within two seconds the battery was at 0%, the device turned in suspend mode immediately. . . shock !

Score:0
de flag

To get rid of "Manually block sleep and screen locking" it has to be on "Do not use special settings" in the Energieverwaltung (German System), somthing like Power Management or Energy Saving, there in the second menu Energy settings for activities .

It is then really in suspend when the lid is closed. Before it was on Define a special behavior Regarding the energy consumption I am using now Gnome Disks and have set to suspend the second HDD after 10seconds. That helps a lot.

I sit in a Tesla and translated this thread with Ai:

mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.