1. monitor turned off
- Posted by tone.skoda at gmx.net Feb 11, 2003
- 514 views
Can I find out, with code, if monitor was turned off? Or can I turn off monitor with code?
2. Re: monitor turned off
- Posted by "Carl W." <euphoria at cyreksoft.yorks.com> Feb 11, 2003
- 471 views
tone.skoda at gmx.net wrote: > Can I find out, with code, if monitor was turned off? > Or can I turn off monitor with code? Not without specific hardware. The cable connecting a computer to a monitor is (usually) one-way. As for turning a monitor off, most CRT monitors have a physical on/off switch due to the large voltages generated inside them. It would be totally impossible to flip such a switch using software alone. You might have better luck if you can find a way to send the monitor into standby mode (if it has one) instead - to do that you would need to interface with the graphics and monitor drivers and send the right calls. Most operating systems detect whether the screen is on or off by asking the user: "Can you see this message?". If the answer is yes, chances are the screen is on. Of course, you could go 'mad scientist' and build a hardware/software interface with power switching relays and stuff. ;) -- [ Carl R White == aka () = The Domain of Cyrek = ] [ Cyrek the Illogical /\ www.cyreksoft.yorks.com ]
3. Re: monitor turned off
- Posted by tone.skoda at gmx.net Feb 11, 2003
- 463 views
I thought it wasn't possible. Monitor supports standby. Is standby same as turning off monitor? For example, is better to turn off monitor overnight or just leave it to go into standby mode? ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl W." <euphoria at cyreksoft.yorks.com> To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> Subject: Re: monitor turned off > > tone.skoda at gmx.net wrote: > > > Can I find out, with code, if monitor was turned off? > > Or can I turn off monitor with code? > > Not without specific hardware. The cable connecting a computer to a monitor > is (usually) one-way. > > As for turning a monitor off, most CRT monitors have a physical on/off > switch due to the large voltages generated inside them. It would be totally > impossible to flip such a switch using software alone. > > You might have better luck if you can find a way to send the monitor into > standby mode (if it has one) instead - to do that you would need to > interface with the graphics and monitor drivers and send the right calls. > > Most operating systems detect whether the screen is on or off by asking the > user: > "Can you see this message?". If the answer is yes, chances are the screen is > on. > > Of course, you could go 'mad scientist' and build a hardware/software > interface with power switching relays and stuff. ;) > > -- > [ Carl R White == aka () = The Domain of Cyrek = ] > [ Cyrek the Illogical /\ www.cyreksoft.yorks.com ] > > > > TOPICA - Start your own email discussion group. FREE! >
4. Re: monitor turned off
- Posted by rubis at fem.unicamp.br Feb 11, 2003
- 475 views
Better in standy. The most critical "moment" in the life of the monitors and other circuits is the power up, when all the capacitors are charged and generate a big current flow through diodes and voltage regulators. Rubens At 15:18 11/2/2003, you wrote: > >I thought it wasn't possible. >Monitor supports standby. Is standby same as turning off monitor? >For example, is better to turn off monitor overnight or just leave it to go >into standby mode? > > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Carl W." <euphoria at cyreksoft.yorks.com> >To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> >Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2003 1:48 PM >Subject: Re: monitor turned off > > > > tone.skoda at gmx.net wrote: > > > > > Can I find out, with code, if monitor was turned off? > > > Or can I turn off monitor with code? > > > > Not without specific hardware. The cable connecting a computer to a >monitor > > is (usually) one-way. > > > > As for turning a monitor off, most CRT monitors have a physical on/off > > switch due to the large voltages generated inside them. It would be >totally > > impossible to flip such a switch using software alone. > > > > You might have better luck if you can find a way to send the monitor into > > standby mode (if it has one) instead - to do that you would need to > > interface with the graphics and monitor drivers and send the right calls. > > > > Most operating systems detect whether the screen is on or off by asking >the > > user: > > "Can you see this message?". If the answer is yes, chances are the screen >is > > on. > > > > Of course, you could go 'mad scientist' and build a hardware/software > > interface with power switching relays and stuff. ;) > > > > -- > > [ Carl R White == aka () = The Domain of Cyrek = ] > > [ Cyrek the Illogical /\ www.cyreksoft.yorks.com ] > > > > > > TOPICA - Start your own email discussion group. FREE! > > > > > >TOPICA - Start your own email discussion group. FREE!
5. Re: monitor turned off
- Posted by gertie at visionsix.com Feb 11, 2003
- 485 views
On 11 Feb 2003, at 19:18, tone.skoda at gmx.net wrote: > > I thought it wasn't possible. > Monitor supports standby. Is standby same as turning off monitor? > For example, is better to turn off monitor overnight or just leave it to go > into > standby mode? That's impossible to tell, by looking at it or thru the email, really. For instance, turning a tv off with a remote control only sets it to the same standby mode as the monitor. It hasto stay awake at very low power consumption to be looking for the "on" command or the existance of incoming video signal again. If you don't have it on a UPS or surge protector to protect it, turn it off manually when you leave it. Otherwise, let the puter put it to sleep, it should be cold when you come back to it in the morning. If not cold, it's not a decent powerdown mode. There is a gotcha to autopowerdowns: the puter could freeze up. Let the OS power the video or harddrives down, not the bios. If i let the bios power down the harddrives, win95 freezes. If i let win95 power off the screen, win95 freezes when turning the screen back on. (this is not hardware or driver related, it's happened on several computers.) If anything has a harddrive powered down, and an application wants to use it, the application usually crashes or reports a drive error. So i disabled all powerdown options, and i use the on-off button when i want it on or off. Not letting the drives power down will reduce the life of any drives over 5400 rpm, but some of my drives have been going 24-7, 99.5% of the time, since 1994. Kat