To set your Windows 10 sleep timer, you'll change your Windows sleep settings. In the Search box, search for sleep, and select Power & sleep settings from the results. In the Sleep section, under When plugged in, PC goes to sleep after, select the drop-down box to choose the amount of time you want your computer to remain idle before going to sleep.

To set a shutdown timer in Windows 8, press Windows+X to bring up the Quick Access Menu. Select Run, enter a shutdown command in the box > OK. Or, open Task Scheduler and choose Create Basic Task, enter shutdown > Next. Then, select the start date, shutdown time, and frequency and follow the prompts.


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In addition to giving users the possibility to make Windows 10 faster, the Power Options menu gives users the options to schedule a shutdown, use the hibernate mode in Windows 10, or change startup programs in Windows 10.

Any time you double-click the shutdown shortcut, the timer will start. To cancel the timer, you can create a second shortcut using shutdown -a or enter the shutdown -a command in Command Prompt.

To change the time on the shutdown timer, right-click the shortcut icon, select Properties and change the seconds value in the Target field. From within Properties, you can also assign a different image as the icon.

If you don't want to create a handful of sleep timer shortcuts or constantly edit the one you have to accommodate different time intervals -- or if you just want a graphical interface -- you're better off installing a dedicated program, like PC Sleep or Sleep Timer. These programs will give you additional options, such as the ability to log out, hibernate, set an exact shutdown time or shut down after a length of inactivity.

Automatic shutdown in Windows 10 is one of the features of the Windows operating system, which makes your computer safe and secure. Generally, we prefer our system to properly shutdown every time to lengthen the operating system's life. But sometimes, when you work on your computer late at night, it is really hard to remember to shut down your computer; in those cases, you should use the automatic shutdown scheduler on your computer.

Do you want to schedule an automatic shutdown for your PC or Mac? It's easy to make any desktop or laptop computer turn off or restart at a particular time, either just once or on a regular schedule. This wikiHow tutorial will show you different ways to set a timer that safely shuts down your computer on Windows and macOS.

I have a script I use to shutdown all of the computers at my work location after 4 hours that I run everyday. Lately, I've been getting reports of users computers shutting down in the middle of the day instead of at night when they are supposed to. I'm thinking these users must be receiving the shutdown command while on location and then taking their machine home in either sleep mode or hibernate (after letting the battery die... :/) and when they turn it back on, the shutdown timer continues from where it left off.

However, I sometimes find that at 22:00, I have something I'd like to still do before it completely shuts down. Currently, I just type shutdown /a in the Search box, which completely aborts it, but that means that I again need to manually shut it down.

If you know prior to 22:00 that you need more time, you can simply issue a shutdown /s /t and when the scheduled task runs, it will simply fail stating: A shutdown is already in progress. Please use shutdown /a to abort it.

If the time hits 22:00 and the shutdown is initiated, then you first need to stop the shutdown using shutdown /a before you can start a new one with a longer value, such as shutdown /s /t 1800 giving you 30 minutes from that moment.

Do note, depending on the windows version you're using, this shutdown time value can be huge. Only on Windows Server 2008 and earlier versions of windows, is the maximum time 600 seconds, aka 10 minutes. But on later versions, you can go high. Like 8 hours or more, if you want to. So in theory, if you calculate the exact time you want to end, even if it is like 5 hours before your task starts, you can already make it being ignored once.

Yes; you can abort the shutdown and restart it at your discretion (though there is no way to directly extend* the delay). You just need to search the web on "Windows CMD shutdown" to find your answer:

But I'd like to check if the shutdown /t xx-command is active, to show a button on the website to cancel the shutdown with the shutdown /a command. This is then useful, when you close the website and return back to have the cancel button visible again.

A lot of questions here only consider the detecting of the immediate shutdown process. So my question is if anybody knows if there's a registry entry or a WMI-Value that I can grab if the shutdown /t xx command was raised. Somehow Windows has to "remember" the time though, when it should shut down itself.

It works fine most of the time, but occasionally I get the BlueScreen when turning the computer on, usually before the log on screen and after the Windows logo animation completes. Is this because of turning off the computer directly using the shutdown command, or can there be other issues? I should point out that when ever my autoit script shuts off the computer, usually there are multiple browsers with multiple tabs open, along with other applications running. So I want to know,

What is the difference between shutting off the computer through the start menu, by directly pressing the power button, and by issuing the shutdown command from the autoit script? Is abruptly shutting down the computer using the shutdown command while other user applications are running dangerous in any way?

The shutdown command is what your computer runs when you press the power button (if you have shutdown assigned it), or by shutting down through the start menu. The command is provided by Microsoft, and therefore shouldn't cause a BSOD, especially in your case where the BSOD is happening at startup.

According to the most you can wait is 10 minutes, so if you need to wait longer you would need to add some sort of artificial timer, most likely using something like TIMEOUT if your system supports it (mine doesn't) or ping.

I wrote a simple little Windows application that can shutdown, restart, hibernate etc. your PC after a specified amount of time. I wrote this a few years back but I recently redone the entire project in C# (was VB) and put in on the Microsoft Store so everyone can easily download it. Screenshots can be found on GitHub. I hope you get some use out of it and I would love to hear your feedback.

my name is Toni. i am an IT system. inside the company the attendance of the employees is based on active directory sign-in and sign-out (we can use shut down also of the PC), integrated with people 365. we notice that some users left early but on the system the checkout is on the right time. i mean the standard time to left the work is 4:00 PM, some users left at 3:30 PM but on the attendance schedule the time is 4:00 PM. i am afraid that they are running a shutdown timer on their PC to shutdown after 30 min.

I tried this in terminal: Sudo shutdown 01:00 and I got a message in terminal '' E:/ can`t find the command''The E: drive is my external drive, and C: is my SSD, what can I do to get it to shut down?

Any reference to E:/ tells us that there is some reference to a windows command going on here as linux has no E:/ which is partly why there are comments as to what you really typed, above - please copy/paste commands, don't re-type them!

Afterward, your computer will shut down automatically at the specific time you set in the Task Scheduler. If it is Daily in Step 4 (above), then your computer will auto shutdown every day at the set time.

Very few people may use this feature and are aware of its existence. The capability of scheduling automatic shutdown is a useful feature of Windows. If you work on your computer all day and find it hard to leave your screen for bed, you can schedule auto shutdown for your bedtime.

I love to watch movies on my Windows 7 computer at night. But I usually doze off and forget to shut down my computer. So I intend to shut down my computer at 12:00pm automatically. What should I do? Do I need any extra software to schedule time to shutdown Windows 7?

I have rigged it up to my Test Win2012r2 Hyper-V server........


I install the Intelli Power Manager software....

It finds the UPS, it adds my Win2012 server.....


Here is where I am stuck.....

I create a "Configuration Policy" called Server Shutdown.

I select the 1 server from the list (Target Nodes)

I select "Runtime Threshold Settings" & "Power Source" from the list (Class List)


I leave the "Timer" set as default which is -1s

I set "Remaining Time Limit" to: 6050s (for testing, I want the UPS to hit the threshold within 5 minutes of me pulling the power cord)

I leave the "Remaining Capacity Limit" to 0%

I set "Shutdown Duration" to be 120s (I'd rather my HYPER-V Suspend the VM's rather than shutdown in this test case).

The Power Source is set for the UPS (hostname of UPS)

The Load segment is selected as "Master Output" , which I assume means ALL outlets


However, I pull the power cord, UPS battery kicks in, alerts flash up on my server saying

"Runtime Threshold reached in 5mins 4 secs" , etc and displays again short while later, etc..

But when it gets to "Runtime Threshold reached in 0 Seconds", nothing happens.... Server continues to run, 10 minutes later, server is still running, it has not received a shutdown request ???


Help !!!

Theconfiguration policies are only for VMware and Citrix. To get IPM to shut downHyper-V you enable shutdown and configure there like a normal windowsshutdown. 


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