You should not power down any computer -- physical or virtual -- with the power button unless absolutely necessary; operating systems need to be shut down cleanly and follow specific steps during the shutdown process to avoid data corruption.

The power button on our servers deals AFAIK only with shutting down the hardware; there is no communication iwth the XenServer/Citrix Hypervisor OS, which is why the power button is not a good idea to use on probably most servers since there s no tie-in between the button and the OS running on that hardware. In your case, the power button does nothing at all?


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Is anyone aware if there is a way to remove to power button completely from the windows 10 start menu. The reason I ask is that in a VDI solution we would prefer to remove that component from the user. As when the user logs off the VDI it shutsdown automatically.

When I use the GPO to remove the shutdown, restart and hibernate command in windows 10, it leaves the power button visible, but if a user clicks on it, its simply a grey box which may be a little confusing.

Sorry...but I have similar Topics...but my expierence all over the years (because we are using VDIs since many years) this visible power button is not a Problem for the users and not generating incidents. We are using the configuration to hide shutdown and restart and keeping the power button as it is and had never an incident about that. And...believe me the users who are using this System are not Special...are well prepared.

Just bought a WD Elements 2Tb desktop drive, for use in windows 10, there are no user instructions in the box just a quick install guide for connecting it to the PC, there is no mention of how to use the power button, the WD elements powers up with the PC, and powers down when using safely remove hardware icon, but does not power up using the power button when the PC is in use, anyone know what the power button is for.

The power button on the back of the WD Elements drive simply reduce the electricity supply on the drive if you want to manually put the hard drive in Stand by mode. Moreover, if you need to access the drive and it is already connected to your computer which is already running then you can simply wake up the drive by pressing the power button again and it will be connected to your already up and running computer so that you can access the drive without disconnecting or reconnecting the drive physically from the computer.

Hi, the buttons on top of the machine are not designed to turn off the machine. One is meant to be used to cancel the current print. The other only turns the screen module off. There is no hardware present to turn the whole machine off except the power switch on the back.

Use cases of turning the machine off fully can include saving 30W when not in use, increased protection against surges when not in use, increased lifetime of a power supply through less capacitor wear, fewer LEDs illuminated at night in home spaces, or restarting to troubleshoot.

You could plug the printer into any assortment of power bar/inline switches which would allow the machine to be power on and off easier. You could even get fancy and use a Wifi plug so you can turn it on and off remotely.

If the reason you're powering off a computer is because of a problem with Windows Update, see How to Fix a Stuck Windows Update for some other ideas. Sometimes a hard power-down is the best way to go, but not always.

If your device has a broken power button, it's vital that you only use the software to restart and not just to shut down. If the power button isn't working, it also won't work to turn the device back on. You can restart iOS or an Android device without using the power button: [Restart iOS Without a Power Button] or [Restart Android Without a Power Button].

Depending on whether your computer is running on a battery, like if you're using a laptop, there will be two options here; one for when you're using a battery and the other for when the computer is plugged in. You can have the power button do something different for either scenario. If you can't change these settings, you might first have to select the link called Change settings that are currently unavailable. If the hibernate option isn't available, run the powercfg /hibernate on command from an elevated Command Prompt, close down every open Control Panel window, and start over at Step 1.

An easy way to remember: 0 = false, meaning no power or off; and 1 = true, or on. (In the case of I/O, the 'I' represents 1.) So, if a switch is turned to I, it's in the On position. If it's turned to O, it's in the Off position.

I am wondering where the settings for what happens after pressing the power button are...I use xfce4-power-manager and I have set it to do not do anything when the power button is pressed, yet when I do the system suspends.

All of a sudden the power button on my Square Register is not working at all. It's not stuck, you can click it, but pressing it in does not do anything. A long hold does not bring up the restart screen and a few nights ago the Register got unplugged and it took the strength of mighty thor of very hard pressing for a minute to somehow get it to turn back on.

I have a G15 which suddenly stopped turning on. If you hold the power button down it does turn on and presents the setup scree to set date and time etc. But you can't do anything because as soon as you let go of the powerbutton it just turns off. Anybody else had the same issue and know what to do to resolve it? Canon want $200 just to look at it!!!

What is the condition of your battery ? Although if it were weak or defective I doubt it would even turn on...it seems to me there is an internal problem in the power circuitry...many reasons that could do that and all require service.

This definitely was an engineering miss- likely related to waterproofing. But allowing wake from any button would go a long way to resolving issues presented by the power button. And it seems it should be an easy software fix.

I agree with you the button is narrow and shallow which makes it difficult to operate. Allowing wake from any button will be great but it should be easier to fully power down the unit whenever you want to. It is a basic function that simply should work better!

Good news first: the back button worked much better on the display unit when compared to the one I sent back. Less wobbly around the sides and easier to operate. This makes me think there is some sort of QC issue with these first units. 


I think there is inconsistency (hit and miss) on waking in general - whether via the app or the power button. Particularly the app. Woke up this morning and opened the app. Roam still showed as offline. Used the power button - it woke. (Button gave no clear feedback - but light turned on).

I'm having this problem too. The Roam power button has absolutely no tactile feedback and I can't tell if I have operated it or not. There are times when I hold it down and nothing happens and other times it seems like it does. Pretty flaky really for an otherwise good device. As as example it took me several goes to get the Bluetooth led to come on

I will remark that it was difficult to get it into Bluetooth pairing mode though I did achieve it after about 5 minutes of trying. Typically holding the button for several (more than 5) seconds only resulted in the unit turning on or off!.

I have a similar issue with the Power button and am disappointed to hear it is likely to switch on if you put the speakers in a bag or rucksack .. as the whole point is for the speakers to be mobile. Otherwise the design, with the exception of the Power button, is great and the audio is terrific,

I had a similar thing happen to me on the Pro XXL but as its a similar setup this is what I did. It might be the connectors on the back of the power button touching the front bolt securing the aluminum beam/extrusion to the hybrid table. Its a fairly close fit in there so i removed the front plate with the power button and added electrical tape around the connectors/wires and bent a pin on the back of the connector ever so slightly to clear that bolt.

EDIT: Its been a while but if memory serves me well while the plate was off i may have also added a strip of electrical tape to the bolt passing through the right aluminum beam/extrusion as an added measure. Also in my case I seem to remember the button still worked as an on/off switch but the blue LED was always lit. Pretty sure its a 3 pin button (pwr, gnd, led) so i was probably shorting the pin to light up the led but in your case you may be shorting a different pin. Just guessing but might be worth investigating.

What I did was not tighten the nut on the back side of the mounting plate, left it loose enough that the power button housing wiggles in the hole and then it would be able to press and depress. I only finger tightened the first time but for some reason that prevented it from working. Left it loose and success.

I opened the panel and tried the button and it operated like normal. A little further investigating revealed a nick in the black wire. It must have been shorted to ground. I taped it and everything works normally now.

Jumping on this thread. Any possibility in the future of being to assign different functions to the power button light, either say SSD activity or make it user controllable via some method for notifications etc?

When you hit the power button, the script /etc/acpi/powerbtn.sh is called. So one option is to modify this script to just call the shutdown script, bypassing the power management daemon. This works across all distributions and environments that I know of. 2351a5e196

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