Power Manager can power on a Mac, run a series of tasks, and power off the Mac without requiring any interaction. With Power Manager you can create sophisticated energy saving schedules and automate complex tasks.

An event might tell the computer to perform a particular action at a specific time. You can create separate events to power on your Mac at different times across the day or week. By creating multiple events, you build a unique schedule for your needs.


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Events can be as simple as putting the Mac to sleep after a period of inactivity; or as complex as powering on your Mac, waiting for a user to log-in, and only then running an AppleScript or Automator workflow.

Power Manager lets you focus on what needs to be done instead of learning about configuration files, user sessions, and other technical edge cases. Power Manager helps you avoid the frustration that can make seemingly simple tasks difficult.

Yes, deploying Power Manager across an organisation is easy. We provide administrator and technical support to help you get the most from your decision. Power Manager scales and includes numerous features designed explicitly for large networks.

We have a specially packaged edition of Power Manager. The packaged edition is a standard Installer package that can be deployed quickly and easily with most network management tools. The Installer package requires no pre-installation or post-installation scripts and can be installed onto a non-booted system volume.

Since beginning Power Manager in 1997, our customers have grown to include household names. We have customers across the world ranging from multi-national businesses, museums, and academic organisations; to consultants and individuals who use Power Manager to craft unique personalised schedules.

Users are shown count downs, notifications, and warnings before events that might affect their use of the computer. This behaviour is ideal for computer labs or where computers are shared by multiple people.

Like the tip of an iceberg, Power Manager reveals only a small fraction of what is possible. As your schedule evolves and becomes more sophisticated, you will delight in discovering that Power Manager is already able to do what you considered impossible.

There is nothing you can not do via the command line tool pmctl. The tool provides complete control over Power Manager. The graphical user interface updates immediately as command line settings are issued.

What happens instead, is that the screen goes blank, but the suspend does not happen (the lights on my computer case do not flash). Upon waking it up and logging in, the tasks in my custom SystemD After=suspend.target service does not run. I need to run systemctl cancel for them to run.

If I turn the computer off, then the computer doesn't shut off. Instead it goes into suspend mode. After I press the power button, a line or 2 extra appears in the shutdown process, then the computer shuts down normally.

There is some error in journalctl --boot=0. This makes me think it's Nvidia driver having an error, but there's been a driver update lately, which didn't fix things. There are fewer errors reported though.

The second command is also needed, or for some reason when I resume, there is no login manager, just a black screen with my mouse cursor. My login manager is the lightdm-webkit-theme-aether package in Arch Linux.

Maybe try with 15 minutes, but I don't see why that should be any different. Its just a timeout. Does the log file (for both the 1 and 15 minute tests) have anything interesting? You should see when the timeout gets triggered - hoping maybe there is something else at that time when it fails.

You can see in the log file where it now sets up to use the logind suspend backend. Does your /etc/systemd/logind.conf contain default values - especially for "HandleSuspendKey"? (should be set to suspend).

The xfce power manager is repeating, incessantly: "Your battery is charging", "Your battery is fully charged", "Your battery is charging", "Your battery is fully charged", "Your battery is charging", "Your battery is fully charged"... etc.

This has never happened before. The most likely explanation is that there is some short causing the power to keep dropping. I'm not aware of any loose connections or problems with my power supply. I'm sat in a cafe I've never sat in before. I can't say for sure.

At the time, I thought it might have had something to do withthe interaction between battery capacity loss andcharging thresholds.Lithium-ion batteries lose capacity over time,so maybe at some point in the battery's lifetimethe charge threshold would be right at the edge,leading to a flurry of notificationsuntil the capacity dropped enough to be out of range.The last full charge of my battery was at 95.10% of design capacity:

Notes: I implemented a 120 second "flap timer" that is reset each time one ofthe notifications specifically for battery full/charging/discharging occurswhile the other types of notifications are shown as usual.

Also the last charge state the system settles into once flapping stops maynot be shown and it would be trivial to set an event callback timer each timea notification is suppressed to eventually show the "final state" if flappingstopped since the timer was set.

Added flapping suppression for a laptop that continually reverts between 99%and 100% and spams the screen with charging/discharging/fullycharged messagesto the point where the notifications occurred many times per minute.

Right now, if the laptop is plugged in, the 'battery is charging' bubble/tipkeeps flashing on and off in the right hand corner. Also with this laptop ifI head into the xfce4-power-manager the lid close and power button optionsare greyed out.

The power manager / battery keeps popping up a notification telling me mylaptop battery is charging, then a second later, tells me it's fully charged.But I haven't unplugged the power, and I never had this issue with Ubuntuproper.

...but it has an issue with the power. It is like the battery will charge to100%, start discharging, then fully charge again every few seconds. Xfcepower manager will notify me every second of the current status: "Yourbattery is charging" > "Your battery is fully charged". I thought it mighthave been a bug with Ubuntu, but it will do it while it is sleeping too (thebattery LED on the back will flash every few seconds the same way). Is mybattery or power supply just begging to be replaced? Would I be able to fixin software? I could probably disable power manager notifications, but thatfeels more like a bandaid.

Two days ago I noticed that my screen was not blanking in the normal time. I tried re-installing, but that did not seem to help. Rebooting does not help. I did a search engine search and found instructions for clearing the session cache.

Well, I ran the debug command as asked, and then watched it. It gave a lot of output quickly, so I copied what was there and was ready to post it, when I noticed that it was not actually finished when a few more lines of output appeared. So I sat back and thought about it. Would my using the computer during this time cause a problem (I reduced the screen blank to 3 minutes for this testing), so I waited around five minutes, no new output. I then went to a different desktop and did some other things for a while, when I came back it was repeating those lines referencing the battery, once every few minutes or so. Then there was that one line about the alarm activity, then more repetitions of the battery state. Eventually I used CNTRL C and killed the process.

For some reason, xfce4-power-manager is not recognizing and interfacing with DPMS on your system. I'm not sure why this is happening. On my Xubuntu 16.04 system, when I run xfce4-power-manager in debug mode, I get messages like:

OK, running that now, but no DPMS listed so far, I will post the log a bit later. Out of curiosity, I checked Synaptic for DPMS, and while three packages were listed (bindings extension, debug and dev), none were installed. Should I install those and test again?

I ran debug again, and again it does not seem to finish, so I killed it. I will try again later when I go out, and am not tempted to interfere. I changed the timeout to three minutes while debug was running, and it took notice. I let it timeout a couple of times, you will see this entry toward the end within the repetitive batter state messages:

This exists in your current debug log file that was not the last one. chromium-browser is inhibiting DPMS (preventing screen blanking). Try logging out and back in again, don't start anything, and see if the screen blanking works.

Interesting. That worked. Typically I have Chromium running whenever I am logged in. In the past there was no issue. So it appears that some recent change to Chromium is causing the issue? Is there something I should do about this? Or someplace else I should report it?

Just looked on my system, and chromium-browser fires off an inhibit signal when I play a video. Interestingly, firefox does not. So it does appear that chromium-browser behaves differently. I don't use chromium-browser so I'm not sure of past behaviour, but given what you've posted here, it does look like a change.

Oh, I also tried just closing the browser without the log out, that also worked. The normal pages open, my homepage and Gmail, do not have any video running on them. I just tried waiting the timeout with just this tab open, so it isn't my normal pages that are at issue.

Greetings, I seem to be having some issues disabling power notifications. Is there a way to change the service to not display gui popups about battery states. Preferably something I can place in bashrc or a service I can disable for next boot. Thank you for your time.

This worked for me at least. Mine was set to 'no' so I would have to start xfce4-power-manager manually. By changing the value to 'yes' it now starts at login automatically without any further configuration.

The basic issue is when I try to configure power manager the software fails to detect the UPS when scanning COM3 for the device. It tries 3 methods to connect then presents the error "setup was unable to find a ups device. please check your connections and select back to start again." 152ee80cbc

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