I have a fresh install of windows 11, though this was an issue with win10 too. I also have an OLED monitor.

I have to always turn the monitor off entirely when not using it unless I shut down the computer- otherwise, windows will leave the screen on, even when locked (and even if I initially sleep it completely. Maybe my cats bump the mouse in the evening and it wakes up forever)

With an OLED this contributes to pretty bad burn in. I tried telling it to turn the screen off after one minute, with no effect….

Any tips? I once setup some scripts to force sleep, but that really doesn’t seem the right solution here.

I do have windows hello enabled, but even disabling that doesn’t seem to help. It happens both on a lock screen and when I leave it alone on the desktop.

Thanks for any tips

  • @DragonAce
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    9
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    1 year ago

    This sounds like a driver issue with your particular monitor. I’ve run into this before and often times its the Windows self installed driver being used for your monitor. I would suggest going to the vendor website and seeing if they have any updated or universal drivers for your particular monitor. There may be more to your particular issue, but its a good place to start if nothing else.

    • @PixelPlumberOP
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      -41 year ago

      Oh just to be clear, I don’t mean like the monitor has power, I mean windows is wanting to display it’s fancy Lock Screen at all times. I’ll still try that, if it makes a difference this is an Alienware.

      • @davidgro
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        91 year ago

        What they are saying is that the driver Windows is using is trying to tell it to turn off the backlight (but leave the screen on) like it would do with an LCD, but OLED doesn’t have a separate backlight. It needs the right driver to know how to power down that monitor.

        • @PixelPlumberOP
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          41 year ago

          Ah gotcha. Will be home soon to try that.

          What I find silly is that Linux has no problem handling it :(. Trying to use that more and more, with the lack of hdr being the last holdout

  • Virtual Insanity
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    11 year ago

    Same issue here, and I know a few people that have it on most cases LCD, not OLED, but I funny think that’s relevant.

    The mechanism for turning a display off is to simply stop sending a signal.

    There was a time when I cared more and actually did into it and windows 10 and 11 do have issues going into standby in in some configurations, with some hardware.

    I once pinned down a console command that could actually tell you (cryptically of course) what things were going on that prevented standby or sleep.

    Comes as no surprise that Linux does this better… But sadly I’m my case I couldn’t use Linux.