Windows Power Schemes – Set and Forget to Reduce Your Electricity Bill
Posted by: Barry Cleave in Windows OS, tags: Independent Review, Power Saving, Pro Reviewer, Utilities, Windows, WIndows Vista, Windows XP
What’s This About?
Windows Control Panel provides a means to customize settings for when various power saving options are triggered following a set period of “inactivity” (no use of keyboard or mouse). For a Desktop PC (rather than a laptop) these include:
- Turn Off Monitor
- Turn Off Hard Disks
- System Standby
- System Hibernate
There is also an option to select what happens when the PC power button is pressed.
Optimizing these settings to suit you personal use can bring benefits in saving electricity, reducing wear on hard drives and cutting costs.
This article is part of a series on power saving.
Why Would You Want to Use It?
Whether you run your PC 24/7 or just switch it on for occasional use you can still make a difference to your bills by using these settings. Laptop users will probably be more familiar with power saving as this is a way to reduce the drain on the battery when not connected to the charger. Laptop manufacturers often provide more sophisticated power saving utilities that allow more options to conserve battery power. Windows Vista also has more options than XP.
This article is based on XP and is for Desktops only. Vista is very similar, but with more comprehensive options in a slightly different interface. The Laptop version of Power Options Properties provides additional tabs and options for when the Laptop is running on batteries or on mains power.
What Does It Do - The Essentials?
Summary:
- Turns off monitor after a predefined period of inactivity
- Turns off hard disks after a predefined period of inactivity
- System goes to Standby after a predefined period of inactivity
- System Hibernates after a predefined period of inactivity
- Set Power Button action to:
- Do Nothing
- Ask
- Standby
- Hibernate
- Shutdown
- Enable Hibernation
- Configure UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply)
Pros: What’s Good?
Features & Benefits
- Part of standard Windows OS

- Multiple Schemes
- Versatile
- Easy to set
Cons:What’s Not So Good?
- No time schedule to change schemes
- Limited options in XP
e.g. Disable during media playback
More About What it Does in Detail:
Go to Page 2 for details and screenshots
Go to Page 3 for ProReviewer Summary
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September 30th, 2008 at 6:07 am - Edit
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