Step 1: From the Windows button menu, go to the control panel and double click power options. By now your laptop will not shut down when you close the lid and therefore you will be able to keep downloads going on.
Make use of the Firefox and chrome AutoShutdown extension for those using the firefox browser. With this extension comes, comes a custom OS command that will command your laptop to shutdown when all download tasks are done.
This helps to avoid heating problems for your laptop since the lid is close to the rest of the body and also controls and saves on your electricity bill. No inbuilt power settings to tweak. No command to run. Fine, there are two ways you can keep downloads active when you have closed the lid of your Mac. The good thing about the app is that it is free. Step 2: Download Insomnia X and use the un acrchiver tool to decompress the downloaded file.
Step 4: When you bring the cursor to the insomnia X app in the horizontal menu bar, it will bring a drop down list of options. Your mac will keep active, downloads will go on even when the lid is closed. Step 5: If you can estimate the time your download will take which is difficult due to many factors involved , you can set the time you want this app to keep the laptop active and then it will shutdown automatically thereafter.
Please remember that you will have to change settings in Insomnia X whenever you will need to keep downloads active, so once you restart, these settings will not hold. Graced with all these devices, connect each of them to your Mac laptop and ensure they are properly functioning. Once you close the lid when downloads are active, a Mac laptop will turn to the external display leaving all computing tasks active including the download jobs. To revert back to normal display usage; open its lid and it will return back to its monitor for Mac Os For earlier versions, you just need to unplug the display, close and open it.
There's nothing worse than picking up your phone, turning it on, only to realize the notification it's just received was probably supposed to have reached you 10 minutes or, you know, hours ago.
Annoyingly, the root cause of this is frequently Android itself, trying to manage your phone's battery life by forcing "low" priority apps to go to sleep, with the end result being those delayed notifications. Fortunately, Android does offer you the ability to configure this behavior on some level, on an app-by-app basis, so that you can be more confident that notifications will be received when they're sent, not when your phone decides you should get them. Fixing this is relatively simple, and though the Battery Optimization feature may seem a little confusing at first, it really is just a few quick steps to resolve this annoying issue.
The below steps should work for most Android phones with Oreo Android 8. Some smartphone manufacturers, however, completely replace Android's battery optimization for their own implementations. In those cases, you'll need to consult a manufacturer-specific tutorial. That's it — though you will need to repeat that process for each app which you want to keep awake in the background. These settings should survive a reboot of your phone and will allow these apps to run normally.
If you ever want to turn the battery optimization back on, just go back to that same menu, and find the apps you've exempted in the "not optimized" list. If you have a Samsung device running One UI, Samsung provides another way to control sleeping background apps. It's somewhat easier to use, and can supersede but also kind of duplicate the OS-level battery optimization setting.
If you do have a Samsung phone, make sure you've set this up as well as the above battery optimization setting to make sure an app doesn't go to sleep. If you tell the Android OS not to optimize the battery life of an app, but not the Samsung settings, your phone may still put it to sleep.
Start the Settings app and find Battery Optimization in the Apps section.
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