MBP C2D Restarting when closing the lid

Every once in a while when I close the lid on my MBP, the computer restarts. When I open the lid it finishes the restart process and runs normally. Any ideas why this would all of a sudden start happening??

Wait for the light on the release button to start blinking before moving the laptop. The sudden motion sensor can act up as you move the laptop when it's still in the process of 'falling asleep'.

Similar Messages

  • Equium A60-692 won't restart after closing the lid

    Most annoying, the only thing I can do is hold the power button to switch off &switch back on again. Is there some combination of keys i should be pressing to bring her back form the brink after closing the lid, or is this a fault?
    Thanks

    Usually when the memory size changes, the system can recover.
    Remove the battery and AC Adapter, then remove one of the Memory Modules, and power up.

  • Problems with sound when closing the lid (MBP and Yosemite)

    Hi
    i have a MBP and Yosemite.
    Before the update i could close the lid when watching movies on the mac and connecting to HDMI to my TV and the sound and images worked OK ( i uses insomnia X for being able to close the lid)
    After the update, when i close the lid the images works but the sound doesn't come out from the TV but from the mac.
    it was working before and not anymore.. anybody knows what this ca be?
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    dogan100 
    First time around, they gave me an apple tv for the inconvenience........ I will keep you guys posted once I find out more from the Apple Store.
    Free Apple TV eh? Thats rather outstanding for a creaking on the plastic hinge cover.
    Nice video, the "old door" sound of soft creaking plastic.    Thats not the (2 of them) hinge sound, which (ive only heard one make the noise, on an old air) is a 'grrr' sound of the alloy creating a rubbing noise.
    Yes, find out what the Apple store says.  Pretty obviously the plastic hinge cover, which does nothing, is cosmetic and doesnt affect anything.
    There could be a crack in the hinge cover I cant see that obviously. Another option is the cover isnt snapped into place correctly.
    I wouldnt worry about it, its ultimately nothing, but youll get it serviced and fixed when you get to Apple.
    Im shocked they just outright gave you a free AppleTV, thats a great 'deal' (meaning free), and top notch from Apple
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  • Tecra M7 : new bios shutdowns the digitizer when closing the lid.

    it took me a moment to find the problem : power saving ? attacking wacom ? no. some very stupid "feature" in the new bios from Toshiba.
    quote from the toshiba download site:
    *Version 1.70 - 2006-10-24*
    *Incorporated Intel requirements for improved stability.*
    **Made changes to ensure that the digitizer is not activated when the LCD is closed.**
    *Version 1.60 - 2006-09-21*
    *Changed the temperature parameters.*
    i have no idea what they were thinking but since when i move i often close the lid, it's very, very annoying because i need to reboot in order to get my tablet working again. the more recent features are not a matter, i'll keep xp pro.
    now give me a download link to get the version 1.6 of the tecra M7 bios. thanks in advance, i count on you.

    Hello
    Fact is that Toshiba offers all tablet PCs with WXP tablet edition and many additional software that offer full functionality when you use this tablet PC in tablet or normal mode.
    So, in my opinion you should use tablet edition and install all available Toshiba tools and utilities.
    I dont have much experience with tablet PCs but if you check Toshiba Europe support and download page under http://eu.computers.toshiba-europe.com > Support & Download you will see that your Tecra is fully supported for WXP tablet edition and you can download all necessary stuff.
    Interesting is that there is also ready for download Installation instruction document with exact installation order.
    You can also visit Canadian download page under http://209.167.114.38/support/Download/ln_bymodel.asp and see what is available there.
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    Sorry I cannot tell you more about all this.

  • Screen not turning off when closing the lid

    I have Windows 7 64-bit installed on my MacBook Air 13.3" as the only OS.
    Everything is working great with the bootcamp drivers except that when I close the lid the screen does not turn off. I don't want to turn off the notebook but only want the screen to turn off when the lid is down. I have looked a lot for a solution and am not able to find anything which can solve this problem.
    There is nothing in the power options that can be done. Bootcamp is supposed to recognize this by itself, but unfortunately it doesn't.
    Does anyone know a work around for this?
    Thank you

    That is correct. I have noticed the same thing. Windows 7 gives better battery life on MacBook Air then Mac OSX.
    I went to talk to a Genius about this, pretty useless, told me to wait for an update. It has been half a year but no update yet. This is the only problem with the Bootcamp drivers I have experienced. I have managed to live with it, but is still pretty annoying. I always once in a while think about finding a way to fix it, but there is nothing that can fix this problem. Unless someone at Apple sees and listens to what is going on in the online fourms and fix the problem.

  • My MBP freezes when closing the lid.

    Problem started after I installed Lion.

    Sorry, I didn't have any answer. But I did'nt have this problem for a while now. I have to say too, because maybe the problem is there for me, that my machine's motherboard have some issues and I'm working with an external hard drive in the USB port. I'm waiting for a new motherboard from Apple. Maybe my problems are caused by the motherboard.

  • MBP Core 2 Duo randomly restarts when closing lid

    Randomly my 2.33 Core 2 Duo restarts when closing the lid instead of going to sleep.
    A real pain when your in the middle of something
    Anyone know a fix ?
    Recently had a new logic board (due to faulty graphics card) and hoped this might also cure the restart at sleep problem. Did not.
    Advice welcome.
    Thanks

    I would suggest you to reset the power manager to check whether the issue resolves. If the issue persists please contact Apple Authorized Service provider for further troubleshooting.
    In this case I suspect the logic board or may be the sensors as a issue but to confirm it is always good to contact an AASP for further troubleshooting.
    To reset the Power manager refer this article http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303319

  • Keeping internet GPRS connection while closing the lid of the powerbook

    I fixed the bluetooth problem that my connection to my Internet access provider was hanging evry 2-3 mn by properly stting the preferences in PPP options.
    Now when I am travelling for a quite long train period I would like to close the lid without deconnecting, and the same would be also nice for iTunes, I would like to be able to keep listening music while the lid is closed. How to have those activities on while the rest is sleeping?
    The same would be true for an iChat session running that depends on the existence of the internet connection.
    Is there any way to do that by setting properly some additional functions?
    Thanks for any help.

    There are programs available that'll allow you to prevent your laptop from sleeping when closing the lid. Not recommended though, since the cooling airflow is thus interrupted and the computer will therefore heat up the screen alongside other sensitive components.
    I'd suggest switching bluetooth and airport off, reducing the performance of the cpu (in "energy saver") and lowering the brightness of the display. This'll keep you running for up to three hours, provided you don't try to play dvd's, on a 15" PB. the 12"'s have been known to last a bit longer.
    Otherwise, get an iPod
    B.

  • MBP (13-inch, early 2011) goes into hibernation instead of safe sleep upon closing the lid (only when using battery power)

    MBP details
    13-inch MacBook Pro, early 2011 (model identifier: MacBookPro8,1)
    Running Yosemite, OS X 10.10.1 (however, problem started while using Mavericks)
    2.5 GHz Intel Core i5
    4 GB memory
    Symptoms
    * the MBP goes into hibernation instead of sleep upon closing the lid on battery power (i.e.,  when AC adapter is NOT connected)
      -- problem does not occur when AC adapter is connected
    * putting the computer to sleep by other means does not induce the problem; these other means include:
      -- [i] option+command+Power,
      -- [ii] Apple Icon --> Sleep,
      -- [iii] in Terminal: pmset sleepnow
    * the battery is NOT getting drained at all; if I close the lid on 87%, the battery is still at about 87% when I get the MBP back up and running
    To be as clear as possible:
    (1) MBP is on and in use  (power source: battery); battery is at X%
    (2) the lid is then closed
    (3) the battery indicator light glows bright for about 10 seconds, then shuts off, and with it so does the MBP (all fans and sounds cease)
    (4) opening the lid and pressing any key on the keyboard does nothing (the computer is not sleeping)
    (5) to turn the MBP back on, I must hit the power button once; this brings up  and the gray screen and loading bar indicative of returning from hibernation
    (6) log in; battery is still at X%
    Attempted Solutions / Fixes
    There are Apple Discussions addressing similar MBP issues, many of which at least have work-arounds, if not full-blown solutions. However, I have tried many of the proposed work-arounds and solutions; nothing has solved my problem. Such attempted solutions include:
      * made sure EFI/SMC firmware was up to date
      * updated all software
      * logged in as a different user
      * booted in Safe Mode
      * reset the PRAM
      * repaired disk permissions using Disk Utility
      * repaired additional disk permissions in recovery mode (a la this chron.com advice)
      * ran the Apple Hardware Test multiple times (short test while plugged in, short test on battery, extended test while plugged in, extended test on battery)
      * booted from an external known-good OS on USB drive
      * reseated the RAM
      * used MemTest to test the RAM's health (it was good)
      * tested my battery's health with the app Battery Health (it is healthy!)
      * booted my computer with one stick of the MBP's original RAM at a time (figured "why not?")
      * booted my computer using other sticks of RAM
      * checked my power management settings using PMSET in the terminal (e.g., pmset -g); tried various hibernation modes (e.g., sudo pmset -a hibernationmode X, where X=0,1,3, etc)
      * searched/grepped through my power management logs and Console messages to look for googleable items (e.g., pmset -g log | grep WORD, where WORD=failure, sleep, etc);  still have not found help online
      * brought the MBP to a Mac Genius
    -- he ran some further tests, but found nothing;
    -- he re-installed my OS as a hopeful-hail-mary-just-maybe-last-ditch effort; the problem persisted!
    -- we both agreed that we had ruled out a software cause
    -- he offered me to leave my MBP to get fixed for a flat fee of $300.00 (which after a couple weeks of trying to figure this out is starting to sound more and more reasonable)
    Given that it is likely not a software issue, what hardware might it be? By booting from an OS on an external drive, I think I've ruled out a bad hard drive or hard drive cable. Also, given that inducing sleep in any way other than closing the MBP's lid does not cause the problem, it seems there might be a wire (or something) in the hinge section of the MBP that gets moved when the lid is closed possibly causing some kind of short circuit...or something.
    If someone with more experience interpreting Console messages, for example, can help, I'd be happy to provide some logs, or any additional information.
    Thank you for your time and consideration.

    Ok, this is a crazy-simple, quasi-embarrassing fix, but I'll post it anyway just in case anyone is having a similar problem (for example, this guy: Changes to pmset being ignored).
    Some time around late last August / early September (2014) this issue began happening for me (specifically, issue = closing lid while on battery power induces hibernation / shut down instead of sleep --- independent of hibernation mode). Maybe it was when I upgraded to Yosemite (not sure what the exact date of that was). As detailed in my original post, I frantically tried everything I could think of... At that time, however, I had quite a few presentations and posters to create and present at meetings and conferences, so I held off fixing it for a couple of months and returned to it this past week, where I tried a few more things listed above, but again to no avail...
    This morning, I simply tried fudging around with all my power management settings again (via pmset in Terminal). The simplicity of the fix surprised me. But now that I understand it, I know it is likely the same fix for other threads I've read, such as the one above:
                                        (TLDR in bold)
    (1) Take note of your power management settings (Terminal:  pmset -g custom)
    (2) Is the "standby" flag set to 0? If so, set it to 1. Wa-la! Done.
    This fix is crazy and embarrassing b/c I was so close to it for so long. I tried changing my hibernation modes multiple times (sudo pmset -a hibernatemode X, where X=0,1,3,25,etc). I read about manipulating other PMSET settings that helped other people with newer MBPs, like "autopoweroff" and "autopoweroffdelay" --- settings that I do not have on the MBP early 2011 (check your settings: pmset -g cap). And most amazingly of all, I even messed with the "standbydelay" setting, trying to make it so long that my computer should never go into hibernation... Yet, from what I can tell by looking over my notes, I never simply set "standby" from 0 to 1.
    There are interesting questions that arise due to this fix. For example, why did this problem persist on clean installs of OS Yosemite? Is "standby" being set to 0 the Yosemite default? I'm not sure. If it is, then Kappy was right: this was normal behavior... It just wasn't always the normal behavior...at least not for my MBP. Normal behavior (hibernatemode 3) used to be (and now is again) that the MBP goes into safe sleep, and then only after an allotted amount of time will it go into full-blown hibernation.
    NOTE: the "standby" and "standbydelay" PMSET settings are not available in some earlier MBP models (e.g., my brother has a 2010 and does not have these settings); so if you're having a similar problem with an earlier model, this fix might not be of any help to you.

  • I don't think my MBP slept after closing the lid - it was hot when I woke up

    I just came back from an overseas trip and hooked my late 2013 13" MBP retina back up to the LG external monitor. When I went to bed I closed the lid. What I expected to happen was for it to stay awake for a certain number of minutes. Then the external monitor display would go black indicating it was asleep. But because an external monitor is connected it would wake up as needed for Carbon Copy Cloner at 3:30 am. But then go back to sleep.
    However my MBP seemed too warm when I just came downstairs. The body and lit were noticeably warm.
    Shouldn't it eventually sleep and not be fully awake in clamshell mode in this situation?
    Thanks,
    Doug

    And another Apple Care chat session. But I still can't figure out exactly what's going on, and we seem to be going in circles.
    Hello, Doug! How are you doing today?
    OK. And you?
    I’m doing really well, thanks for asking! How can I help you today?
    Well, I tried talking about this via chat support earlier, but was getting wrong information, so I thought I would try again and take a different approach to how I ask .
    I’m currently reading through the chat transcript to get a strong understanding of what you were going through.
    If you read over the chat you can see we digressed into a separate question about whether the "turn hard drive when possible" mattered to the internal SSD and he said it did and pointed me to a support page which said it did NOT and then he said, "there you have it! have all your questions been answered" but none were so I gave up.
    Anyway...
    Basically it's just this. My MBP is connected to an external display. In the energy settings I have my MBP set to not sleep when the display sleeps so I don't lose some Terminal SSH connections when I'm working.
    But when I'm going to sleep I thought I would let it power nap and cool down.
    But I've noticed the MBP is warm in the morning. Also I noticed that open SSH sessions were not broken. So I think my MBP is not going to sleep.
    Perhaps the computer thinks it’s going into Clamshell mode since it’s connected to an external display via HDMI, correct?
    I did read in help that if you hold the power button down 1.5 seconds an option dialog will appear and from there I can select sleep. I did that, but this morning it is still warm and the connections were not broken.
    Let me look into this, I want to do everything I can to make sure you’re getting your questions answered this time.
    Yes, I believe you are correct. That it is just going into clamshell mode, and even though I manually selected sleep from the power button option it is ignoring that.
    It seems to immediately sleep though. Instead of timing out, the external display goes black, reports a loss of signal and then goes into its own power save mode. So it appears to go to sleep.Yet it is warm in the morning, and the open Terminal sessions, which I would normally expect to break, are not broken.
    Okay, so there’s still network communication going on, and you’re used to that terminating.
    It shouldn’t be possible, but that could be what’s going on here. This is an interesting one, and I can see how you’d expect your Mac to be a little cooler to the touch if it’s supposed to be sleeping.
    Okay, so there’s still network communication going on, and you’re used to that terminating.
    Let me check our resources on this. It may be a great opportunity to speak to a senior advisor as well.
    I just came back from a trip and during the trip there was no external monitor and I didn't experience this, even though the energy settings are the same.
    The network is my home wifi. On my trip, it was my friend's home wifi.
    So the external display is really the big variable here I think.
    Probably so.
    I could just power off the external display before I close the lid as my next test before I go to sleep next time. But I sort of wanted to know what was happening. Especially since I intentionally manually selected sleep.
    I’d like to check with a senior advisor if that’s okay with you.
    Yes, please do check.
    Also - another thing.
    I notice my keypad and hand rest - the whole top surface - has become noticeably COOLER since we began our chat. So I'm wondering if there is stuff in the display/lid itself which might be causing the warm temperature, rather than the body (which is what I would have expected with the display off). Or it is just able to "cool better" with the lid open?
    That’s another interesting observation. I think either way, the concern still remains whether or not the computer is actually going to sleep. The display of all things should not be producing excessive warmth.
    Do you hear any fan noise when you wake your Mac?
    Or right beforehand?
    Yes, you are correct about the main concern. I thought maybe there was something in the logs I might be able to check to see if it actually was asleep or not.
    I have never heard any fan noice from the MBP.
    Okay. I just wanted to make sure. My hands-on experience with a new Retina display is limited, I’m not sure what the fan actually sounds like compared to my traditional MacBook Pro. I’ll go ahead and consult with my senior advisor since our troubleshooting steps would indefinitely cause us to get disconnected.
    Thanks for your patience as check on this!
    I just found this terminal command to check on the last sleep time:
    pmset -g log | grep sleep | tail -n 1
    It does report that it went to sleep at 2:42 am which sounds right:
    8/2/14, 2:42:25 AM GMT+9 com.apple.sleepservices.sessionTerminatedSleepService: window has terminated.
    Unless that means sleep ENDED at that time.
    Interesting. I’m glad you found that. It’s a little beyond the level at which I know OS X, But I’ll have some answers soon enough.
    OK. Take your time.
    Thanks, Doug.
    I believe I found more information, though it still doesn't explain why the SSH connection didn't break.
    This command:
    pmset -g log|grep -e " Sleep " -e " Wake "
    will report all the sleep/awake occurrences.
    For the last few days it reports:
    7/30/14, 11:16:09 AM GMT Wake Wake from Standby [CDNVA] due to EC.LidOpen/Lid Open: Using BATT (Charge:99%)66 secs 7/30/14, 11:17:15 AM GMT Sleep Clamshell Sleep: Using BATT (Charge:99%) 10830 secs 7/30/14, 2:17:45 PM GMT+ Sleep Maintenance Sleep: Using BATT (Charge:97%) 11542 secs 7/30/14, 5:30:07 PM GMT+ Wake Wake from Standby [CDNVA] due to RTC/Alarm: Using BATT (Charge:96%) 41 secs 7/30/14, 5:30:48 PM GMT+ Sleep Clamshell Sleep: Using BATT (Charge:96%) 10823 secs 7/30/14, 8:31:11 PM GMT+ Sleep Maintenance Sleep: Using BATT (Charge:94%) 7/30/14, 9:29:02 PM GMT+ Wake Wake from Standby [CDNVA] due to EC.ACAttach/Lid Open: Using AC (Charge:94%) 8/2/14, 2:06:18 AM GMT+9 Sleep Software Sleep pid=78: Using AC (Charge:100%
    So (if you can look at that neatly, one line at a time, it shows it was in fact going into clamshell sleep until I manually put it into sleep.
    Then at 2:06 am it went into "software sleep".
    Then at 2:42 a it went into something called "maintenance sleep"
    at 3:30 am it was awakened by CCC (Carbon Copy Cloner) and did not go to sleep again after that.
    So maybe:
    1. The sleep is quietly keeping the SSH connections alive and,
    2. CCC is not properly putting the MBP back to sleep after doing its 3:30 am backup?
    Doug, I’m going to go ahead and transfer you over to a Senior Advisor now. They will discuss this with you further. Does that sound good?
    Yes, thank you.
    You are now being connected to another Advisor. Please standby.
    Okay, so your external display is not sleeping?
    It is sleeping.
    It times out in 15 minutes normally.
    After I close the MBP lid.
    Just like the energy settings say it should.
    And when I did the forced sleep via the power button the external display immediately went black and reported loss of signal and then went into power save mode.
    So I assumed it was asleep.
    Okay, so, the Mac is not sleeping or the Display?
    What I'm trying to find out is if the Mac is sleeping or not. The reason I was prompted to ask was because in the morning after I wake up I notice the MBP feels warm to the touch. I would expect it to feel cold if it was sleeping. Also, a terminal session with an SSH going did not get broken.
    Okay, I think I understand now. You are looking for answers about the sleep status of your Mac. I understand your expectation of a cold Mac, and I am here to help.
    Thanks. Did you notice my pmset command outputs near the end of my chat with the previous person?
    So, In Energy Saver, there is a setting to wake for network Activity.
    Yes. It is checked.
    However, when not connected to the monitor (like on my previous trip) that was not enough to keep an SSH session going.
    Okay, so this would explain to me why the Mac would be warm to the touch. If there is a SSH session active.
    Typically those shells would break when the lid was closed.
    Okay, with a Display attached, the system expects to operate in Clamshell mode when the lid is closed.
    This is all expected
    Which prompts two questions:
    (1) Even if I force it to sleep with the power button followed by selecting "sleep" from the options and
    (2) Even though the pmset output indicated it went to sleep and not into clamshell mode?
    I am not familiar with the pmset
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pmset
    In computing, pmset is a command line utility to manipulate power management settings under the Darwin and Mac OS X operating systems. It can assign sleep settings, schedule sleep and wake times, and display power information.
    pmset indicated it went to sleep at 2:06 am. Anyway, as I reported above with the previous tech person.
    Okay, pmset is not supported by AppleCare, yes it is a Terminal command, but it is there for Developer use
    So... where are we left? That you think it was in clamshell mode even though I manually forced it into sleep mode and the logs indicate it went to sleep? I'm just still left not quite understanding what is happening.
    I guess I'll just try a test next time with the display powered off and see what happens. I need to go now. Thank you. I will end the chat for now.
    End Chat

  • My problem started when system preferences was unresponsive and would not force quit.  I tryed to restart and got the grey screen, but it never restarted.  I closed the lid and now the screen is blank.  Has anyone had a similar problem after Lion?

    My problem started when system preferences was unresponsive and would not force quit.  I tryed to restart and got the grey screen, but it never restarted.  I closed the lid and now the screen is blank.  Has anyone had a similar problem after Lion installation?

    No, as I have yet to be convinced on Lion.
    Did a permissions repair help from the install DVD?

  • Macbook pro not turning on after SMC reset. I have the following problem. Yesterday I noticed that my mbp 2011does not sleep when closing the screen. smc due loud fan and an X on battery symbol

    Yesterday I noticed that my mbp 2011 dos not sleep when closing the screen cover. Today I Turner my laptop in. However the fan was working loudly and stayed loud. After Start I noticed an X on Battery symbol. Clicking on it, it showed 'no battery.' I found out that a potential solution for this problem was SMC reset. I also noticed that the leds on magsafe was not lightning. Despite this I tried to execute the smc reset as described on apple support site. Switching off, plugin the magsafe connector, pushed the buttons shift + alt+ ctrl + power. Then i pushed the power button, but my mbp is not turning on. I pushed several times on the power button but nothing works. The magsafe is also dark meaning the leds not lightning. Can anyone here help me on this ?

    Problem solved by my own. But do not how :) magsafe again working and the laptop tooo

  • Wireless mouse and Keyboard Issue after closing the lid - external display

    Can anyone give any insight. Recent purchase of a new Late 2008 15" MBP. I have connected it to an external 24" Apple monitor on my desk and use a wireless mouse and wireless keyboard on my desk top. I have configured the laptop to wake on bluetooth devices. So here is the problem: The laptop when the lid is up recognizes the bluetooth keyboard and mouse. I close the lid/screen. Laptop powers down... the after several seconds I move the mouse and the laptop comes alive... But after that there are no bluetooth devices attached. When I use the mouse, I get "connection lost" with a white figure of the mighty mouse on the screen. The wireless keyboard is not there and I have to open the lid and manually find the mouse and reconnect. The keyboard seems to work however....
    Apple..... any thoughts..... anyone?????

    Hi Stentdoc; I'm thinking, 'connection lost ~= sorta low AA batteries in the Mighty Mouse? (I would put in fresh AA batteries in the mouse and keyboard, to eliminate as an issue that the 'connection lost' is due to low batt voltage; that this is causing the failure to wake.) ... then, in System Preferences > Hardware > Energy Saver, settings for Power Adapter > Sleep, set to "never" for "Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for ..." to eliminate that as a conflict when trying to wake with bluetooth from sleep induced by closing the lid ...
    Check your current "Sleep" setup (I left my MBP as "3")
    go to Utilities > Terminal
    After you launch Terminal, the first step is to determine which sleep mode your Mac is currently using. You can both view and change the sleep mode using the Unix program pmset. To see your current settings, type (or, copy and paste)
    pmset -g | grep hibernatemode
    press 'enter'
    You should see something like this:
    $ pmset -g | grep hibernatemode
    hibernatemode 3
    So your machine is using mode 3 ... thanks to the documentation for the handy Deep Sleep Dashboard widget, which puts your machine immediately into hibernation mode (so you don’t have to yank all the power sources to invoke it):
    * 0 - Old style sleep mode, with RAM powered on while sleeping, safe sleep disabled, and super-fast wake.
    * 1 - Hibernation mode, with RAM contents written to disk, system totally shut down while “sleeping,” and slower wake up, due to reading the contents of RAM off the hard drive.
    * 3 - The default mode on machines introduced since about fall 2005. RAM is powered on while sleeping, but RAM contents are also written to disk before sleeping. In the event of total power loss, the system enters hibernation mode automatically.
    also, I enabled this (to change back, input "lidwake 1":
    go to Utilities > Terminal
    type in sudo pmset lidwake 0 then "enter"
    it will ask for your password. type it in, that's it!
    Now, when your computer is sleeping with the lid closed, when you open the lid nothing happens until you press any key ... nice: keeps it off when accidentally opened, like in a backpack?
    WARNING: Improper use of the sudo command could lead to data loss
    or the deletion of important system files. Please double-check your
    typing when using sudo. Type "man sudo" for more information.
    To proceed, enter your password, or type Ctrl-C to abort.

  • MBP intermittently restarts when waking from sleep

    I had this problem repeatedly which seemed to stop after I did a full battery of repair utilities with TTP6... When opening the lid after the MBP was asleep (various times, could be a matter of minutes or hours) it would restart, blue screen appears, sometimes even brings up the password screen (I do NOT have the sys prefs set to ask for a password either on restart or on resume from sleep!).  It does not make the tone that occurs on restart or starting up, just see the screens change, then the desktop appears, see all the extensions loading on the top bar, dock appears, etc just like a start up or restart would occur but the process is faster overall.  Battery level is fine, just randomly restarting.  It happened again this evening.  I have had some other peculiar issues with the MBP just restarting itself but on coming out of sleep seems by far and away the most common.  I am befuddled as to what the problem might be.  I'll also note, no peripherals attached.  No 3rd party hardware upgrads, all original Apple stuff from initial purchase.  Any suggestions on a troubleshooting process and feedback on potential severity of the issue would be greatly appreciated.

    Well, it's been awhile since I reinstalled the system to purge it of any goofy files.  So, I tried using my Snow Leopard install DVD which will not work!??!?  I then tried using my Leopard DVD which will not allow me to reinstall the system either?!??  So, now I'm backing up to my G-Tech mini and I'm going to boot from that drive and wipe out the MBP internal drive, reinstall the OS and use setup assistant to import data from the backup drive.  Something is clearly not right that goes above and beyond the weird sleep -> restart issue.  Still interested in feedback if this clearly appears to be the result of something that I just don't understand?

  • Qosmio G20-127: Screen blackout after closing the lid on Vista

    Hi,
    I have Qosmio G20-127 and I've recently installed Vista Ultimate Edition (32-bit). I managed to bring everything to its place (except the magic buttons, but the drivers are not out yet), but I have a problem that is seriously making me reconsider going back to XP MCE.
    When I close the lid of my computer the display naturally goes off, but when I open it up again it does not turn on, but it stays black. And I can't make it turn on again no matter what. I have to turn off the entire computer and that is quite impractical.
    Funny thing is that after restart for about 20-30 minutes I can open and close the lid normally, but after a little longer work on the computer the same problem occurs.
    The problem persists even after I turned off every action remotely connected to closing the lid.
    Does anyone have any solution?

    Hi J,
    thanks for your help but my BIOS update won't install. I get the message "[Error] BIOS Update is not supported OS. Unsupported OS or service pack is installed."
    About the powersaver, I didn't install additional powersaver program as I was told it would conflict with Vista's Mobility Center (FranciscoJr's Guide to installing Vista), but all the options regarding closing lid are turned off (Do nothing option).
    There are two more new things I observed and might be indicative of the problem, but I don't know what to make of it.
    1. When I close the lid I hear 'disconnected device sound'
    2. And the screen sometimes comes back if the s-video cable (leading to my tv) is plugged out (usually it was always in coz I use Q20 as a media center as well)
    Of course that made me think that it might be a problem in Graphic Card, but I've installed the most recent driver.
    So now I'm pretty much clueless as what to do.

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