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How to impede W10 from hibernating automatically?



 
 
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  #46  
Old July 14th 19, 08:14 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Mandy Liefbowitz
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 132
Default I don't want to be blinded by an advertisement, first thing.

On Sun, 14 Jul 2019 18:26:52 +0000 (UTC), owl
wrote:

In comp.os.linux.advocacy Jeff-Relf.Me wrote:
Owl asked me:
I don't want to be blinded by an advertisement, first thing.
How could a power strip stop the splash screen ?

How would the splash screen work without power?


What do you think a "splash screen" is ? !


Something that does not work without power.


1. Turn on monitor, to start my day, in the pitch-black room.

2. Splash Screen appears, blinding me.

3. Note the brand of my monitor ( for the millionth time ).

4. Turn off the monitor, because "Owl" said so.

You can't see any problems with this, above ?

I could never use the monitor.


You asked how to keep the monitor from coming on when you accidentally
moved your mouse in your sleep. You do that by turning the thing off.
Now you move the goalposts by complaining about the splash screen
when you actually *do* want to turn on your monitor. In that case,
if you don't want so see the splash screen, I suggest turning your
head sufficiently that the monitor is no longer in your line of sight.


Alternatively, turn down the brightness before retiring to sleep. If
turned down until it is a mere glimmer, the gleam of the glowing
advertisement should not be too painful even in the gloom of night.

One *could* write a batch file to do this and another to reset it to
the desired day-time luminance. Leave them on the desktop and a simple
double-click would prepare the monitor for either sleep or work.

Mand.
Ads
  #47  
Old July 14th 19, 08:23 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Kompressor
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
Owl,

No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.

I'm not "moving the goal posts"; I'm simply explained why
turning the monitor off/on is not an adequate solution to
my "no signal" problem ( flashing me 15 seconds after
the monitor is put to sleep { from a RANDOM awakening } ).

The solution is simple: point the monitor to the ceiling.

Like I said, it's not a big deal;
it's just something I'd avoid, if I could.

I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor;
I found plenty of sympathy, but no solutions.

No monitor-reviews mentioned it because
most people don't operate in pitch-black rooms, like I do;
nor do their screens look like this:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/Diff.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SearchBar.PNG

Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComments.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeNotices.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeSubs.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/X.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Chess.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Super.Fast.Monopoly.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Reversi.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Solitair.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Mario.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Glyph.PNG


First try this:

Device Manager - Mice and other pointing devices --Select your mouse
--Properties---Power Management--- UNSELECT the box that says
"Allow this device to wake the computer" --Save it.

If that doesn't work, you may have to do the same thing but at the
USB port level.

Device Manager -- USB --- Find the USB port that the mouse is plugged into
Go into Power Management and UNSELECT "Allow This Device To Wake The Computer".

See if that works.

If not, get a cover for the monitor or a blindfold to cover your eyes
when you sleep.



--
Kompressor
  #48  
Old July 14th 19, 08:31 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Jeff-Relf.Me @.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 234
Default I don't want to be blinded by an advertisement, first thing.

Owl asked me:
I don't want to be blinded by an advertisement, first thing.
How could a power strip stop the splash screen ?


How would the splash screen work without power?


What do you think a "splash screen" is ? !

1. Turn on monitor, to start my day, in the pitch-black room.

2. Splash Screen appears, blinding me.

3. Note the brand of my monitor ( for the millionth time ).

4. Turn off the monitor, because "Owl" said so.

You can't see any problems with this, above ?

I could never use the monitor.
  #49  
Old July 14th 19, 08:31 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Jeff-Relf.Me @.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 234
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

Owl,

No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.

I'm not "moving the goal posts"; I'm simply explained why
turning the monitor off/on is not an adequate solution to
my "no signal" problem ( flashing me 15 seconds after
the monitor is put to sleep { from a RANDOM awakening } ).

The solution is simple: point the monitor to the ceiling.

Like I said, it's not a big deal;
it's just something I'd avoid, if I could.

I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor;
I found plenty of sympathy, but no solutions.

No monitor-reviews mentioned it because
most people don't operate in pitch-black rooms, like I do;
nor do their screens look like this:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/Diff.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SearchBar.PNG

Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComments.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeNotices.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeSubs.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/X.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Chess.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Super.Fast.Monopoly.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Reversi.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Solitair.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Mario.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Glyph.PNG
  #50  
Old July 14th 19, 08:31 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Jeff-Relf.Me @.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 234
Default Never do I look at my mouse, before I press a button.

Steve Carroll asked me:
How could you find the "global hotkey" in
this "pitch black room", genius?
Maybe... Turn a light on... Ya think?


To answer my phone, or to toggle my monitor On/Off,
or to toggle my keyboard On/Off, etc.,
I simply press a mouse button; to wit:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/MouseKeyboardLayout.PNG

Never do I look at my mouse, before I press a button.
I do it in a pitch-black room, all the time,
after being awoken by my ringing phone.

When my monitor turns on, I see a mostly-black screen; to wit:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG

When watching bright videos, I push my monitor back,
farther away from me. This is where a 40" screen
( on my bizarrely long+high monitor–arm ) really helps.

Also my eyes adjust to the brightness, eventually.
My blue eyes are ultra sensitive -- my mom was the same way;
it's a Swiss thing, apparently.
  #51  
Old July 14th 19, 08:32 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Carlos E.R.[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,356
Default Your monitor goes from black[off] to gray[on] ?

On 14/07/2019 20.39, Carlos E.R. wrote:

Removing comp.os.linux.advocacy, I don't see what "advocacy" has to do
with technical issues. Nor Linux, if we are talking of Windows.

On 14/07/2019 15.49, Jeff-Relf.Me@. wrote:
Carlos replied ( to me ):
None of my monitors [ flash a splash screen ],


I've never seen a monitor without a splash screen.

Your monitor goes from black[off] to gray[on],
nothing more ?

What's the brand+model ? How old is it ?

I spent hours googling this "splash screen" issue;
found nothing.


I think it pops a brand name, but not that shiny. I often power it up in
a dark room.

My Sansung displays "samsung" in grey over a blue ellipse, the rest is
black. The acer displays "acer" in green on black (I just looked at
both, and I had switched off all the room lights for the test). None I
remember does a "super-annoying+blinding splash screen".


Further: The Acer doesn't display any logo when waking up from sleep. At
least after one hour. What I get is the password prompt from the computer.


--
Cheers, Carlos.
  #52  
Old July 14th 19, 08:34 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Mandy Liefbowitz
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 132
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On Sun, 14 Jul 2019 12:07:08 -0700 (Seattle), Jeff-Relf.Me @. wrote:

Owl,

No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.


Yes, it can and it is *easy*.

Switch off the monitor at the power button, wall socket or any
powerstrip between the two.

Of course then one must press a button each time one wishes to use
the thing but that simple, easy to understand operation has the added
benefit if saving power and thus being green and "saving the planet".

I expect you, given your history of objecting to everything anyone
suggests that could help you over many, many years, will find a flaw
in my suggestion.


I'm not "moving the goal posts"; I'm simply explained why
turning the monitor off/on is not an adequate solution to


Oh. Right. The flaw. It is "not an adequate solution".

I'm not impressed by that as an objection but no doubt you are.

my "no signal" problem ( flashing me 15 seconds after
the monitor is put to sleep { from a RANDOM awakening } ).


Don't put it to sleep. Push the little power button.

Or write a batch file to darken the screen and one to brighten it
back up again. Use them in turn.

Or simply have a screensaver that goes to a very, very dark image
then switches the monitor to power-down after one minute. Set it to
activate on mouse-to-screen-corner. That way, the manufacturer's
splash panel is never retrieved.


The solution is simple: point the monitor to the ceiling.


Idiotic, as this simply moves the flash from the monitor's position
to a large area of ceiling - in addition to a brighter, lightning-like
glare around the edge of the monitor, perhaps.

True, it won't be as glaringly bright on the ceiling but the
difference is probably going to be marginal when compared to the gloom
of the night.

Still, it's your sleep hours. If you want them interrupted, who are
we to suggest solutions?
Mand.

  #53  
Old July 14th 19, 08:42 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Snit[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,027
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On 7/14/19 12:23 PM, Kompressor wrote:
On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
Owl,

No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.

I'm not "moving the goal posts"; I'm simply explained why
turning the monitor off/on is not an adequate solution to
my "no signal" problem ( flashing me 15 seconds after
the monitor is put to sleep { from a RANDOM awakening } ).

The solution is simple: point the monitor to the ceiling.

Like I said, it's not a big deal;
it's just something I'd avoid, if I could.

I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor;
I found plenty of sympathy, but no solutions.

No monitor-reviews mentioned it because
most people don't operate in pitch-black rooms, like I do;
nor do their screens look like this:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/Diff.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SearchBar.PNG

Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComments.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeNotices.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeSubs.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/X.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Chess.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Super.Fast.Monopoly.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Reversi.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Solitair.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Mario.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Glyph.PNG


First try this:

Device Manager - Mice and other pointing devices --Select your mouse
--Properties---Power Management--- UNSELECT the box that says
"Allow this device to wake the computer" --Save it.

If that doesn't work, you may have to do the same thing but at the
USB port level.

Device Manager -- USB --- Find the USB port that the mouse is plugged into
Go into Power Management and UNSELECT "Allow This Device To Wake The Computer".

See if that works.

If not, get a cover for the monitor or a blindfold to cover your eyes
when you sleep.



Another Carroll sock post.

--
Personal attacks from those who troll show their own insecurity. They
cannot use reason to show the message to be wrong so they try to feel
somehow superior by attacking the messenger.

They cling to their attacks and ignore the message time and time again.
  #54  
Old July 14th 19, 08:49 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
John[_92_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 515
Default My eyes don't like the surprise.

On Sat, 13 Jul 2019 14:59:59 -0700 (Seattle), Jeff-Relf.Me @. wrote:

Mayayana replied ( to me ):
If you want the monitor off then why not just turn it off?


The problem with turning the monitor off/on is
the super-annoying+blinding splash screen ( in a pitch-black room ).


So don't.

Have a small, glowing lamp turn on *first* to allow your onboard
optics to adjust to seeing light. *then* hit the monitor on-switch.

Monitor reviews don't mention anything about that.

No one talks about it, not even in the manuals.
I'm a strange duck, apparently; no one but me cares about it.


No, you are a whiner who has spent decades on Usenet finding the most
obscure issues to panic over then trashing and insulting every single
solution offered to help you.

You *never* accept any advice and any gratitude expressed is grudging
and tainted with " ... but ...".


Or put the whole system in standby.
I don't see the point of putting only the monitor to sleep.


Bria v5, my Win10 soft phone, responds to incoming calls.


So switch *that* off at night. Kill the program, stop the application
or simply set "I'm bloody asleep so bugger off" hours in the settings
menus.

No one is so important that a call to them can't wait a few hours.


I might be asleep, for example, with the monitor powered-off,
when someone calls me. I answer the phone ( via a mouse button )


So don't. Let it go to voicemail. Let them call back.

without turning the monitor on. My eyes don't like the surprise.


Have you tried wearing a sleep-mask? Maybe a translucent one that is
semi permeable to photons?

"Oh, but I *CAN'T* do *THAT* because I need to see to ...."

Right?

J.
  #55  
Old July 14th 19, 09:19 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Kompressor
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.


Device Manager - Mice and other pointing devices --Select your mouse
--Properties---Power Management--- UNSELECT the box that says
"Allow this device to wake the computer" --Save it.


Did that, didn't work.

Device Manager -- USB --- Find the USB port that the mouse is plugged into
Go into Power Management and UNSELECT "Allow This Device To Wake The Computer".


Nothing to de-select, not an option.


Try the Root Hub the port is on.
That is where the power management options are.




--
Kompressor
  #56  
Old July 14th 19, 09:29 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Melzzzzz[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 119
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
Owl,

No one knows how to stop the mouse
from accidentally waking the monitor;
apparently, it can't be done.

I'm not "moving the goal posts"; I'm simply explained why
turning the monitor off/on is not an adequate solution to
my "no signal" problem ( flashing me 15 seconds after
the monitor is put to sleep { from a RANDOM awakening } ).

The solution is simple: point the monitor to the ceiling.

Like I said, it's not a big deal;
it's just something I'd avoid, if I could.

I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor;
I found plenty of sympathy, but no solutions.

No monitor-reviews mentioned it because
most people don't operate in pitch-black rooms, like I do;
nor do their screens look like this:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/Diff.PNG
http://Jeff-Relf.Me/SearchBar.PNG

Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComments.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeNotices.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeSubs.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/X.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/SleepPat.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Chess.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Super.Fast.Monopoly.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Reversi.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Solitair.PNG
Jeff-Relf.Me/Mario.PNG Jeff-Relf.Me/Glyph.PNG

You are amazing!

--
press any key to continue or any other to quit...
U ničemu ja ne uživam kao u svom statusu INVALIDA -- Zli Zec
Na divljem zapadu i nije bilo tako puno nasilja, upravo zato jer su svi
bili naoruzani. -- Mladen Gogala
  #57  
Old July 14th 19, 09:57 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Paul[_32_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,873
Default 15 seconds after the monitor is put to sleep.

Jeff-Relf.Me @. wrote:
Carlos E.R. wrote:
Acer doesn't display any logo when waking up from sleep.


Nor does mine, that's standard.

15 seconds after the monitor is put to sleep
{ possibly from a RANDOM awakening },
as I'm starting to relax, "No Signal" flashes up,
annoying the crap out of me.

No monitor-review discusses this topic;
I'm the only one that cares.


That's not supposed to happen.

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor

In the video card to monitor direction, the video-card
has impedance sensing. That's how it tells there are
100ohm differential resistors on the R/G/B/Clk pairs
on a digital interface.

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor
100ohms

If the 100 ohm load goes missing (monitor unplugged),
the video card disables the digital signals on the cable.
This reduces radio frequency emissions, among other things.

*******

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor
???

In the other direction, the monitor has a function too.

If the cable falls off the video card, the monitor does
*something* to detect the cable has fallen off. Is it
a DC check of some sort, on a status signal. Is it the
+5V power on the HDMI or DisplayPort cable ? *Something*
on that interface is used for "presence detection".

And that something, does not rely on the computer having
power. Even if the Computer is disconnected on the
wall side, I don't see the Monitor feature being triggered.

Now, your monitor is obviously *malfunctioning*.

What this means is, maybe some DC path it uses for
"cable fell off" detection is actually an AC coupled
path, with a capacitor in it.

Your monitor should not complain that the cable fell
off, when the cable has not fallen off.

*******

Some people here with similar symptoms.

Problem wasn't evident at first, but developed later.
Suggesting perhaps a component failure. As I doubt
"state information" is being kept by the OSD processor.
It's job is to check things each time the monitor
is powered up. It's not supposed to hold a grudge.

https://www.cnet.com/forums/discussi...ing-no-signal/

My Acer monitor sets the power LED to amber, when the
RGBHV signals all go to zero DC. And the screen goes black.

However, if the cable falls off, then I see "No Signal"
and the "No Signal" dialog moves around the screen to
prevent burn-in. My monitor still works properly, and
knows the difference between computer S1 sleep (screen goes
black) versus cable has fallen off.

Paul
  #58  
Old July 14th 19, 10:15 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Kompressor
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default I spent hours googling, looking for a better monitor.

On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
Kompressor:
Device Manager -- USB --- Find the USB port that the mouse is plugged into
Go into Power Management and UNSELECT "Allow This Device To Wake The Computer".

Nothing to de-select, not an option.


Try the Root Hub the port is on.
That is where the power management options are.


The option is grayed out.


https://www.google.com/search?source...30.Y931fx0NmBo


--
Kompressor
  #59  
Old July 14th 19, 10:46 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Paul[_32_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,873
Default 15 seconds after the monitor is put to sleep.

Paul wrote:
Jeff-Relf.Me @. wrote:
Carlos E.R. wrote:
Acer doesn't display any logo when waking up from sleep.


Nor does mine, that's standard.

15 seconds after the monitor is put to sleep { possibly from a RANDOM
awakening },
as I'm starting to relax, "No Signal" flashes up, annoying the crap
out of me.

No monitor-review discusses this topic;
I'm the only one that cares.


That's not supposed to happen.

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor

In the video card to monitor direction, the video-card
has impedance sensing. That's how it tells there are
100ohm differential resistors on the R/G/B/Clk pairs
on a digital interface.

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor
100ohms

If the 100 ohm load goes missing (monitor unplugged),
the video card disables the digital signals on the cable.
This reduces radio frequency emissions, among other things.

*******

Computer --- Video-Card ---------------------- Monitor
???

In the other direction, the monitor has a function too.

If the cable falls off the video card, the monitor does
*something* to detect the cable has fallen off. Is it
a DC check of some sort, on a status signal. Is it the
+5V power on the HDMI or DisplayPort cable ? *Something*
on that interface is used for "presence detection".

And that something, does not rely on the computer having
power. Even if the Computer is disconnected on the
wall side, I don't see the Monitor feature being triggered.

Now, your monitor is obviously *malfunctioning*.

What this means is, maybe some DC path it uses for
"cable fell off" detection is actually an AC coupled
path, with a capacitor in it.

Your monitor should not complain that the cable fell
off, when the cable has not fallen off.

*******

Some people here with similar symptoms.

Problem wasn't evident at first, but developed later.
Suggesting perhaps a component failure. As I doubt
"state information" is being kept by the OSD processor.
It's job is to check things each time the monitor
is powered up. It's not supposed to hold a grudge.

https://www.cnet.com/forums/discussi...ing-no-signal/

My Acer monitor sets the power LED to amber, when the
RGBHV signals all go to zero DC. And the screen goes black.

However, if the cable falls off, then I see "No Signal"
and the "No Signal" dialog moves around the screen to
prevent burn-in. My monitor still works properly, and
knows the difference between computer S1 sleep (screen goes
black) versus cable has fallen off.

Paul


OK, I checked a monitor schematic. +3.3V
|
10K
|
VGA pin 10 (GND) --------- 100 ohm -----+-------- CHK_VGA

What that means is, if the VGA falls off, the GND is
removed, and the "CHK_VGA" signal hops up to a logic 1.

This is the HDMI.

HDMI pin 18 (+5V_DDC) ---------- 10K -----+------ CHK_HDMI
| (looks active low)
47K
|
GND

This is fine and all, if the computer is driving out +5VSB
on the +5V_DDC pin, but if it's the regular +5V then that
power would go off when the computer enters S5 (soft off).
And that also wouldn't be a good way of implementing
"only alarms when cable falls off".

Really, the VGA method is the best, and the VGA method
is possible, because one of the grounds can be abused
for sensing without compromising overall operation.

*******

Try the following. No promises.

If the monitor has a VGA input, look in your junk bin for
any old VGA cable plus an old video card. You want a
video card you never plan on using again. And due to the
habit of modern equipment keeping VGA cables "captive",
you may not have a VGA cable with VGA connectors on
both ends.


video card --------- VGA_cable -------- monitor_VGA_input
sitting on wood

All that connecting this up would be doing, is allowing
the monitor "VGA-checker" to see a ground on pin 10.
On the video card, pin 10 should be joined to the
other ground signals. There should be ground
continuity.

The logic should really be doing two things. Noting which
connectors had signals. And verifying the CHK hasn't
entered the "cable has fallen off" state. If all cables
indicate they've fallen off, then perhaps the monitor
is in the best position to put up the "No Signal" dialog.

Paul
  #60  
Old July 14th 19, 11:10 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Melzzzzz[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 119
Default Do you also have sensitive eyes ?

On 2019-07-14, Jeff-Relf.Me @. Jeff-Relf.Me@ wrote:
Branimir replied ( to me ):
No monitor-reviews mentioned it because
most people don't operate in pitch-black rooms, like I do;
nor do their screens look like this:

http://Jeff-Relf.Me/YouTubeComHist.PNG


You are amazing!


What ?! why ?!

Do you also have sensitive eyes ?


No, but this is not some Linux tiling window manager?


--
press any key to continue or any other to quit...
U ničemu ja ne uživam kao u svom statusu INVALIDA -- Zli Zec
Na divljem zapadu i nije bilo tako puno nasilja, upravo zato jer su svi
bili naoruzani. -- Mladen Gogala
 




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