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I own a laptop(HP Pavilion DV7) with Windows 7 installed for already half a year.
Usually when I finish my work I do not turn machine off - closing is enough to get is into "Sleep" state.

Generally it's okay for me, but recent several days laptop was turning on in night spontaneously, while I was sleeping.

  • I haven't installed any app with "turn-on by schedule on when_dooes_pc_wants"-like features.
  • Checked if there are some "Wake-On-Lan"-like settings in BIOS, haven't found ones.
  • The power-cable is always plugged-in.

Does someone have any suggestions regarding that?

p.s. laptop is placed right near by bed, so when it turns-on on night - it is quite annoying and a bit scary. I think it's trolling me, please help to stop it :)

Thanks.

alexb
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2 Answers2

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Check device drivers in Device Manager, see if any are set to "allow this device to wake computer", disable them.

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Moab
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  • Found that "Allow device to wake the computer" flag was enabled for mouse; Probably it's sensitive enough to react on environment events(nearby subway, human steps, etc). Switched flag-off, think that helped. Thanks a lot! – alexb Apr 06 '12 at 15:10
  • Hmmm, I don’t think this is the cause for mine (I’m fairly sure I already checked everything), but it certainly would explain why it turns on at *random* times. I’ll check it tomorrow to be certain. @alexb, thanks for specifying *which* device it was that caused it for you. – Synetech Aug 03 '12 at 02:18
  • My computer has a whole lot of devices attached to it. I don't suppose there's a way to just auto magically get a list of all devices that have that checkbox checked? – neubert Feb 17 '14 at 16:40
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    @neubert: `powercfg.exe /devicequery wake_armed` at an Administrator command prompt. `powercfg.exe /lastwake` is also useful – Ben Voigt Jul 24 '14 at 17:48
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In addition to moab's answer, you can usually find out which device was responsible for waking the computer as follows:

  • Open a command prompt: Hit the windows key, type "cmd", and press enter.
  • In the command prompt, type "powercfg /lastwake"

Using /lastwake is not perfect, but you can usually tell if it's an USB device or a network card that's waking the computer. If the device was woken up by one of the network cards, the issue is often that Wake On LAN is enabled but not requiring a magic packet.

Peter
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