Recommended Posts

Yes there is one.. I coded it for myself a few years ago and then hacked my TV card remote control drivers so that I could turn off the monitor while in bed :) Ill have a dig around and see if I can find it.. It is really easy to code anyway, so in 2 weeks once my finals are over I can recode it if I cant find it.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/164539-turn-off-monitor/#findComment-2069018
Share on other sites

Just thought I would add the following.

The C++ version I just coded above will turn off the primary monitor. If you have a multiple monitor setup, the others will remain on. Ive just checked and I will be able to recode it to do all monitors, but wont do it at the moment as Im at uni without my second monitor to test it on.

Im pretty sure the same will apply to the delphi app (the first one I posted).

If people want it for multiple monitors then Ill do it during the summer, or in 2 weeks when my exams are over if some people could test it for me.

Hope the new, smaller, faster app is to everyones liking

Kieran

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/164539-turn-off-monitor/#findComment-2069439
Share on other sites

Kieran

"and then hacked my TV card remote control drivers so that I could turn off the monitor while in bed "

if possible could you give some details on this - would a key remapping work as well?

Well you can do anything that will just call the .exe that turns the monitor off. So for instance, if you have one of the microsoft keyboards with the shortcut keys on it, you can use their drivers to make one of the shortcut keys run the .exe. Alternatively, you could use a 3rd party keyboard mapper that has the ability to call an .exe. That way you could get any key on your keyboard to call the .exe. Personally, if going down this route, I would code my own app to do it that uses about 2k of memory and so doesnt bog your system down. If people want me to do this, I will, but this one really does have to wait till after my exams. They finish on the 19th, then Ill be drunk till the monday after. So Ill do it then.

Ill just have a little hunt and see if I can find an example of the TV card stuff I hacked. It was for the (any of then I think) hauppauge TV card... Well it looks like I deleted it at some point (I dont use my TV card anymore).

...... 5 minutes later.... OK Im back. The stupid fire alarm just went off in my building. Was a false alarm though..... now where was I?

OK. If you have a hauppauge TV card, the file you are looking for is something like IRRemote.dll or IRRemote32.dll. Something like that. I know it starts with 'IR', and its in one of the Windows directories (System32?). Anyway (make a copy of the file first before you do any editing incase you mess it up!) open this file and you will see a list of all the mappings from the remote. You will see how they have called programs in there, so you just have to follow the same format. One thing you have to be careful about is that it wont accept long file names, so either keep it somewhere near the root of your hard disk, or I think I got it working by typing the directories the way that DOS interperates them, like \Documen...\Kieran\ with the dots. Something like that anyway (if in doubt, just put it somewhere on the hard disk where you dont have to do this). Once you have made the changes, save the file, close the IR software and load it back up. Now press the button on the remote that you assigned. Hopefully it will work. If it doesnt work, it may just close down the IR software. This isnt an issue as it closes down nicely and can just be started up again when you have edited the file some more.

Once you have got that working you can go to town on it. I remember I could control most things on my computer from my remote. I could turn off the monitor, close down the PC, start media player, play tracks, skip tracks, close down any program, turn random play on and off, turn the system volume up and down. It was great, but now I just have a TV in my room so I dont use it any more.

Hope that helps

Kieran

Edited by Kieran
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/164539-turn-off-monitor/#findComment-2072102
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
kieran,

its a great program .

however, my monitor turns back on after like a minute or so ...

and it keeps doing that :p

any ideas?

Sorry for the no-reply. Neowin did its wonderful thing of unsubscribing me from this topic. As I said in the PM I sent you, the monitor will come back on if a key is pressed or you move the mouse, so it sounds like the mouse is moving. This could be down to vibrations or it being an old mouse (they tend to wander). If its not an optical mouse, try cleaning the ball, otherwise turn the mouse upside down when your not using it :)

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/164539-turn-off-monitor/#findComment-2161161
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
i used wizmo some time back.

http://www.grc.com/wizmo/wizmo.htm

Thanks for the link! I have multiple monitors and want my system volume turned up so I can hear it when I leave the room and this is perfect! I've mapped my Logoff key on my keyboard to run that shortcut and it works like a charm!

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/164539-turn-off-monitor/#findComment-2267628
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

Ive just been looking at the stats for my web site and I saw that one of the top referrer's is this topic. I also noticed that my link in a previous post is pointing to the wrong place on my server now. The correct link is:

..:: Click Me ::..

For some reason I can't edit my previous posts :angry:

Hope that helps some people,

Kieran

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I think he means you haven't reviewed previous UFC games. Of course it doesn't matter... Every time you just report on something that involves the President even if just simply what happened you guys usually get accused of being anti-Trump. We live in fun times.
    • So how did you solve the problem? Disabling Secure Boot isn’t a solution.
    • Another devilish issue surrounding these certificates is what can happen with old, unsuspecting PCs that nevertheless have Secure Boot enabled. In my case, it was a Dell with a 3rd-gen Core chip (so about 13 years old). As of the last few weeks, it was suddenly BSOD'g within about 5 minutes of booting. Turns out it was because of MS's "Secure-Boot-Update" scheduled task, which is scheduled to run 5 minutes after login. It's explained in gory detail here (this is not my post, but it was where I found the answer), but the short version is that this legacy system would need fairly elaborate, manual certificate intervention since MS's automatic cert update method cannot work. How to do that is linked late in the thread. https://www.bleepingcomputer.c...od-caused-by-scheduled-task Secure Boot wasn't at all important for this particular PC, so I disabled it to be done with the problem.
    • Winhance 26.06.12 by Razvan Serea Winhance is an open-source Windows enhancement utility designed to help users debloat, optimize, and customize Windows 10 and 11. It provides a user-friendly interface for removing unwanted apps, legacy components, and optional features safely, giving you more control over your system. With Winhance, you can improve performance, reduce clutter, and enhance privacy without the need for a clean install. Beyond basic debloating, Winhance offers extensive optimization tools. Users can tweak power plans, adjust gaming and performance settings, control notifications, and manage Windows Update behavior. Privacy-focused settings allow you to limit telemetry and data collection, while system customization options let you personalize the taskbar, Start menu, Explorer, and Windows themes. Winhance also supports installing or removing software efficiently, including external apps via WinGet integration, streamlining both new setups and daily maintenance. New AI privacy groups have been added for Windows AI, Microsoft Edge AI, and Microsoft Office AI, giving users clearer control over AI-related telemetry and feature usage. In addition, new settings in Gaming & Performance introduce AI taskbar pin toggles, options to remove AI apps, and controls for AI services and scheduled tasks, allowing users to better manage how AI components run in the background and appear in the system. For advanced users and IT professionals, Winhance integrates WIMUtil, a tool for creating custom Windows installation ISOs with automated configuration. You can generate autounattend.xml files, inject drivers, and apply your chosen Winhance settings automatically during installation. Most changes are non-destructive and reversible, with clear explanations in the GUI. Whether you’re optimizing a single PC or managing multiple systems, Winhance delivers a faster, cleaner, and highly personalized Windows experience. The Winhance.Installer.exe includes both Installable and Portable versions during setup. Winhance supports both Windows 10 and Windows 11 64-bit versions. It's regularly updated to ensure compatibility with the latest Windows updates and features. Winhance key features: Debloat Windows – Safely remove unwanted apps, features, and legacy components. Optimize Performance – Tune system settings for speed, responsiveness, and gaming. Privacy Enhancements – Control telemetry, data collection, and notifications. Power Management – Configure power plans and advanced energy settings. Windows Update Control – Adjust update behavior for stability and convenience. Theme Customization – Switch between light/dark mode and adjust system colors. Taskbar & Start Menu Tweaks – Modify layout, icons, and behavior. Explorer Customization – Adjust file explorer appearance and functionality. Software Management – Install/remove Windows apps and optional features. External Apps Installation – Deploy essential apps via WinGet integration. Configuration Management – Save, export, and import Winhance settings easily. Automation with WIMUtil – Create custom Windows ISOs with integrated settings. Autounattend.xml Generator – Automate Windows installations with preconfigured options. Driver Integration – Include current system drivers in custom ISOs. Non-Destructive Changes – Reversible settings with clear explanations in the GUI. Winhance 26.06.12 changelog: Features Builder Mode — build a Winhance config file or autounattend.xml without changing anything on the PC you're sitting at. Flip the new mode switcher to Builder, set everything the way you want it, and save the result as a Winhance config or an autounattend file ready for deployment on other machines. Sponsors & Supporters page — the exit donation dialog is gone. In its place, an in-app page (heart icon or the More menu) recognizes the businesses and individual supporters who keep Winhance free. It works offline and is fully localized. Change History — Winhance now keeps a receipt of everything it does. ChangeHistory.txt records every setting change (before and after values) and every app install or removal, with clear headers for config imports and bulk actions. Open it from the More menu. Hebrew language support — Winhance is now available in 29 languages. New Explorer customizations: desktop icon visibility toggles, This PC folder visibility, an icon cache size setting, and automatic thumbnail cache cleanup. New "All apps view" setting for the redesigned Windows 11 Start menu, and the Windows 11 system tray icons setting is now a dropdown with more control. App-local UI zoom — press Ctrl +/-/0 or use Ctrl+MouseWheel to scale the whole app, just like a browser. New External Apps: EA app, Ubisoft Connect, Battle.net, Rockstar Games Launcher, PowerShell, and Helium Browser. Bug Fixes Layouts no longer clip when the Windows text size slider is set above 100%. Accessibility: Narrator now announces setting names on toggles and dropdowns, previously unlabeled buttons are labeled, and progress updates are announced. Silent updates now respect your custom install location instead of reverting to the default. Cancel in Review Mode no longer clears your app selections. OneNote is now detected correctly for Win32 Click-to-Run installs. Clean Start Menu applies more reliably by also writing the group policy path. WinGet errors are no longer silent — error details now show in the terminal output. Fixed a startup crash on older Windows builds caused by a .NET runtime regression. Config import now converts power setting values correctly and no longer re-applies an already-active power plan. Improvements App icons load noticeably faster and cover almost everything now, including legacy capabilities and optional features — they come from a dedicated, checksum-validated icon repository and are fetched in parallel. Software & Apps polish: per-icon tooltips, extra table columns, an app sort dropdown, relocated search, and a cleaner compact view. A warning now appears when the Connected Devices Platform Service is set to Manual or Disabled, since some Windows features depend on it. Download: Winhance 26.06.12 | 61.5 MB (Open Source) Links: Winhance Website | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      95
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!