I am not afraid of the command line or of scripting or changing configuration files. Does anyone know how I can do this from within the operating system? Head to Control Panel > Hardware and Sound > Power Options to find these settings. With this, nobody will be able to copy anything without putting. Whether you’re using Windows 7, 8, or 10, you’ll need to change it from the Control Panel’s power plan window. You can turn on or off your USB port in your computer or laptop whether window is 10 or 8, 8.1. This setting is part of the power plan options on Windows. Shouldn't it be possible to cut power to all the USB ports on shutdown? Or even, to determine for each port individually whether it should remain powered or not? There is no option that I can find in the BIOS system settings to accomplish this. If your USB peripherals work properly, there’s no reason to disable USB suspension. Which makes it sort of useless, unfortunately. Note: Make sure it is set to disable for both On Battery and. 6.Expand USB selective suspend settings and select Disabled from the drop-down. 5.Under USB settings you will find USB selective suspend setting.
4.Find USB settings and then click on the Plus (+) icon to expand it. In the present state it obviously does not power off my other peripherals (monitor, amplifier, desk lamp.) without manually flipping the switch. 3.Now click on Change advanced power settings link. It works only on hubs that support per-port.
I would love it if when I turn the TV off, the power to the USB is off and then it turns off the lights. You could use my tool uhubctl - command line utility to control USB power per port for compatible USB hubs. I also have a power strip that I like to use, which works with a USB controlled relais. When I turn off the TV, the lights just blink. I would prefer it if no USB devices were leeching power while the computer is off, while still being able to turn on the computer (and everything attached) remotely through Wake-on-LAN. This seems undesirable to me and it was not the case with my previous computer. Except I noticed that the USB ports keep supplying a voltage even after I shutdown the system. Hello, I just built a new desktop computer using an Asus M5A78L-M/USB3 motherboard with an AMD FX6300 CPU.