View Full Version : Disabling the sleep light
TheFish
Sep 4, 2003, 06:45 AM
Dose anyone know how you can disable the flashing light your moniter gives off when your computers asleep?
MacMaelstrom
Sep 4, 2003, 06:57 AM
Get a 17" iMac...
Mr. Anderson
Sep 4, 2003, 07:14 AM
If you can't do it through controls, try a piece of duct tape cut to fit it exactly. That or a thin piece of opaque plastic that you can superglue to the light.
D
MacMaelstrom
Sep 4, 2003, 07:17 AM
If I bought a expensive mac, last thing I'D do would be superglue something to it. That'll be, like, permanent
frescies
Sep 4, 2003, 12:19 PM
Originally posted by MacMaelstrom
Get a 17" iMac...
I have one and it has a sleep light..... ???????
TheFish
Sep 4, 2003, 12:31 PM
I have a 17" imac, and as for covering it up, ive put put on 15 post it notes on it and the thing still shines through the paper and you can still see the light from the back.
Mr. Anderson
Sep 4, 2003, 12:47 PM
So I'm really curious as to why this is such a huge issue.
A good thick coating of paint (several coats maybe) might work as well.
D
Eniregnat
Sep 4, 2003, 05:28 PM
My previous boss used to flip out on it.
"Why is you computer blinking at me?"
"Jou know it's hard to concentrate when it stares at me."
"If it just blinked on and off I could handle it, but dim-light-dim-light... just turn it off."
The HAL them on the central server bothered her also.
My former girlfriend used to put her clothes on top of my iBook so that she could sleep.
rainman::|:|
Sep 4, 2003, 05:34 PM
wow, i thought i was neurotic...
pnw
TheFish
Sep 4, 2003, 05:44 PM
hah alright then, i think ill just throw a shirt over the moniter.
Cale
Jan 8, 2004, 03:54 AM
I take it from this thread of non-answers that there is there no way to disable it? My iBook lights up the whole room :P
teabgs
Jan 8, 2004, 04:22 AM
Originally posted by Cale
I take it from this thread of non-answers that there is there no way to disable it? My iBook lights up the whole room :P
not unless you want to void your warranty ;)
MoparShaha
Jan 8, 2004, 04:41 AM
I find throwing clothes on the computer the best thing. My Power Mac and PowerBook light up the whole room as well, and it makes it difficult for me to sleep.
floatingspirit
Jan 8, 2004, 07:34 AM
I know I'm stressed out right now, but you could:
Apply a screwdriver directly over the blinking light and then apply your basic hammer's head to the top of the screwdriver and, well, there you HAD it.
As an absolute last resort: Buy a Dell
3-22
Jan 8, 2004, 07:44 AM
It's a cool effect now that I moved the mac out of the bedroom into my office. That pulsing light would light up the room... I placed a CD case in front of the display sometimes before i went to bed but usually just turned off the computer completly.
Cale
Jan 8, 2004, 12:12 PM
Originally posted by floatingspirit
As an absolute last resort: Buy a Dell
ACK! The light would have to be giving me skin cancer before I went that route. :P
I work computer support for the College of Education at my school, dealing with both platforms, and Dell seems to be shipping out pretty shoddy hardware these days...
(BTW, the iBook technically belongs to my school, so while I appreciate the advice, hammer + screwdriver probably would not be the most desirable method. Too hard to explain. "I... uh... fell down some stairs...")
5300cs
Jan 8, 2004, 11:38 PM
I doubt there's a way to disable it without physically opening it. Just throw some clothes over it. Or you can turn it around and point it at the wall or something, that's what I do (wife complained.)
You never realize how bright it is until you put it in a pitch-black room. My PowerMac is the same way ...sleeping in the same room is like sleeping a lighthouse sometimes.
Kwyjibo
Jan 9, 2004, 12:39 AM
yeah the ibook light is a bit big ... on the powerbooks its not bad but its also i nthe button so the idea of coverign it is less than ideal
can't you put a sticky not overit before oyu goto bed but something that will easily come off
Maritan
Jan 9, 2004, 12:53 AM
Me, I just put it flush against the wall... so almost no light escapes to disturb me.
Works well enough for me, but then I'm told that I will probably sleep through earthquakes too.
5300cs
Jan 9, 2004, 12:59 AM
Originally posted by Maritan
Works well enough for me, but then I'm told that I will probably sleep through earthquakes too.
<off topic> scary as hell when one wakes you up though ... </off topic>
FriarTuck
Jan 9, 2004, 10:56 AM
If only there was such a thing as a sleep light when I was in college.... :daydream:
Her: "That light on your computer is wrecking the mood. Isn't there anything you can do?"
Him: "Only one cure for that, honey. Take off your sweater and put it over the light."
DavidLeblond
Jan 9, 2004, 11:44 AM
Turn your computer off.
That should stop the light.
Nermal
Jan 10, 2004, 11:27 PM
I do one of 3 things:
1. Leave the computer on. Usually I can sleep better with it on, possibly due to the constant hum.
2. Put it to sleep and lean a piece of cardboard over the front. I keep a piece handy for that very purpose.
3. Just turn it off. I haven't ended up doing that very much.
There might be some Open Firmware commands that can adjust the light. I remember someone saying that one of the OS X updates made his sleeping computer take shorter breaths.
Powerbook G5
Jan 10, 2004, 11:39 PM
My roommate was annoyed with it the first couple of nights after I got my new PowerBook because the white light can be pretty intense so I just have to set it on my desk facing backwards against the backing of the desk a little to "muffle" the light.
Counterfit
Jan 11, 2004, 12:50 AM
Of course, you can always set it not to sleep...
Powerbook G5
Jan 11, 2004, 12:56 AM
I'm pretty sure that it's better for it to sleep so it isn't running constantly. My roommate's HP laptop ran for two months nonstop without sleeping because he used it for an alarm and to run defrag and stuff at night and it burnt out the logic board by mid October and refused to start up.
Counterfit
Jan 11, 2004, 07:21 PM
Right, but that's an HP, not an Mac :p
TigerPRO
Jan 11, 2004, 10:38 PM
This is about the dumbest discussion I've seen on this site. And it looks like fun..
The pulsing sleep light is just about the coolest feature on the planet. If you want to get rid of it, you need a life.
But if you do need help, try this:
Void your warranty by opening up your computer and short circuiting the LED, or whatever that thing is. Then close the computer up, and hope for the best that your computer still turns on.
Otherwise you might try buying a defective refurbished computer that had a disfunctional LED light.
jon404
Jan 12, 2004, 02:43 PM
Such a useful product; usually comes in a stunning silver metallic shade that is a perfect complement to Powerbook and I-book covers. But not just for hiding bright Sleep lights ( which actually might make a good bedside nightlight?) ... duct tape stops liquid leaks (sort of), muffler leaks (very well), can be used for first aid, etc, etc. Good stuff, cheap. Also used, experimentally, in the fashion industry, and not only by bondage types.
stoid
Jan 12, 2004, 03:03 PM
Why not leave it on folding?!? :D
mj_1903
Jan 12, 2004, 03:39 PM
I just leave my 2 PowerMac's, iBook and PowerBook running. My PowerMac has been running non-stop for 14 months now, so it can be done.
TigerPRO
Jan 12, 2004, 11:46 PM
Originally posted by mj_1903
I just leave my 2 PowerMac's, iBook and PowerBook running. My PowerMac has been running non-stop for 14 months now, so it can be done.
Then you must be running Mac OS 2.
MattG
Jan 13, 2004, 05:59 AM
Haha...I usually have to put something over my PMG4 if I leave it in sleep mode when I go to bed. It lights up the whole room!
Counterfit
Jan 13, 2004, 07:14 AM
Originally posted by TigerPRO
Then you must be running Mac OS 2. Or OS X. Hell, they could even be running OS 9, it's not unheard of to get that kind of uptime with it.
Raid
Jan 13, 2004, 09:29 AM
I too would like to be able to adjust the pulse rate of the power button on my monitor and tower as well. I love darkness when I'm trying to get a sleep and have covered up LED's on my zip drive, phone, iSub, and even put tint on my alarm clock to keep the light level as low as possible.
However, the worst offender is by far my G4 and the monitor.
The advice some people here have offered doesn't really work:
1) Tape up the button
Normaly this would work, but the plastic of the monitor and tower reflects & refracts the light so you have to plaster the enitre front of the monitor and tower face (mines an older Gigabit? G4) with tape. The result is one fugly looking set up and a tiny glow coming from the bottom right corner of the monitor... and I'm not taping up the screen!
2) Cover it with something.
Now I've had varing degrees of success with this. For my Tibook I have an old scarf that I cover the back up with and that works. Using a t-shirt over the monitor and tower works ok, but I still get light leaking around (or through) the shirt. Puting cardboard or the like is even worse, I have my monitor right up against the wall and the light simply reflects off the cardboard and onto the wall making appear brighter than before. Also unless you have a fitted piece of cardboard for your tower, the reflection from that gap is even worse than the monitor! BTW I should also mention this makes your computer look fugly or make you look like a slob.
3)Open up your computer and take out the LED.
Well this one would work, but you got to know what your doing. I aslo wonder that if you did this would the power button still work like it used to? Futhermore I've got a 17" ADC CRT monitor there is some serious shock hazzards when opening up those things.
4) Turn it off.
Well this is what I do, but some may want/need their computer on. It's my understanding that there are some scheduled repairs and checks that a computer will run late at night and if your computer is off they don't get done. I'm not sure if it's affected my computer's performance any, but I sure can't brag about my uptime. :)
Since the pulse rate is something that runs even when the disks and computer is asleep, I'm assuming that any modification to the pulse rate would be a firmware hack. I have yet to run accross anyone who is skilled enough to pull it off. And I doubt apple would give users the ability to play with firmware settings from the OS. :(
MacBoyX
Jan 13, 2004, 10:08 AM
Originally posted by Raid
...4) Turn it off.
Well this is what I do, but some may want/need their computer on. It's my understanding that there are some scheduled repairs and checks that a computer will run late at night and if your computer is off they don't get done. I'm not sure if it's affected my computer's performance any, but I sure can't brag about my uptime. :)...
Which won't run when it's asleep either.
If it bothers u that much and it's a desktop, have the monitor go off and the display go to sleep! If it's a 'Book, cover it up or turn it off.
I kept my iMac G4 on for almost a year (rebooting when necessary of course) and it never hurt it. Same with my G5. It runs my printer (3 other Macs print to it) and my Firewire HD (3 other Macs access it). It's not bad to leave a desktop on, the Servers at work (some are just desktop pcs) run 24/7/365.
macboyX
Powerbook G5
Jan 13, 2004, 11:18 AM
I regularily kept my PowerBook G3 under OS 9 running for months at a time, so yes, it is possible for long uptimes even before OS X. I normally kept it up all semester long at college and turned it off only to go home or take an extended vacation, which came every 5 months or so.
TigerPRO
Jan 13, 2004, 11:43 AM
Originally posted by Counterfit
Or OS X. Hell, they could even be running OS 9, it's not unheard of to get that kind of uptime with it.
I think you misunderstood me, sorry to confuse you with my comment. I was pointing out if he/she was running non-stop like that, they they probably haven't upgraded their Mac OS since then. I didn't mean to imply there's something wrong with Mac OS 2. lol.
rueyeet
Jan 13, 2004, 12:21 PM
Originally posted by TigerPRO
The pulsing sleep light is just about the coolest feature on the planet. If you want to get rid of it, you need a life.
As a habitual insomniac, I can assure you I need good sleep far more. :) Though I do agree with you on coolness factor.
I'm one of those that needs the room to be pretty dark before I can sleep, and the TiBook's sleep light and power cord LED are amazingly bright in a dark room. I can ignore the steady green of the power cord, but the sleep light's really annoying. It's like the TiBook is snoring visually instead of audibly....and I can't sleep if someone's snoring! Can't nudge a PowerBook and make it roll over, either.
I've actually found that placing the foam of the headphones I use for non-roommate-bothering computing just over the sleep LED gets rid of most of the light, though.
Funny this thread should pop up just as I was wondering if there was a way to disable the thing....Go MR Forums!
Powerbook G5
Jan 13, 2004, 08:36 PM
If it is that bad you can just turn it off. With how quickly Panther boots up, it's not much of an issue having to wait for it to restart.
Counterfit
Jan 13, 2004, 09:51 PM
Originally posted by TigerPRO
I think you misunderstood me, sorry to confuse you with my comment. I was pointing out if he/she was running non-stop like that, they they probably haven't upgraded their Mac OS since then. I didn't mean to imply there's something wrong with Mac OS 2. lol. Oh I see, that's actually funny then :D
PismoGuy
Jan 13, 2004, 10:52 PM
If I would want to shut that darn light off in my pismo I would open up the case and replace the LED with a regular diode. I would not short it out for the consequences could be ugly; I would not just pull it out either because it might open a circuit that is doing something important (like acting as a sensor for waking it up or something).
Powerbook G5
Jan 13, 2004, 11:23 PM
My PowerBook G3's light is actually less "annoying" probably since it flashes rather than pulses. I think what gets to people is the fact that the G4's pulsing light isn't a steady blink, but rather that irregular "breathing" which psychologically gets to some people. I personally don't mind it much since I tend to need distractions such as an A/C or ceiling fan or something to help me sleep. I must admit that the first night it really took me by surprise, though, the dang thing seriously can light up the room if it is normally pitch dark and the pulsing can be a bit mesmerizing if you look at it enough. I just keep mine turned towards the back on the desk for my roommate's sake so it doesn't bother him, even though his HP laptop has a good half dozen lights of various colors that blink at seemingly random times all night long, the only difference is that they are either steady or a constant blinking instead of a pulsing.
Counterfit
Jan 14, 2004, 06:55 AM
I just don't let mine sleep while it's plugged in :rolleyes:
Besides, between my roommate's binary clock, and the extremely bright LED on my front right speaker, the room's pretty bright anyway, so a "breathing" light wouldn't make much difference.
Steamboatwillie
Jan 14, 2004, 08:25 AM
Here is what I did last night, as a test, to see how well it worked.
Before I went to bed I set my display to sleep after 1 minute (while plugged in) and for my computer (PB Al 15") to never sleep (again, while plugged in) After a minute it was almost totally dark with the exception of the power cords green ring. I slept fine and I am pretty sensitive to light while I am sleeping. My PowerBook was on my nightstand less than 2 feet from my head.
Good luck
Raid
Jan 14, 2004, 11:20 AM
Originally posted by Steamboatwillie
Here is what I did last night, as a test, to see how well it worked.
Ok I think I get it, I'll try it tonight and see what it does. Maybe I could even start folding for MR if it works!
Simon Liquid
Jan 14, 2004, 11:55 AM
Originally posted by Steamboatwillie
Before I went to bed I set my display to sleep after 1 minute (while plugged in) and for my computer (PB Al 15") to never sleep (again, while plugged in) After a minute it was almost totally dark with the exception of the power cords green ring. I slept fine and I am pretty sensitive to light while I am sleeping. My PowerBook was on my nightstand less than 2 feet from my head.
I tried that with my tower when I first got it. It kept the monitor light from pulsing but my Quicksilver was just too loud to sleep with the fans running. Now I just turn it off or hang an article of clothing over it.
Purple Worm
Jan 14, 2004, 12:09 PM
I haven't seen such a thread of old toss in all my life. Poor old TheFish, not a single post has attempted to seriously answer his question about stopping his sleep light from flashing. Losers.
Doh!
rueyeet
Jan 14, 2004, 12:46 PM
There is no answer to the question, because there is no way to disable the sleep light without physically modifying the machine, which was stated quite early in the thread. Pay attention.
Originally posted by Counterfit
Of course, you can always set it not to sleep...
Not if you want to close the lid of your 'Book...there was another whole thread about the fact that you can't set your 'Book not to go to sleep when the lid is closed. I don't like the idea of leaving the TiBook open all the time, what with how dusty my house is (yes, I know, shame on me). :rolleyes: That, and I'd probably knock it off the table in my sleep or something... :eek:
Powerbook G5
Jan 14, 2004, 12:50 PM
I still say the best solution is turning it off at night. I know that most Mac users have a hang up about turning off or restarting, but it's not like the Apple police are going to raid your house and confiscate your Mac for turning it off at night.
Purple Worm
Jan 14, 2004, 02:52 PM
I was paying attention rueyeet you idiot.
Counterfit
Jan 14, 2004, 02:54 PM
Someone's gettin' banned :rolleyes:
Purple Worm
Jan 14, 2004, 03:00 PM
Me? It would ruin my life.
Counterfit
Jan 14, 2004, 04:04 PM
Uh-huh, I'm sure it would...
From The Rules (http://forums.macrumors.com/announcement.php?forumid=20):
Instantly Bannable offenses
In general, we try to give some warnings, but these are one-time bannable offenses. You will not get a warning.
1) Direct personal insult. ie "You are an idiot." and all the variations. Why? Because this isn't grade school. People should be able tonot insult people. And the only purpose of a post like this is to incite other people.
Purple Worm
Jan 14, 2004, 04:07 PM
Me? It would ruin my life.
virividox
Jan 14, 2004, 04:14 PM
close your eyes and go to sleep, no more sleep light. hehe
seriously if it bothers u that much, get some black electrical tape and before you go to bed cover that little blinker
Purple Worm
Jan 14, 2004, 04:21 PM
I clicked on your link Counterfit and it was really interesting.
pinto32
Jan 14, 2004, 07:18 PM
dude....chill
TigerPRO
Jan 14, 2004, 09:13 PM
Originally posted by Counterfit
Oh I see, that's actually funny then :D
Yes. lol.
jap4n
Jan 14, 2004, 09:46 PM
try the old.. overheating method..
get the computer really hot, then turn it off - cooling it should crack some internal chips.. just joking...
well, thats what happened to my iBook.. it got hot and cracked some chips on the logic board apparently?!
the result was the sleep light wouldnt show.. it got really annoying cos i couldnt tell if i had to boot up or not..
sleep light is a good idea... dont take to your mac with glue/hammers/ or :( faces!!
Purple Worm
Jan 15, 2004, 05:16 AM
It's OK pinto32, it's a sort of calm sarcasm. And besides Counterfits link was really interesting, no it was.
Counterfit
Jan 15, 2004, 09:25 AM
Well, maybe you should read the rules for once. It's obvious you haven't done it before.
Calvin19
Nov 2, 2009, 08:07 PM
I disabled my sleep light and did not void the warranty. it was actually really easy.
shadowbird423
Nov 2, 2009, 08:38 PM
And you posted on a thread abandoned since 2004 because....? :confused:
Raid
Nov 3, 2009, 08:53 AM
Without instructions to boot. :rolleyes: Reading this was a blast from the past though.
filmweaver
Nov 3, 2009, 11:03 PM
Try cutting a small square of black electrical tape, it worked on my check engine light.
Calvin19
Nov 4, 2009, 04:22 PM
And you posted on a thread abandoned since 2004 because....? :confused:
just to see if it made anyone mad. :apple:
Calvin19
Nov 4, 2009, 04:22 PM
Try cutting a small square of black electrical tape, it worked on my check engine light.
Word.
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