USB ports didn't power off after shutdown in Windows 10
I'm using Windows 10 Pro in my Dell Inspiron 3547 laptop. The issue is my USB ports remain powered after shutdown. It was never an issue until I upgraded to Win 10, and now I can't figure out how to make it stop.
I tried by configuring BIOS, updating the OS, and a few other ways.
windows-10 usb shutdown
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I'm using Windows 10 Pro in my Dell Inspiron 3547 laptop. The issue is my USB ports remain powered after shutdown. It was never an issue until I upgraded to Win 10, and now I can't figure out how to make it stop.
I tried by configuring BIOS, updating the OS, and a few other ways.
windows-10 usb shutdown
add a comment |
I'm using Windows 10 Pro in my Dell Inspiron 3547 laptop. The issue is my USB ports remain powered after shutdown. It was never an issue until I upgraded to Win 10, and now I can't figure out how to make it stop.
I tried by configuring BIOS, updating the OS, and a few other ways.
windows-10 usb shutdown
I'm using Windows 10 Pro in my Dell Inspiron 3547 laptop. The issue is my USB ports remain powered after shutdown. It was never an issue until I upgraded to Win 10, and now I can't figure out how to make it stop.
I tried by configuring BIOS, updating the OS, and a few other ways.
windows-10 usb shutdown
windows-10 usb shutdown
edited Feb 12 '17 at 14:03
Run5k
10.8k73051
10.8k73051
asked Feb 12 '17 at 13:54
Chamin WickramarathnaChamin Wickramarathna
10413
10413
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
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From https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/usb-ports-remain-powered-after-shutdown/5a97d8d6-49d7-4537-a76d-7bb219aeb8d1:
I think this is not an hardware issue, it's an OS setting. You don't
need to make BIOS changes. I think you can solve this in 2 steps:
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Change Settings Scheme > Change Advanced Power Settings > USB Settings > and deactivate
Selective Suspension;
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Choose What Power Buttons Do > Activate Settings Currentlly Unavailable > scroll down to Shutdown Settings > disable Activate Fast Start.
That should solve your problem. It did for me ;-)
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
add a comment |
This "fast startup" seems to be a new feature in some recent Windows 10 update (I didn't have the problem with earlier versions of Windows 10).
Turning this off solved the problem for me (no need to change anything else, i.e. I still have selective suspension enabled and did not have to do any BIOS changes).
- Go to
Windows > Settings > System > Power & sleep > Additional power settings > Choose what the power buttons do > Change settings that are currently unavailable
UncheckTurn on fast startup (recommended)
Save changes
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
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active
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From https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/usb-ports-remain-powered-after-shutdown/5a97d8d6-49d7-4537-a76d-7bb219aeb8d1:
I think this is not an hardware issue, it's an OS setting. You don't
need to make BIOS changes. I think you can solve this in 2 steps:
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Change Settings Scheme > Change Advanced Power Settings > USB Settings > and deactivate
Selective Suspension;
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Choose What Power Buttons Do > Activate Settings Currentlly Unavailable > scroll down to Shutdown Settings > disable Activate Fast Start.
That should solve your problem. It did for me ;-)
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
add a comment |
From https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/usb-ports-remain-powered-after-shutdown/5a97d8d6-49d7-4537-a76d-7bb219aeb8d1:
I think this is not an hardware issue, it's an OS setting. You don't
need to make BIOS changes. I think you can solve this in 2 steps:
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Change Settings Scheme > Change Advanced Power Settings > USB Settings > and deactivate
Selective Suspension;
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Choose What Power Buttons Do > Activate Settings Currentlly Unavailable > scroll down to Shutdown Settings > disable Activate Fast Start.
That should solve your problem. It did for me ;-)
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
add a comment |
From https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/usb-ports-remain-powered-after-shutdown/5a97d8d6-49d7-4537-a76d-7bb219aeb8d1:
I think this is not an hardware issue, it's an OS setting. You don't
need to make BIOS changes. I think you can solve this in 2 steps:
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Change Settings Scheme > Change Advanced Power Settings > USB Settings > and deactivate
Selective Suspension;
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Choose What Power Buttons Do > Activate Settings Currentlly Unavailable > scroll down to Shutdown Settings > disable Activate Fast Start.
That should solve your problem. It did for me ;-)
From https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/usb-ports-remain-powered-after-shutdown/5a97d8d6-49d7-4537-a76d-7bb219aeb8d1:
I think this is not an hardware issue, it's an OS setting. You don't
need to make BIOS changes. I think you can solve this in 2 steps:
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Change Settings Scheme > Change Advanced Power Settings > USB Settings > and deactivate
Selective Suspension;
Go to Control Panel > Power Options > Choose What Power Buttons Do > Activate Settings Currentlly Unavailable > scroll down to Shutdown Settings > disable Activate Fast Start.
That should solve your problem. It did for me ;-)
edited Feb 12 '17 at 16:53
DavidPostill♦
104k25225259
104k25225259
answered Feb 12 '17 at 16:49
wysiwygwysiwyg
2,018416
2,018416
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
add a comment |
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
I followed above steps. But didn't work it.
– Chamin Wickramarathna
Feb 14 '17 at 12:16
add a comment |
This "fast startup" seems to be a new feature in some recent Windows 10 update (I didn't have the problem with earlier versions of Windows 10).
Turning this off solved the problem for me (no need to change anything else, i.e. I still have selective suspension enabled and did not have to do any BIOS changes).
- Go to
Windows > Settings > System > Power & sleep > Additional power settings > Choose what the power buttons do > Change settings that are currently unavailable
UncheckTurn on fast startup (recommended)
Save changes
add a comment |
This "fast startup" seems to be a new feature in some recent Windows 10 update (I didn't have the problem with earlier versions of Windows 10).
Turning this off solved the problem for me (no need to change anything else, i.e. I still have selective suspension enabled and did not have to do any BIOS changes).
- Go to
Windows > Settings > System > Power & sleep > Additional power settings > Choose what the power buttons do > Change settings that are currently unavailable
UncheckTurn on fast startup (recommended)
Save changes
add a comment |
This "fast startup" seems to be a new feature in some recent Windows 10 update (I didn't have the problem with earlier versions of Windows 10).
Turning this off solved the problem for me (no need to change anything else, i.e. I still have selective suspension enabled and did not have to do any BIOS changes).
- Go to
Windows > Settings > System > Power & sleep > Additional power settings > Choose what the power buttons do > Change settings that are currently unavailable
UncheckTurn on fast startup (recommended)
Save changes
This "fast startup" seems to be a new feature in some recent Windows 10 update (I didn't have the problem with earlier versions of Windows 10).
Turning this off solved the problem for me (no need to change anything else, i.e. I still have selective suspension enabled and did not have to do any BIOS changes).
- Go to
Windows > Settings > System > Power & sleep > Additional power settings > Choose what the power buttons do > Change settings that are currently unavailable
UncheckTurn on fast startup (recommended)
Save changes
answered Jan 1 '18 at 2:19
msamsa
62
62
add a comment |
add a comment |
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