this post was submitted on 16 Mar 2024
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We already have a setting for that. Just make sure to set suspend to do nothing so it doesn't go into sleep/hibernate or shutdown.
We already have a setting for that too.
Wow: I always use red arrows with Spectacle but having seen these green ones I think I'm going to switch! 🔝🔚
I figured they'd be more visible with how bit cunched my shit gets.
As a colorblind person, I love these arrows vs the typical red arrows lol
Thanks for the info, now I am going to use the Colour Picker plasmoid to save this colour and use it whenever I make an arrow.
The exact color I used is #0dff00
#00ff55 is a good one too.
What I want is not (just) that the screen turns off when the lock timer times out, but that I can push 'lock' or a key combination and have the system lock and the screen turn off immediately.
The new 'when locked, turn off screen' setting should help with this, but setting it too low will presumably make it hard to unlock.
For running backups, 'after a period of inactivity' could help.
It still seems like the removal of a useful feature.
This might be a problem, I don't think you can have both behaviors at the same time.
Setting it to 0 will function just how you described, it won't make unlocking it harder. When the password prompt is open, it blocks the screen off behavior.
It should work for your case of creating backups when idle. inactivity = no user input or program sending block signal = most likely idle.
Sure, but for your case I don't believe you actually need it.
The screen turning off when it automatically locks is an added bonus; the priority is to be able to command the system to simultaneously lock and turn off the screen. You're correct that the setting at zero seconds safely achieves that.
I've had other, more stupid uses for running commands, though I don't think any are actively in use.
Taking actions on network reconfiguration, charge completion, and SMART failure are all things that spring to mind. It's nice to be able to set those kinds of things in a GUI rather than putting them in /etc/something.d