System Review and Apply Energy Recommendations in Windows 11


Green_banner.webp

This tutorial will show you how to review and apply energy recommendations for your account in Windows 11.

Starting with Windows 11 build 22621.1344, Windows now provides Energy Recommendations in Settings.

You can review and apply these recommendations to improve the energy efficiency of your PC and reduce your carbon footprint.

Starting with Windows 11 version 22H2 KB5030310 Build 22621.2361, Microsoft added 2 additional energy recommendations for turning on dark mode and adjusting refresh rate to conserve energy.

Starting with Windows 11 build 26252.5000 (Canary), build 26120.1340 (Dev), build 26100.1876 (RP), and build 26100.1882 (24H2) Microsoft is beginning to roll out a new energy recommendation for turning off HDR to conserve energy on PCs with HDR displays.

Reference:



Here's How:

1 Open Settings (WIn+I).

2 Click/tap on System on the left side, and click/tap on Power & battery on the right side. (see screenshot below)

Energy_recommendations-1.png

3 Click/tap on Energy recommendations. (see screenshot below)


Energy_recommendations-2.png

4 You can now review the energy recommendations to either Apply specific or Apply all recommendations you want. (see screenshot below)

If you click/tap on an applied energy recommendation, it will take you to its settings page to make any changes you want.


Energy_recommendations-3.png


That's it,
Shawn Brink


 
Last edited:
I wonder whether you can DISABLE the energy recommendations though. The entire functionality is horrible.
You can’t hide just that page because it’s not a sub page of power. It’s a card embedded in the power page.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro
I wasn't talking about hiding anything. I was talking about completely disabling the functionality, because the OS doing something without my consent and repeatedly reverting a setting I set is completely wrong.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
I wasn't talking about hiding anything. I was talking about completely disabling the functionality, because the OS doing something without my consent and repeatedly reverting a setting I set is completely wrong.
are you saying that you turn on screen saver and, by itself, it is auto turned off (constantly)? have you attempted to set it via reg or gpo to ensure that its not a problem elsewhere? i have been unable to replicate that behavior today...
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro
are you saying that you turn on screen saver and, by itself, it is auto turned off (constantly)? have you attempted to set it via reg or gpo to ensure that its not a problem elsewhere? i have been unable to replicate that behavior today...

Basically the power recommendations page keeps disabling my screen saver. I would notice it not starting, go to settings, the "disable screen saver" has green checkmark, then I got to screen saver settings, those are not changed at all, I still see the same screen saver and timeout there, but it's just overwritten somehow. When I change the timeout to anything else, back in recommendations page the screen saver is no longer displayed as disabled, and after random looking time and under completely unknown circumstances this gets disabled again in anything between cca 1 and several hours.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
It has just disabled itself again, and bizarrely the registry settings are the same, exactly the same. There is something else going on in the background that bypasses everything, but I can't figure out how does it work.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11
I don't use a screen saver, so I can't really comment on that issue. I don't see things on that settings screen changing themselves...
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • OS
    Win 11 Pro 25H2, Build 26200.8524
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brew
    CPU
    Intel Core i5 14500
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte B760M G P WIFI
    Memory
    64GB DDR4
    Graphics Card(s)
    GeForce RTX 4060
    Sound Card
    Chipset Realtek
    Monitor(s) Displays
    LG 45" Ultragear, Acer 24" 1080p
    Screen Resolution
    5120x1440, 1920x1080
    Hard Drives
    Crucial P310 2TB 2280 PCIe Gen4 3D NAND NVMe M.2 SSD (O/S)
    Silicon Power 2TB US75 NVMe PCIe Gen4 M.2 2280 SSD (backup)
    Crucial BX500 2TB 3D NAND (2nd backup)
    Seagate 4TB Ironwolf, rotating HDD archive files
    External off-line backup Drives: 2 NVMe 4TB drives in external enclosures
    PSU
    Thermaltake Toughpower GF3 750W
    Case
    LIAN LI LANCOOL 216 E-ATX PC Case
    Cooling
    Lots of fans!
    Keyboard
    Microsoft Comfort Curve 2000
    Mouse
    Logitech G305
    Internet Speed
    Verizon FiOS 1GB
    Browser
    Firefox
    Antivirus
    Malware Bytes & Windows Defender Security
  • Operating System
    Win 11 Pro 25H2, Build 26200.8524
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brew
    CPU
    Intel Core i5 14400
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte B760M DS3H AX
    Memory
    32GB DDR5
    Graphics card(s)
    Intel 700 Embedded GPU
    Sound Card
    Realtek Embedded
    Monitor(s) Displays
    27" HP 1080p
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1080
    Hard Drives
    Crucial P310 2TB 2280 PCIe Gen4 eD NAND PCIe SSD
    Samsung EVO 990 2TB NVMe Gen4 SSD
    Samsung 2TB SATA SSD
    PSU
    Thermaltake Smart BM3 650W
    Case
    Okinos Micro ATX Case
    Cooling
    Fans
    Keyboard
    Microsoft Comfort Curve 2000
    Mouse
    Logitech G305
    Internet Speed
    Verizon FiOS 1GB
    Browser
    Firefox
    Antivirus
    Malware Bytes & Windows Defender Security

My Computers

System One System Two

  • OS
    Win 11 Pro 25H2, Build 26200.8524
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brew
    CPU
    Intel Core i5 14500
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte B760M G P WIFI
    Memory
    64GB DDR4
    Graphics Card(s)
    GeForce RTX 4060
    Sound Card
    Chipset Realtek
    Monitor(s) Displays
    LG 45" Ultragear, Acer 24" 1080p
    Screen Resolution
    5120x1440, 1920x1080
    Hard Drives
    Crucial P310 2TB 2280 PCIe Gen4 3D NAND NVMe M.2 SSD (O/S)
    Silicon Power 2TB US75 NVMe PCIe Gen4 M.2 2280 SSD (backup)
    Crucial BX500 2TB 3D NAND (2nd backup)
    Seagate 4TB Ironwolf, rotating HDD archive files
    External off-line backup Drives: 2 NVMe 4TB drives in external enclosures
    PSU
    Thermaltake Toughpower GF3 750W
    Case
    LIAN LI LANCOOL 216 E-ATX PC Case
    Cooling
    Lots of fans!
    Keyboard
    Microsoft Comfort Curve 2000
    Mouse
    Logitech G305
    Internet Speed
    Verizon FiOS 1GB
    Browser
    Firefox
    Antivirus
    Malware Bytes & Windows Defender Security
  • Operating System
    Win 11 Pro 25H2, Build 26200.8524
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brew
    CPU
    Intel Core i5 14400
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte B760M DS3H AX
    Memory
    32GB DDR5
    Graphics card(s)
    Intel 700 Embedded GPU
    Sound Card
    Realtek Embedded
    Monitor(s) Displays
    27" HP 1080p
    Screen Resolution
    1920x1080
    Hard Drives
    Crucial P310 2TB 2280 PCIe Gen4 eD NAND PCIe SSD
    Samsung EVO 990 2TB NVMe Gen4 SSD
    Samsung 2TB SATA SSD
    PSU
    Thermaltake Smart BM3 650W
    Case
    Okinos Micro ATX Case
    Cooling
    Fans
    Keyboard
    Microsoft Comfort Curve 2000
    Mouse
    Logitech G305
    Internet Speed
    Verizon FiOS 1GB
    Browser
    Firefox
    Antivirus
    Malware Bytes & Windows Defender Security
It's just the screen saver one :(
i cant replicate your issue, but here is an ahk script i made to launch your screensaver after 10 mins of pc idle. if you want the time changed, just tell me the path to the .scr file of the screensaver you use, the time you want it set for and i will edit the script and compile it to an exe for you so you can have it run at startup. it runs in the clock tray area so you can close it out if you want it off

Code:
#Persistent
SetTimer, CheckDesktop, 60000   ; check every 60 seconds

CheckDesktop:
    ; Get the active window's class
    WinGetClass, activeClass, A

    ; If Desktop ("Program Manager") is active
    if (activeClass = "Progman") {
        ; Get how long it's been active in ms
        WinGet, activeTime, ID, A
        if (A_TimeIdlePhysical >= 600000) { ; 10 minutes = 600000 ms
            ; Launch screensaver
            Run, "C:\Windows\System32\Bubbles.scr"
        }
    }
return
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 11 Pro
It's just the screen saver one :(
this maybe of help as it could be advanced power settings that needs adjustment.

best of luck Steve ..
 

My Computers

System One System Two

  • OS
    Debian 13 Trixie .. Windows 11 Home
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Manufacturer/Model
    HP 24" AiO
    CPU
    Ryzen 7 5825u
    Motherboard
    HP
    Memory
    64GB DDR4 3200
    Graphics Card(s)
    Ryzen 7 5825u
    Sound Card
    RealTek
    Monitor(s) Displays
    24" HP AiO
    Screen Resolution
    1920 x 1080 @60 Hz
    Hard Drives
    1TB WD Blue SN580 M2 SSD Partitioned.
    2x 1TB USB HDD External Backup/Storage.
    PSU
    90W external power brick
    Case
    24" All in One
    Cooling
    Default Air Cooling
    Keyboard
    HP WiFi UK extended
    Mouse
    HP WiFi 3 Button
    Internet Speed
    1GB full fibre
    Browser
    Edge & Firefox
    Antivirus
    AVG Internet Security/Windows Defender
    Other Info
    Mainly Open Source Software
  • Operating System
    Ubuntu 22.04.5 LTS
    Computer type
    Laptop
    Manufacturer/Model
    Dell 13" Latitude 2017
    CPU
    i5 7200u
    Motherboard
    Dell
    Memory
    16GB DDR4
    Graphics card(s)
    Intel
    Sound Card
    Intel
    Monitor(s) Displays
    13" Dell Laptop
    Hard Drives
    250GB Crucial 2.5" SSD
    Mouse
    Generic WiFi 3 button
    Internet Speed
    WiFi only
    Browser
    Firefox
    Antivirus
    ClamAV TK
    Other Info
    Mainly Open Source Software

Latest Support Threads

Back
Top Bottom