XFCE Energy Management
Would like the XFCE Desktop Tumbleweed developers take care of the annoying behavior of the energy management which "should be responsible" to adjust and to save the screen brightness settings. The fact is that the user must adjust it at every system boot or even after a system suspend. It should be really good having a sort of "brightness setting memory" which reminds the previous adjustment made by the user. This issue is really annoying Sirs! Thanks and regards! -- Marco Calistri Build: openSUSE Tumbleweed 20220403 Kernel:5.17.1-1-default Desktop: XFCE (4.16.0)
Op donderdag 14 april 2022 15:59:37 CEST schreef Marco Calistri:
Would like the XFCE Desktop Tumbleweed developers take care of the annoying behavior of the energy management which "should be responsible" to adjust and to save the screen brightness settings.
The fact is that the user must adjust it at every system boot or even after a system suspend.
It should be really good having a sort of "brightness setting memory" which reminds the previous adjustment made by the user.
This issue is really annoying Sirs!
Thanks and regards! That deserves a bug report. Without it no one will take action.
-- Gertjan Lettink a.k.a. Knurpht openSUSE Board openSUSE Forums Team
Il 14/04/22 11:12, Knurpht-openSUSE ha scritto:
Op donderdag 14 april 2022 15:59:37 CEST schreef Marco Calistri:
Would like the XFCE Desktop Tumbleweed developers take care of the annoying behavior of the energy management which "should be responsible" to adjust and to save the screen brightness settings.
The fact is that the user must adjust it at every system boot or even after a system suspend.
It should be really good having a sort of "brightness setting memory" which reminds the previous adjustment made by the user.
This issue is really annoying Sirs!
Thanks and regards! That deserves a bug report. Without it no one will take action.
Got it! -- Marco Calistri Build: openSUSE Tumbleweed 20220403 Kernel:5.17.1-1-default Desktop: XFCE (4.16.0)
participants (2)
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Knurpht-openSUSE
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Marco Calistri