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Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
Model # of my mouse is MO-CMC-WDON
Houses contain an ancient and powerful technology, invented millenia ago and passed down through generation. It is called... ...a DOOR. By harnessing the mysterious power of this evice, you can create a barrier that forcibly seperates regions of space and time, thereby shutting out the light of your mouse.
To operate a Door, take hold of the handle with your hand. Then pull with all your might, rotating the door around it's axis. Push the door forwards until it closes. There will be a click as it shuts, seperating the two rooms.
Jokes aside, switching off the USB port isn't going to be a practical option. Either unplug the mouse, throw a T-shirt over it, or buy a less cheap & nasty mouse with LEDs that off automatically.
There's a general rule of thumb that applies to most gaming hardware: the LED-performance ratio. It states that LEDs and Performance are mutually exclusive and that the worse a peripheral performs, the more LEDs the manufacturer will encrust it with.
As a result you see a lot of low-end mice encrusted with LEDs and badged as top-level Esports products. While genuinely ultra-high performance mice like the Steelseries Sensei and Logitech G900 make do with simple names and almost no LED at all.
But they also have buttons to turn off the LED. On the mouse/KB itself.
ASUS now has RGB monitor that you can't turn off.
True. But with Logitech it's often functional lighting. The LED strips on the G900 light up to show battery charge and which DPI profile you're using. By default they're off, unless the battery is below 10% or you've just changed DPI profiles.
The Logitech logo is also backlit, but it's small and unobtrusive. You can switch it off from the software panel.
The keyboards tend to have a LED on/off button. My g610 has it next to sound on/off button.
Of course cheap stuff RGB peripherals tend to lack such convenient buttons.
Well of course, Hibernate is NOT a sleep mode.
This turns the PC off fully. It simply takes whats in RAM and puts that into the Hibernation temp file. Then does a shutdown, on next power on the OS loads the data from that temp file and injects it all back into RAM. Thats how u have everything like it was before all available again quickly. Sleep Mode is a joke, I see zero reason for it.
Cold boots are like 5-10 secs from power on til desktop w/ internet, so why use sleep mode.
during this time, a drop of varnish would have dried up
or you can use an alternative solution - a piece of electrical tape
even a piece of paper pasted on an tape would solve the problem by dimming the brightness
what can be simpler and more effective?
^This is your best option, or unplug it when not using it.