On Mar 4, 2011, at 22:58:26, frsechet wrote:
> In sleep mode, Growl will cause the Mac to wake up every hour …
No, it doesn't. When your Mac is asleep, no applications can be doing anything.
The part of Growl that runs in the background is just an application.
It's possible to set the Mac to wake up at a certain time, but Growl does not
do this.
Something else is waking your Mac up. See this Apple Kbase document:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Mac/10.6/en/9040.html
> I need to enter my password so after a few seconds it goes back to sleep, for
> another hour
You can just hit Escape (or the Cancel button) at the password prompt and it
will go right back to sleep without having to wait a few seconds.
> Here is what the console tells me:
>
> 04/03/11 20:43:21 GrowlHelperApp[241] Growl: Utilisateur retourné
> (Activité utilisateur détectée. Les nouvelles notifications ne vont pas
> rester épinglées a priori.) - Priority -1
This would be when you entered your password. Growl sees that you have done
something (it can't read the password, but it knows that you are no longer
idle) and stops making notifications sticky.
> 04/03/11 20:43:51 GrowlHelperApp[241] Growl: Utilisateur au repos
> (Aucune activité depuis plus de 30 secondes.) - Priority -1
30 seconds of idleness later, Growl starts making notifications sticky again.
These notifications have nothing to do with sleep or wake.
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