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1. atombe+xg[view] [source] 2025-07-31 15:54:02
>>speckx+(OP)
Another trick is to open Activity Monitor, switch to the Energy tab, and sort by the "Preventing sleep" column. Some apps prevent macOS from sleeping.

In my case, I've discovered that Devonthink (document/notes management app) is responsible. I've been meaning to file a bug report about it.

I'm surprised that Apple's power management doesn't have an alert for this. Surely an app that causes my Mac to become glowing hot while sitting in my backpack, not to mention slowly running out of battery, is a pretty important thing to intercept. Meanwhile, I keep being asked if Chrome should be allowed to find devices on my network, which doesn't seem nearly as important.

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2. ryandr+1i[view] [source] 2025-07-31 16:04:14
>>atombe+xg
I didn't realize any rando app could prevent the entire system from sleeping. Shouldn't this power be gated behind a user-controllable permission? I assume the developer needs to at least use an entitlement to call whatever API does this...?
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3. bayind+Vl[view] [source] 2025-07-31 16:28:29
>>ryandr+1i
Any website and app can do it. Zoom / Google Meet / YouTube / Bandcamp / Spotify already does this. I don't think it needs to be hidden behind walls. Maybe a user override can be added.

In Linux, KDE's power manager PowerDevil shows if something is blocking device or display sleep for example. I don't think it's hard to add an indicator in macOS, too.

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4. trikno+am[view] [source] 2025-07-31 16:30:18
>>bayind+Vl
In KDE, user can also override this.
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5. bayind+zn[view] [source] 2025-07-31 16:38:27
>>trikno+am
Yes, you can. I forgot to add that, thanks.
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