Home energy assessments are conducted by professionals that have industry accepted credentials. Selecting a certified home energy auditor assures the homeowner that the auditor is uniquely skilled and qualified to perform energy assessment work. The following are accepted home energy certification programs;
Home energy auditor certification is also a requirement for homeowners seeking tax credits authorized and Inflation Reduction Act. The listed certification programs have been reviewed by DOE and serve as a list of Qualified Certification Programs for home energy auditors that taxpayers can use to claim the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Section 25C) under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (commonly referred to as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law) for home energy audits. Starting in 2024, home energy auditors will be required to provide a business employer identification number (EIN), or other type of relevant taxpayer identifying number, as part of the written report they provide to the homeowner looking to claim the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Section 25C) for home energy audits. If you wish to claim this credit, make certain the home energy auditor has applied for and received an EIN for their business and that the EIN number is on the final report provided by the auditor.
Before the energy assessor visits your house, make a list of any existing problems such as condensation and uncomfortable or drafty rooms. Have copies or a summary of the home's yearly energy bills. (Your utility may be able to provide these to you or you may be able to get them online.) Assessors use this information to establish what to look for during the audit. The assessor will also talk with you to better understand your needs and interests in having an assessment. The assessor will examine the outside of the home to determine the size of the house and its features (i.e., wall area, number and size of windows). The assessor then will analyze how you use your home:
Professional energy assessments generally go into great detail to assess your home's energy use. The energy assessor will do a room-by-room examination of the residence, as well as a thorough examination of past utility bills. Walk through your home with the assessor and ask questions. Many professional energy assessments will include a blower door test and a thermographic scan. Assessors may use equipment to detect sources of energy loss, such as blower doors, infrared cameras, furnace efficiency meters, and surface thermometers. Check out the Energy Saver 101 home energy audit infographic to get an idea of what energy assessors look for and to learn more about the special tools they use to conduct an assessment.
Through the process, the home assessor will gather information and produce a report including characterizations of your home and action you can take to reduce your home's energy use while increasing comfort of the living space. Common recommendations often include:
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something did change at least for us. We do not use that setting , but the below as a custom plist to get the computer name as the custom display and display to activate after 20 minutes. This is working for us on Ventura:
for whatever reason the plist approach worked instead of the Built in JAMF one.
We just made a quick .saver screensaver file in xcode to display a PNG, deployed it as a .pkg and pointed the plist to it - worked like a charm!
Boy, I must really be missing something obvious. I've been trying to get a loginwindow screensaver working for ages and have never had luck. If it's verified to be working in Ventura, I must be overlooking something.
I know that Jamf's built-in Screensaver profile doesn't work, so I've tried a couple alternatives. First I used ProfileCreator to make a signed profile (didn't work), and second I tried really old school deploying /Library/Preferences/com.apple.screensaver.plist (long shot, but unsurprisingly didn't work).
Seems like a major oversight (from Apple) to me. Our nice iMac Pros are logged out all weekend, for power saving and burn-in protection it sure would be nice if we can get the screen to blank after 10 minutes or so.
Hey,
we have a weird behaviour.
We tried the above plist without the key for the module to allow the user to change the screensaver, but not the time and password protection.
On my test-devices it works also with sonoma.
But for some users in the field, no matter what the choose, it always resets the screensaver to flurry.
Screensaver it set to 10 minutes inactivity, but the commandline gives us:
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It is a security issue. However you have likely given cubase privilege to so.
On a mac this is done with settings->security&privacy->accessibility.
Cubase ask for access, and for most users it is valid for cubase to have access to audio inputs.
If you were someone who needs 24/7 remote access to 36TB of spinning disk, nightly backups of over 8TB of data, and access to sophisticated home automation wherever you, then keeping your computer running all the time is a necessity.
You need to save energy? Turn your computer off.
Screensavers and power safe modes make most audio hardware instable, and this is crashing the software sometimes.
Nearly all audio and video software disables the power safe modes and the screen safer.
I have tried deleting the Fnix from my Garmin Connect app, deleting & forgetting it from my phones bluetooth, deleting & reinstalling the app, hard reset on the watch, deleting all installed watch faces from Garmin IQ and done all the software updates.
I am sorry there is an issue. Since your Power Manager > Battery Saver menu will not allow you to turn it back off again, I am sorry, it will take a full System > Reset and selecting Reset Default Settings to resolve the issue. Your watch will be fully reset but you should gain full control again.
Regarding your phone connectivity issues - with your watch stuck on what it perceives to be your Battery Saver mode, it is going to be a headache for your phone connectivity too. Your default Battery Saver turns off your Bluetooth connection to your phone. I would not expect you to receive smart notifications with the current state your watch is in.
Once you have recovered your watch, when you go to Bluetooth pair again, remove your watch from your Connect APP and from your smartphone's Settings > Bluetooth menu first. Pairing through your Connect Mobile APP should then go smoother.
If a reset to defaults has not returned your watch back to an out of the box state where you can properly control whether your Battery Saver feature is off and on, your watch has a more serious issue and you will need to reach out to Outdoor Product Support in your region.
I had a low battery warning come up yesterday and selected power saver mode. Now that I have recharged the watch it is stuck in battery saver mode. I am having the same issues as the original poster. I cannot exit battery saver mode. When I try to toggle it on/off it just grays out.
I am sorry you have the issue. Your watch is on current v26.00 software. If resetting your watch through the System > Reset menu does not resolve your issue, please reach out to Outdoor Product Support in your region.
I have the same problem as identified in the above thread by other users. This is clearly not a random unique circumstance - can Garmin release a patch or update to correct the issue? And if so how do we access the upgrade?
have had the same problem as well. have an fenix 6s. battery ran low 3 days ago and it went into low power mode. charged and still can't get out of it but the battery saver mode is grayed out exactly as OP described.
Found a temporary fix in the meantime for everyone who has been having this problem too, since I have been unable to restore it back to normal. I went into the power manager mode and under battery saver i selected edit. then i just turned everything back on again (watch face: dont change; music: allow; phone: don't change; wifi: don't change; activity tracking: don't change; wrist heart: don't change; pulse oximeter: don't change; backlight: don't change.
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