ExitWin Screensaver is a utility that runs as a screensaver and, after a configured idle period, performs system-exit actions (shutdown, restart, log off, hibernate, or lock). It’s designed to save power and enforce unattended-machine policies by combining the visual inactivity lock of a screensaver with automated exit behavior.
Key features
- Multiple exit actions: shutdown, restart, log off, hibernate, sleep, lock, or run a custom command.
- Idle-time trigger: actions execute after a configurable period of inactivity.
- Warning/countdown: optional on-screen warning with countdown and a cancel option to prevent accidental exits.
- Scheduling options: set different behaviors for work hours vs. off hours (where supported).
- Customization: choose which exit action runs, set delay times, and configure the screensaver image/animation.
- Silent or secure mode: optionally suppress visible prompts for headless or kiosk-style setups, or require confirmation for security.
- Logging: record executed actions for audit or troubleshooting (if available).
Typical use cases
- Energy savings: automatically power down unused workstations overnight.
- Security: ensure public kiosks or shared PCs lock or log off after inactivity.
- Maintenance windows: trigger restarts for updates during off-hours.
- Home convenience: power-manage home media PCs or HTPCs.
Setup and configuration (typical steps)
- Install the screensaver file (usually .scr) to the system’s screensaver directory.
- Open Display Settings → Screen saver settings (Windows) and select ExitWin Screensaver.
- Click Settings to configure idle time, exit action, countdown/warning, and any schedule options.
- Test with a short idle time to confirm behavior and that cancel/confirmation works as expected.
- Deploy to multiple machines via group policy or endpoint management for centralized control.
Safety and best practices
- Always enable the warning/countdown unless machines are truly unattended.
- Use a cancel or confirmation option to avoid data loss from unintended shutdowns.
- Combine with group policies that save open work or notify users before forced exits.
- Test on a single machine before broad deployment.
- Ensure critical background tasks (backups, updates) are scheduled outside the idle-trigger window.
Limitations and considerations
- If users have unsaved work, forced exits can cause data loss—ensure safeguards.
- Compatibility may vary by OS version; test across target systems.
- Some endpoint management tools provide more granular controls; evaluate before replacing existing solutions.
- Screensaver-based triggers won’t run if screensaver behavior is blocked or disabled by policy.
If you want, I can:
- Provide a concise install/config checklist for Windows.
- Draft Group Policy steps for deploying ExitWin screensaver across a domain.
- Suggest settings for different environments (kiosk, office, home media).
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