The LCD monitor the windows shifted to was connected by VGA cable - my primary monitor is connected by DisplayPort, plus the laptop display. I had this problem - all the windows shifted to one monitor on resume from sleep / hibernate. Unplug the VGA monitor, then plug it back on each resume. Make the VGA monitor the Primary Monitor.Change the connection to that monitor to something other that VGA (changing to DisplayPort connection fixed it for me).TL DR - if the windows are moving to a VGA connected monitor, it looks like there are three options, in order of "fixed" to "workaround": I guess there is nothing more to do than wait for Microsoft to fix this. Sometimes only some windows stay at their position and some get moved to the main display even if you do the described workaround. press a key, mouse button or ctrl-alt-delete, depending on Windows configuration, so that the login screen appears, asking for password.the monitors might blink once or twice, just give them good 5 or 10 seconds, so they are 100% on and detected by Windows.when the monitors are sleeping, move the mouse.system must be locked before going to sleep (lock it by the key combination WINDOWS-L and let it then go to sleep or make sure it locks by itself before sleeping - maybe with screensaver settings, I always lock manually, so did not test this just letting the PC go to sleep (unlocked) will not work, even if it asks for the password when waking up).The currently accepted answer by Origami does not work for me.īut this workaround helps, although far from a complete solution. Settings -> System -> Power & Sleep -> Screen You can quickly test this by temporarily setting your monitor sleep time to 1 minute. Uninstall all greyed out monitors (even non-PNP and PNP monitors)Īfter doing this my windows don't resize after my monitor goes to sleep.Keep only the highlighted monitor you are currently using. Right-click on these monitors and select uninstall. I uninstalled ALL the greyed out monitors. I believe these are aliases to your current monitor (at a lower resolution) before Windows installed drivers for it. You may see monitors with "non-PNP" and "PNP" listed as well. When you expand the Monitors you will see your current monitor (highlighted) and all the disconnected monitors (greyed out). A similar case on Microsoft Community mentioned a workaround, have a try.
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