![]() There is also Power On which will startup you're Mac if it has been shutdown or wakeorpoweron, all run together like one word, and that will either wakeup you Mac when it is sleeping or start it up if it has been shutdown. Well, there is actually a Shutdown option as well. Now let's say we didn't want to use Restart. Then we'll see there repeating power events restart at 3:00 a.m. So we want to do dash g and scheduled but just abbreviate it like that. We don't need to use sudo for this because we're just checking. So you can see executed without any errors. ![]() So note that you may not be able to actually use this command if you're user account is a standard user account, not an admin user account. It is asking for administrative privileges. Now when you hit Return it is going to ask you for your password. So if you wanted it to be at, say, 3 in the afternoon you would use 15. ![]() If you want to skip a day, like not have it do it on Wednesday, just remove that one. So if you want all seven days you just do that MTWRFSU. So T is Tuesday, W is Wednesday, Thursday though is R, Friday is F, Saturday is S, and Sunday is U. The other days of the week kind of make sense, but of course there are repeats. But that starts first with the day of the week. Then you have to give it the time that you want it to restart. So its repeat and then what we want to repeat. What we're doing here is setting a repeating command. But if you don't start with sudo you're not going to be able to execute this command. So it is going to prompt you for a password. Sudo mean that you want to run this command with Administrative privileges. So in Terminal if you wanted to set, say, a Restart time to have your Mac restart every night at 3:00 a.m. You could still do it with the Terminal in macOS Ventura. All that System Preferences did is give you a shortcut to setting something that you could do in Terminal. But the functionality isn't completely gone. There is no way to set a Startup, Shutdown, Restart time or anything like that. But if you did use this feature you may be shocked to find that in Ventura it is missing. There's really no reason to Shutdown your Mac. You should just be able to put your Mac to Sleep, have it Sleep at night and do all of its different system maintenance then when you're not using it, and then just wake it up in the morning. Now most people should never really need this. So when macOS Monterey and before there was a way to go into your System Preferences and then set a scheduled Startup time, Shutdown time, or Restart time on your Mac. Join us and get exclusive content and course discounts., There you can read more about the Patreon Campaign. MacMost is brought to you thanks to a great group of more than 1000 supporters. ![]() Let me show you how to schedule Shutdown, Startup, and Restart times on your Mac in Ventura. Video Transcript: Hi, this is Gary with. Check out How To Schedule Start Up, Shut Down or Restart In macOS Ventura at YouTube for closed captioning and more options. ![]()
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