I have been running Debian unstable for over a few months on a SONY PCG-SR5K
without any problems.

Recently, after shutting down my laptop in class, I booted up and all the inodes got 
messed up under my $HOME. After running fsck  /dev/hda9 and holding down the Y key 
until end, all my user data on the ext2 filestystm was to be moved to 
/home/lost+found.  Luckily, I didn't loose any data. But, this gave me a scare.

I am wondering what may have caused this corruption?


How I shutdown--:
I shutdown the laptop with /sbin/init 0, which I feel is equivalent to a halt.
This may not be the safest way. Is there a better way to shutdown ?
I have started using shutdown -h.

Other Harddrive management programs:
I recently started using /sbin/hdparm -y -S 1 /dev/hda to save on power and limit 
harddrive spinning. 

Am I doing something wrong here?

OS settings:
        Debian testing/unstable
        Kernel 2.4.10-pre10     
        hdparm v3.9
        fsck version 1.22       
        apm enabled

----------------------
GNU PGP public key
http://www.annapolislinux.org/docs/public_key/GnuPG.txt
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Ted Knab


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