I've seen something similar with my laptop Win 2k using a wireless card. Everything works fine until the laptop, running on battery, desides to go to standby mode. When the system wakes up it's pretty much impossible to revive the network connection off the wireless card. Just plain bad design AFAICT.
-Alex P.S. You end up rebooting the system. For years I worked on big iron systems and rebooting was generally not an option. ----- Original Message ----- From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Greater NH Linux User Group" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2003 9:54 AM Subject: Re: NT Stuff On Wed, 15 Jan 2003, at 9:22am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > A freaking checkbox labeled "Allow the computer to turn off this device to > save power". > > Is there a reason that MS feels that this is an "Option"? Does the power > that that card uses really make THAT big a difference? On laptops, the power used by a PCMCIA Ethernet NIC can actually be quite significant. Not so on a server, of course. One of Microsoft's fundamental failings is that they consistently fail to consider the consequences of a given feature. This is a classic example. The power management people live in a world laptops and batteries. They figured if the computer needed the NIC, it would wake back up when the software triggered the action. They never considered the fact that an idle *server* needs to respond to external inputs from the *network*. You see this failure over and over again in their history. With MSIE and ActiveX (it would be nice if the browser could just automatically download any software it needs (until the user visits a malicious web page)). With Outlook (it would be nice if emails could be interactive (until someone sends you a malicious email)). With Microsoft Office scripting (it would be nice if documents could be interactive (ditto)). Heck, earlier versions of Windows NT ran the screen saver with system privileges, because they never thought about what would happen if the screen saved did something bad. This is what happens when a company sets out for world domination. They end up blinding themselves to the outside world as well. -- Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | The opinions expressed in this message are those of the author and do not | | necessarily represent the views or policy of any other person, entity or | | organization. All information is provided without warranty of any kind. | _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss