You may want to try a BIOS upgrade or contact your manufacturer. Also check out: http://www.linux-laptop.net/ or http://www.linux.org/hardware/laptop.html if you haven't already.
It seems that speedstep is entirely controlled at the hardware level and that the Kernel just tries to respond correctly to the changes that is gets. -- Chaim Keren Tzion | [EMAIL PROTECTED] System Administrator " The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Dept. of Neurobiology " Tel: 972-2-658-5083 Inst. of Life Science " Cel: 972-2-54-652983 Jerusalem 91904, Israel " Fax: 972-2-658-6296 ...................... : ............................ Quoting Lior Okman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > The problem is that there is no such option in the bios. Is there any > other way to disable the speed-stepping? > > Lior > > > Chaim Keren Tzion wrote: > > I had to turn speed-stepping off in my BIOS. I read that if not, the kernel > will > > lock the CPU speed at whatever it was at boot time. If that's a lower speed > then > > you will be stuck with that. Turn it off in the BIOS and see what happens. > > > ------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP: http://horde.org/imp/ ================================================================To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
