Hi Ian.

 > The solution seems to be to compile the sound as a module, then
 > remove it at suspend time and re-insert it when the machine is
 > resumed.  You can get apmd to do this automatically.  On my
 > machine I also get apmd to touch the floppy driver on resume
 > because that's another strange quirk with IBM machines.

This sounds similar to the problem I'm having with my Toshiba T2100
and the PCMCIA network card therein...

Basically, when I suspend and resume with the network driver running,
the driver's still running after resume, but the network interface
itself is dead. SO long as I remember to take the network down before
suspending, it'll pick up fine when I resume though...

I'd very much like to know how to get apmd to automate this, as I've
never worked it out so far, so if you can offer any clues, they'll be
very much appreciated...

Best wishes from Riley.

+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| There is something frustrating about the quality and speed of Linux  |
| development, ie., the quality is too high and the speed is too high, |
| in other words, I can implement this XXXX feature, but I bet someone |
| else has already done so and is just about to release their patch.   |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
 * ftp://ftp.MemAlpha.cx/pub/rhw/Linux
 * http://www.MemAlpha.cx/kernel.versions.html

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