In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Scott Long writes:
: On Mon, Oct 01, 2001 at 10:50:17AM +0200, Georg-W. Koltermann wrote:
: Hi,
:
: I'm wondering how I should handle APM now that ACPI has basically
: taken over power management responsibility.
:
: APM and ACPI are mutually exclusive from what
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mitsuru IWASAKI writes:
: Generalized power-management interface API to have compatibility with
: APM and ACPI also is suggested long time ago;
:
Hi,
On Mon, Oct 01, 2001 at 10:50:17AM +0200, Georg-W. Koltermann wrote:
Hi,
I'm wondering how I should handle APM now that ACPI has basically
taken over power management responsibility.
APM and ACPI are mutually exclusive from what I understand. You should
remove the apm device
It seems Scott Long wrote:
On Mon, Oct 01, 2001 at 10:50:17AM +0200, Georg-W. Koltermann wrote:
I also was able to suspend and resume my machine (DELL Inspiron 7500)
with APM being configured (and ACPI being active by default). Sound
is dead after a resume,
What sound card?
PCMCIA
: APM and ACPI are mutually exclusive from what I understand. You should
: remove the apm device from your kernel config.
I've been able to run both with my VAIO. However, my VAIO hangs
randomly with ACPI enabled (even when i have apm disable).
You shouldn't be able to do this. 8)
To
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mike Smith writes:
: : APM and ACPI are mutually exclusive from what I understand. You should
: : remove the apm device from your kernel config.
:
: I've been able to run both with my VAIO. However, my VAIO hangs
: randomly with ACPI enabled (even when i have
At Mon, 1 Oct 2001 08:49:10 -0600,
Scott Long wrote:
On Mon, Oct 01, 2001 at 10:50:17AM +0200, Georg-W. Koltermann wrote:
[...]
I also was able to suspend and resume my machine (DELL Inspiron 7500)
with APM being configured (and ACPI being active by default). Sound
is dead after a