1. The latter. Therefore autowlan=1 just enables the ability to manually
pres the physical switch - it is not automatic.

As for the type of switch, I am not sure what you mean. I think it is
unfortunately what you describe as momentary push-to-make type. There
are no positions to the switch - it does not have "pressed" and
"released" states. It works like a key on a keyboard - you press it, a
key is written, and then you release it and it goes back to its original
position. Only that wifi is turned off/on only after releasing the
button whereas keys on keyboard work already after being pressed. (There
is a picture of the laptop for you to check:
http://www.gsm4u.cz/Obrazy/Prestigio_1570_20-rozlozeny_A4.jpg it is a
similar type to the notebook in question. The button is the top one of
the five buttons situated no the left.)

Acerhk is unfortunately no longer developed:-(.

(this bug has originally been opened because without autowlan=1, it is not 
possible to use one of the extra buttons to turn the wifi off and back on: 
without autowlan=1, the button that is supposed to manipulate wifi is treated 
just as another extra key, i.e. I can assign actions to it through GNOME, but I 
cannot turn off wifi with the button.
I think I am not the only one who is running linux on this laptop - I still 
regularly see exactly this type when I go to the library and I know that 
someone on our natinonal unix community is running BSD on it, so there must be 
some people running linux on it, this type was once rather popular in Czech 
Republic - just giving the rational that I may not the only one still affected.)

-- 
change 'acerhk' to use 'autowlan=1' by default
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/53953
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