Well +1 :-(

I'm running Lucid on a 4810TG (with ATI, but not using the ATI card,
because it drains my battery, see
http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=7933876&postcount=11 for a module
that powers off the ATI card.)

My tries to fix include the following:
- Tried kernel 2.6.34 (package from 
http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/): No change, still get a freeze
- Tried the "acpi_backlight=vendor" boot option: No change
- Tried the "nomodeset" and "acpi_backlight=vendor" boot options: Seems to fix 
it, BUT nomodeset breaks lots of stuff for me, so this is not an acceptable 
option.

There is a working way to set the brightness (see script below
Brightness Control > 9.10 on
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AspireTimeline/Fixes).

So all I need for a satisfactory workaround is a way to prevent the kernel and 
friends from trying to set the brightness. Didn't manage to do so yet:
1) Tried the "acpi.brightness_switch_enabled=0" boot option: No change (even 
seems like this does not work at all, because "less 
/sys/module/video/parameters/brightness_switch_enabled" still shows "Y")
2) Tried "echo 0 > /sys/module/video/parameters/brightness_switch_enabled" (as 
root): No change, still changes the brightness and freezes
3) Tried the "acpi_backlight=vendor" boot option and additionally "modprobe -r 
acer_wmi" (acer_wmi is the module I suspect to be in charge when the vendor 
option is passed): No change
4) 3) + "modprobe -r acer_wmi": No change

So: Is there some way to prevent the kernel and modules from trying to
set the brightness? This is really annoying because when you remove the
AC plug it tries to change the brightness and freezes...

-- 
[gm45] Adjusting Brightness in Acer Aspire Timelines causes system freeze in 
4810T and 5810T models
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/446717
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