Le jeu, 05 jui 2001 16:19:31, Dhruva B. Reddy a écrit :
> No, I was not referring to laptops that do this at the BIOS level (I am
> aware
> that there are machines that do this). Also, I was under the impression
> that
> these machines hibernate in response to the 'suspend' command. Am I
> mistaken?
Yes you are. Suspend and Hibernate are distinct commands.
> My point was that W2K does this no matter what it is running on. I would
> love
> this for my Toshiba, which holds the system state in some sort of
> volatile
> memory powered by a capacitor--which doesn't seem to work predictably.
On my Toshiba 2520cds suspend works correctly.
And Jonathan Buzzard is working on the hibernate feature.
http://www.buzzard.org.uk/toshiba/
Christophe
> On Thu, Jul 05, 2001 at 05:13:19PM +0300, Dmitry Astapov wrote:
> >
> > s> It is my understanding that hibernation functionality is specific
> to
> > s> Windoze 2000 (i.e., it is provided at the OS level).
> > You have to add : "for this specific notebook", maybe?
> >
> > Because friend of mine have quite old dell powerbook (dont remember
> exact
> > model), which handle hybernate on BIOS level(?) and hybernates no
> matter
> > what OS is running right now
> >
> >
> > --
> > Dmitry Astapov //ADEpt (mail-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED])
>
>
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--
Christophe Barbé
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Lineo France - Lineo High Availability Group
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