[I deleted the beginning of this thread, jumping in later instead] On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 03:35:35PM +0100, martin f krafft wrote: > also sprach martin f krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.11.27.0127 +0100]: > > > I read somewhere that pressing Fn + z should solve the problem, but > > > I've not had a chance to try it myself yet. > > > > This seems to work for me. Is there any documentation on this? > > > > I am going to call Dell tomorrow to find out... > > None of three "technicians" I spoke to at Dell ever heard of Fn+z ! > Speaks for the company, doesn't it? > > I think it causes the BIOS to reread the settings. I don't really know > what a BIOS has to do with a temperature sensor. Anyway, will upgrade > to A13 tonight. Maybe that's just going to fix it all...
When the temperature (allegedly) goes to 85 degrees, was it by any chance 42 degrees before then? 85 = 1010101 42 = 0101010 which is almost too much to be a coincidence... I see from another thread that you're also suffering from random lost keystrokes - is this the same laptop? If so, I would be inclined to run it: - without i8kutils : because of Dell's refusal to provide useful info to the i8k author - there is a small chance that this specific version of the BIOS does not like the way i8k tickles it. - without apm : buggy [DH]ell BIOS'es are not unheard of. My BIOS had a bug where it would overcharge the battery, and thus kill it off much sooner than necessary. I ended up upgrading the BIOS and getting non-dell batteries in protest. - or perhaps with ACPI instead of APM for a walk on the wild side... and see whether this helps... My money is on a buggy BIOS - it's a [dh]ell after all ... -- Karl E. Jørgensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://karl.jorgensen.com /"\ \ / ASCII Ribbon Campaign x - Say NO to HTML in email / \ - Say NO to Word documents in email (and Macros!)
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