On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 10:40:14AM +0200, Mattia wrote:
> Hi,
> if your notebook is quite recent it's possibly an ACPI only laptop. In ACPI
No, it's not particularly recent; it's a 120MHz Pentium, with a BIOS
copyright date of 1996, which I got second-hand. I had to upgrade its
RAM from 8MB to 4
On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 10:40:14AM +0200, Mattia wrote:
> Hi,
> if your notebook is quite recent it's possibly an ACPI only laptop. In ACPI
No, it's not particularly recent; it's a 120MHz Pentium, with a BIOS
copyright date of 1996, which I got second-hand. I had to upgrade its
RAM from 8MB to
Hi,
if your notebook is quite recent it's possibly an ACPI only laptop. In ACPI
systems IRQ routing is done by the ACPI subsystem. You should try ACPI
patches from sourceforge site (http://www.sf.net/projects/acpi) and enable
API IRQ routing in kernel config.
Can't you see anything ACPI relate
Hi,
if your notebook is quite recent it's possibly an ACPI only laptop. In ACPI
systems IRQ routing is done by the ACPI subsystem. You should try ACPI
patches from sourceforge site (http://www.sf.net/projects/acpi) and enable
API IRQ routing in kernel config.
Can't you see anything ACPI related
I have a Fujistu Lifebook 520D on which I've installed
kernel-image-2.4.18-586tsc and kernel-pcmcia-modules-2.4.18-586tsc.
I've had no problems using PCMCIA cards on this machine (except an Ambicom
WL-1100, but that's another problem), but when I insert a Cardbus card
(Net-Lynx "32bit 100/10M Cardb
I have a Fujistu Lifebook 520D on which I've installed
kernel-image-2.4.18-586tsc and kernel-pcmcia-modules-2.4.18-586tsc.
I've had no problems using PCMCIA cards on this machine (except an Ambicom
WL-1100, but that's another problem), but when I insert a Cardbus card
(Net-Lynx "32bit 100/10M Card
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