Stephan,
It was a kernel issue. The kernels after 2.6.8 solved it, e.g. 2.6.11.8
and 2.6.12-rc4.
jeff
On May 17, 2005, at 3:58 AM, Stephan Leemburg wrote:
Dear All,
For quite some time, I stopped using linux on my powerbook in favor of
Mac OS X. Starting from Panther, I consider Mac OS X to be m
Dear All,
For quite some time, I stopped using linux on my powerbook in favor
of Mac OS X. Starting from Panther, I consider Mac OS X to be mature
enough for all my usages. Therefore I cannot support in solving this
bug anymore as I don't have any reference system. I only use linux on
my x8
Michael Schmitz wrote:
Michael,
All I can say at this point is that it didn't work without specifying
the kernel argument. As far as 2.6.8 goes, it didn't work period. I
tried it with the kernel arg and it didn't work, but it did work with
2.6.12-rc4 and 2.6.11.8. However again, I did need to expl
+
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Debian stuff)
+
On Thu, 12 May 2005, Jeff Green wrote:
> With crucial help from Be
Michael,
All I can say at this point is that it didn't work without specifying
the kernel argument. As far as 2.6.8 goes, it didn't work period. I
tried it with the kernel arg and it didn't work, but it did work with
2.6.12-rc4 and 2.6.11.8. However again, I did need to explicitly give
them
Earlier, I posted:
I've submitted a bug to the debian system (Bug#308495) regarding this
situation. The basic problem is as the subject line says: the display
is left on after the machine to put to sleep. It displays what looks
to be the console messages in single user mode display. pmud worked
ju
I've submitted a bug to the debian system (Bug#308495) regarding this
situation. The basic problem is as the subject line says: the display
is left on after the machine to put to sleep. It displays what looks
to be the console messages in single user mode display. pmud worked
just fine with woody
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