On Thursday 27 January 2005 12:10 pm, Anders Breindahl wrote:
> On Thursday 27 January 2005 16:19, Alvin Smith wrote:
> > > A wild guess would be your pcmcia card going into a power-saving mode.
> >
> > If so, then how, or where, do I tell it to either wake up, or not to do
> > that? It is on AC po
On Thu, 27 Jan 2005, Alvin Smith wrote:
> On Thursday 27 January 2005 09:44 am, Juraj Ziegler wrote:
> >
> > A wild guess would be your pcmcia card going into a power-saving mode.
>
> If so, then how, or where, do I tell it to either wake up,
# cardctl resume
> or not to do that?
# cardctl
On Thursday 27 January 2005 16:19, Alvin Smith wrote:
> > A wild guess would be your pcmcia card going into a power-saving mode.
>
> If so, then how, or where, do I tell it to either wake up, or not to do that?
>
> It is on AC power, not running on the battery when this happens. Not sure if
>
On Thursday 27 January 2005 09:44 am, Juraj Ziegler wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 08:59:41AM -0500, Alvin Smith wrote:
> > My system:
> >
> > Dell Inspiron 8000
> > Belkin Wireless Notebook Network Card F5D6020 VER. 2
> > Debian Sid
> >
> > When I first boot, or when I first insert the PCMCIA ne
On Thu, Jan 27, 2005 at 08:59:41AM -0500, Alvin Smith wrote:
> My system:
>
> Dell Inspiron 8000
> Belkin Wireless Notebook Network Card F5D6020 VER. 2
> Debian Sid
>
> When I first boot, or when I first insert the PCMCIA network card into the
> computer, networking works just fine. But after a
My system:
Dell Inspiron 8000
Belkin Wireless Notebook Network Card F5D6020 VER. 2
Debian Sid
When I first boot, or when I first insert the PCMCIA network card into the
computer, networking works just fine. But after a period of non-use, I can
no longer ping the gateway. If I restart the netw
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