I tried this again with gdm stopped, so changes can happen with no suspending or hibernate.
As you can see here in my battery watch file this time my BIOS took 15 seconds to start giving reasonable values. My netbook charges at about 35-40 Watts, discharges at 13 Watts. 700 to 750 Watts is more power then my microwave oven uses and should be ignored by any program reading the acpi battery status. When the status file shows stupid values like this one, it should be completely ignored a re-read until is looks sane. The log file was made with this very simple shell script: #!/bin/bash while sleep 1 do BATSTATE="/proc/acpi/battery/BAT1/state" read present state charging rate therest << EOState $(cat $BATSTATE | cut -d":" -f2 | tr "\n" " " ) EOState echo "time $(date +%H:%M.%S)\t$charging rate: \t$rate" done ** Attachment added: "Battery status log (each 1 second)" http://launchpadlibrarian.net/47398016/batinfo -- Power manager mistakenly thinks my battery power is critically low, and hibernates -- MSI Wind U100 https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/558627 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs