On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 10:14:28PM +1000, Scott Ferguson wrote: > I saw one in a shop today.... does the front of yours look like this? > http://ge.tt/9NJkgG5/v > > If it does - please use the switches and try again, otherwise let me > know and we'll try the next fence.
Sort of like that, but on mine there's no built-in bluetooth. As I wrote before, it's a USB dongle: > > I removed the > > bluetooth dongle before booting. It had no effect. The switch for WiFi on this model is not on-off, it's just a reset button. Can't turn off anything. I just checked and you can't even turn WiFi off in the BIOS. > > Surely refusing to suspend because WiFi can't be connected to is broken > > behavior for a hibernate program? > > Dunno - it's not "proven" it's the wireless yet. > Even then it depends on whether it does what it's supposed to do (not > the same as what we users might wish it to do). > eg. on one of my laptops the lack of a license for the sound card driver > means it's non-free - so the fact it doesn't work on resume could be > interpreted as broken behaviour(I've fixed it) - but it's not broken, it > was never designed to support that module in the first place. You're reading "broken" as "not what the programmer intended." I'm using it to mean "not what the end-user expects or wants." Not to be argumentative but I'm correct and you're wrong. :-) > Sounds right. Only way to break out it to hold down the power button - > or pull the battery (and ps)?. Correct. -- Carl Fink nitpick...@nitpicking.com Read my blog at blog.nitpicking.com. Reviews! Observations! Stupid mistakes you can correct! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110621025810.ga23...@panix.com