On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 12:22, Jack Coates wrote: > On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 11:42, Wolfgang Bornath wrote: > > *** James Sparenberg Wed, 13 Aug 2003 17:44:00 +0000 : > > > > > If you use KDE the is a power management section in the kcontrol > > > control center that will allow you to set warnings at whatever percent > > > level you want. (worked for mine) > > > > And what is this KDE flummy playing frontend for? I don't use KDE and > > with important things I want to keep it as near to the CLI as possible > > so I can always manage even if there is no GUI. > > > > wobo > > go to /proc/acpi and have a look. > > you may also like the acpi client -- try acpi -V.
Wobo, Doing some google searches I've run across just two Mentions of this ... Seems it's kernel related as you'll see. http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/linux/linux-kernel/2003-25/1591.html The second site is in german and related to a thinkpad ... you can be the judge better than I on what if any relevance it has to your situation http://www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~diesch/linux/r40.html But on the second one he/she talks about almost an identical error message to the one you are getting. Same error number (ACPI-1121) at any rate. Hope this helps rather than adding confusion to the problem. One question does acpi -b or apm return any batter info at all? James
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