Nils Faerber wrote:
 I also guess that most
Palms and alike behave the same - off is off. Only exception from that
rule I know of are (some) mobile phones.

No in PalmOS off is not off. On Tungsten T2 you can set it to be waked up by initiating bluetooth connection with it when it is 'off'. You can also schedule alarm procedure which gets executed and the display is even not waked up if you wish. Unlike with N770 you really can't shutdown PalmOS and battery is not removable in most units so there is not this type of problem there. Solution for N770 would be to remove the poweroff item to make it behave like PalmOS and maybe also implement suspend in kernel which pauses all tasks and powers off unneeded hardware. But the current system is also good, just don't let users shutdown the device so easily.

Frantisek
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