On 26 Sep, this message from Bastien Nocera echoed through cyberspace:
>> Dunno why, but if my powerbook runs out of juice while suspended it
>> screws the time.
>
> That's because the battery that keeps the time is a very small
> capacitor. Doesn't hold for long at all...
Hmmm, IIRC from the l
On Tue, 2003-09-23 at 11:18, Jens Axboe wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 22 2003, Georg Nikodym wrote:
> > On Fri, 1 Jan 1904 00:13:59 +0100
> >
> > Jens Axboe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > Upgrade your kernel, this bug is fixed in 2.4.20 and newer.
> >
> > Wow, dude. You're old :-
On Mon, Sep 22 2003, Georg Nikodym wrote:
> On Fri, 1 Jan 1904 00:13:59 +0100
>
> Jens Axboe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Upgrade your kernel, this bug is fixed in 2.4.20 and newer.
>
> Wow, dude. You're old :-)
Better? :)
Dunno why, but if my powerbook runs out of juice
On Fri, 1 Jan 1904 00:13:59 +0100
Jens Axboe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Upgrade your kernel, this bug is fixed in 2.4.20 and newer.
Wow, dude. You're old :-)
-g
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On Sat, Sep 20 2003, Michael D. Crawford wrote:
> When I give the following command to do a DESTRUCTIVE bad block check:
>
> badblocks -o 11.bb -b 4096 -v -w /dev/sda11
>
> the following message appears repeatedly on the console:
>
> Warning - running *really* short on DMA buffers
Upgrade
When I give the following command to do a DESTRUCTIVE bad block check:
badblocks -o 11.bb -b 4096 -v -w /dev/sda11
the following message appears repeatedly on the console:
Warning - running *really* short on DMA buffers
However, the test seems to proceed normally. Is this a problem? Each
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