On Wed, 09 May 2007, Henning Schild wrote:
> The statement i quoted is not true for all thinkpads. Please keep in
> mind that some thinkpads have an additional hardware kill switch.
I didn't forget it. But right now we are dealing with the software kill
switches, only. The "enable/disable" bluet
Am Tue, 8 May 2007 23:08:44 -0300
schrieb Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> It makes sense to group it with other WLAN rfkill switches, and
> thinkpads only have a single key (typically fn+f5) which is supposed
> to control all radios anyway, so I am inclined to do just that.
I d
On Tuesday 08 May 2007 22:08, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> The rfkill class has been merged in Linux mainline, and if at all possible,
> thinkpad-acpi will use it to connect or disconnect the internal bluetooth
> and WWAN devices.
>
> The rfkill class has a concept of "type" of the radio,
On Tue, 08 May 2007, Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
> On Tuesday 08 May 2007 22:08, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > The rfkill class has been merged in Linux mainline, and if at all possible,
> > thinkpad-acpi will use it to connect or disconnect the internal bluetooth
> > and WWAN devices.
> >
> >
The rfkill class has been merged in Linux mainline, and if at all possible,
thinkpad-acpi will use it to connect or disconnect the internal bluetooth
and WWAN devices.
The rfkill class has a concept of "type" of the radio, which is used to,
e.g., turn on or off all radios of the same type. This i