Martin Haug <martinhaug <at> piratenpartei.de> writes: > ... > I may forgot to mention it, but this isn't my first install of Fedora 14 > on this machine: I had Fedora 14 before and it worked pretty well, then > I accidently deleted the root-partition and after reinstallation I got > the discussed Problem. So CPU works, BIOS stayed the same, too. (But I > will try to do a BIOS-Update) > ... In connection with the reinstallation, if you maintained some dirs like /home on separate partitions and they were reused, it is possible that something got screwed up and saved on them during the crash (root / deletion). Besides that, after reading that Bugzilla discussion (post by Heinz), where some guy (at the end of comments as I looed at them yesterday) fixed his machine just by changing his BIOS freq to performance instead of on-demand, and looking at my own BIOS's Power settings, with all those options having to do with SpeedStep (freq), thermal control, etc, I think you should try that as well. Besides, settings BIOS may unlock some ACPI data read by kernel that will allow you to make the desired changes (governor, freq values) thru cpufreq entries later on. Another possibility is, after you update the BIOS, to reinstall F14 fresh, with reformatting partitions, and not inheriting any separate dirs/partitions if applicable. Of course, make sure you do not have any problems with harddisk - after a crash things happen. Before reformatting partition, select disk health check in anaconda. Install smartmontools package and run a full test. One more - if you have space, install another distro and see if things work there. JB -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines