On Wed, 2006-02-15 at 21:16 -0500, Jim Cornette wrote: > I noticed that the power manager is starting to be pretty much a battery > applet with a few less features. What is this crippling supposed to > accomplish? The only thing I see missing is the options to suspend or hibernate. Suspend has moved to the system menu, and hibernate is gone I do believe because it is quite broken on a lot of systems currently. > A few days ago, I knew how to prevent closing the display lid on my > laptop w/o having it go into suspend. today, I am at a loss to how to > change my power management settings. System -> Preferences -> More Preferences -> Power Management. Also left or right click on gnome-power-manager and select Preferences. Same app. > I know that there were bug reports requesting removal of the options on > computers that are presently incapable of successfully going into > suspend or into hibernate. It does not seem rationale for settings to > not be easily manageable as if the obstacles preventing those that have > problems on their systems presently because of lack of resolution in the > development arena are slower than would be expected. > > Removing the features seems like a move to styfle legitimate bug reports > and hide a legitimate failure on the power management scene. > > I hope to see reversal of the degradation of the power manager to yet > another battery charge indicator. Again, the only thing I see gone is the suspend/hibernate options. -- Jesse Keating RHCE (geek.j2solutions.net) Fedora Legacy Team (www.fedoralegacy.org) GPG Public Key (geek.j2solutions.net/jkeating.j2solutions.pub)
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