On Fri, Oct 31, 2008 at 11:11:39AM +0900, John Summerfield wrote: > Chuck Anderson wrote: >> Yeah, you definately don't want to hibernate to swap on one OS and try >> to boot the other. You'll just lose your hibernated system and leave >> the filesystems in inconsistent state. In general it is very bad to >> boot /anything/ other that the original hibernated kernel when after >> you have hibernated. That's why grub doesn't show you a menu when you >> boot up in a hibernated state. > > _I_ don't think I'd like that. I _can_ hibernate Windows, run Linux, > then resume Windows. I've not hibernated Linux at all except > accidentally (FC3 I recalled resumed then shutdown, I lost interest > then). It's safe if you don't touch *ANY* filesystems that were mounted when the system was hibernated. For example, it is unsafe to mount the Windows partition from Linux, hibernate, then boot Windows. > I've been running pure 64-bit Fedora and SL5 with no problems that > concerned me: I don't know what, if any, browser plugins work, and don't > really care. I don't like flash! swfdec-mozilla is getting really good. Most popular sites just work. -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list