Sérgio Basto posted on Thu, 24 May 2012 20:27:01 +0100 as excerpted: > Wtf power devil has no more profiles, > why some many regressions on one thing that was working so well , now > have a stupid check box , > Power management enable , wtf that means ? what means disable power > management ? is disable this tramp ? . > > Cpu freq , not enter in screen saver (on presentations ) why this > functions was removed ? > > I may want power save on AC Power or not want power saver on battery but > is not a choice , who is the brain that think we are all stupids . > > > Power management enable is the same of "power saved enabled" ? I don't use power devil at all, preferring to use laptop-mode-tools (which has far more specific detail available than power devil, but you configure its text files manually, which some might not like) directly for automatic switching plus a couple scripts for on-demand, but... I've read that the lower level tools themselves changed. Apparently, some of the knobs power devil was using weren't designed to to be individually tweaked, and they either disappeared entirely or there were bugs related to their use that were closed WONTFIX as they weren't supposed to be directly tweaked in the first place. So power devil didn't have much of a choice. They could either do the complicated thing and provide a GUI that allowed setting most of what laptop-mode-tools does, but that was several times more complex than what they were doing, or go the simple, dumbed-down route. For now, they went the dumbed-down route. It's possible they'll eventually expose the complex config to those that want it, but that's a lot of code to write and test, so dumbed-down is what they'd be exposing temporarily, until the complex code could be written and tested, in any case. There was definitely some controversy over the change, but it wasn't like the GUI tool authors had a lot of choice, when the interface they were using changed as it did. I'd therefore suggest going the full laptop-mode-tools route, and configuring its various text-based config files manually if you want more control than the various GUIs, power devil and others, give you. You'll have both a greater understanding of your system and finer control over it, when you're done, and thus will likely be happier with the outcome. =:^) -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.