-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Wednesday, 2008-10-29 at 14:28 +0100, Holger Macht wrote:
No, there isn't anymore. Power Management is controlled on the desktop by the user. And I think that's actually what 99% of all usual home users want.
Yes, as long as we (users) make the decision to hibernate automatically or not. It is different when you set the default to hibernate without asking us.
As you said, it's just a decision which have to be made, others would maybe say, wow, what a good default, it helps to save the environment.
Power management is nothing new, I have used it on MsDos many years back. But it is very problematic. You are taking the decision on to you (Novell), instead of asking: "do you want to...?" You should have a setting somewhere in sysconfig, for example, where the owner (aka root) of the machine decides if the machine autohibernates or not by default. Question for you: machine has no session opened, it is on the gdm login. There is nobody working on it. Shouldn't it hibernate? But it will not, AFAIK. Why does it have to hibernate if somebody is logged in? Because if energy star compliance is so important, machine must conserve energy always...
For instance: my home machine serves a samba share to my external digital TV box, so that it can do time shifting and recording. With your default of hibernating, you can make it loose data!
That's advanced, you are root, you know what you do, you can change the default. And yes, it will be in the release notes.
No, I can't. Only for one user. I have to log in as each user and change it.
And even on homes, a machine can have several users, and I have no click
If one user session isn't active, aka another user is logged in, the inactive session won't trigger a autosuspend.
Even if one is gnome, the other kde? Or xfce? Or text?
and shoot method of changing that default. That's all I ask: either change the default, or provide a click and shoot method (or CLI script at least) to change that default system wide.
That would be an easy script calling 'sed', I'll provide one on the upcoming wiki page.
Thanks. Better on notes for root. Not many years ago SuSE system emailed root with such news. - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkkKPRIACgkQtTMYHG2NR9VAFgCfVuFQE5bbJmDhLkBaBYeXmoU6 TqsAn06gTMd213FNsv6zOLabw8XtERip =G+wv -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org