I just recently got a Dell Inspiron N7110 laptop, and virtually everything worked out of the box. Certainly everything important (had to apply a kernel patch to fix an issue with the touchpad being recognized incorrectly as a PS/2 mouse - known issue and a fix is in the works). So I'm getting to more esoteric things in the system configuration. I'm using GNOME3 as my DE and it's on 12.1. 1. Bluetooth - the host name shows the original "linux-xqoa.site" name rather than the current hostname. Anyone know where this comes from? 2. Dell includes a utility with Windows 7 to disable the battery charging circuit. The point of this is to stop trickle charging the battery when it's full - pulling the battery out leaves the laptop without battery backup and isn't the ultimate goal. The goal is to charge the battery and then switch off that circuit, which is supposed to extend the life of the battery itself (that's what the info I've read indicates the purpose is). On Windows it's implemented using WMI as near as I can tell. I see in the kernel drivers (dell-wmi.c specifically) that on some models there's a key - Fn-F2 or Fn-F3, I think - that is supposed to do something, but this model laptop doesn't have that particular key assignment. I can hibernate and go into the BIOS to disable the charging circuit, but that's somewhat inconvenient as if I switch to battery, I then have to hibernate, go to the BIOS, and re-enable the charging circuitry to actually charge the battery when it needs it. Anyone have any ideas on either of these issues? Jim -- Jim Henderson Please keep on-topic replies on the list so everyone benefits -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org