[opensuse] Strange behaviour of ACPI on laptop
I have a laptop with a strange behaviour. If I turn on ACPI when I boot the machine, the USB connections do not work (or at least, they work very bad. A USB mouse is very very slow). If I turn off ACPI when I boot the boot the machine, the USB connections do work but the wireless card does not work. I would like to have a setup, where both the wireless network card and the USB ports are working at the same time. I had been looking at http://www.novell.com/documentation/opensuse102/opensuse102_reference/data/s... but I have my problems to find oout, which module I should include, and which I should exclude. I hope someone know how to help me. I could imagine some information of the BIOS system would be a great help, but I do not know how to get the information for the BIOS. Only thing I can see is, the BIOS is based on software from Inside Software CDU. -- Best regards Torben Frøberg -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Quoting torben
I have a laptop with a strange behaviour. If I turn on ACPI when I boot the machine, the USB connections do not work (or at least, they work very bad. A USB mouse is very very slow).
If I turn off ACPI when I boot the boot the machine, the USB connections do work but the wireless card does not work.
I would like to have a setup, where both the wireless network card and the USB ports are working at the same time.
They should. I've yet to boot 10.2 on a laptop but 9.3 > 10.0 all work fine in this regard.
I had been looking at http://www.novell.com/documentation/opensuse102/opensuse102_reference/data/s... but I have my problems to find oout, which module I should include, and which I should exclude.
I hope someone know how to help me.
I could imagine some information of the BIOS system would be a great help, but I do not know how to get the information for the BIOS. Only thing I can see is, the BIOS is based on software from Inside Software CDU.
Well, we can probably guess the bios from your laptop model and processor. What is the laptop, and what does it say on the screen when you open My Computer (KDE) or Computer (GNOME)? -- kai ponte www.perfectreign.com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Well, we can probably guess the bios from your laptop model and processor. What is the laptop, and what does it say on the screen when you open My Computer (KDE) or Computer (GNOME)?
The laptop is model from a danish company called PrimeTech, and the processor is a Intel Celeron 1.4 GHz. The laptop is almost 1 years old, and I cannot the model number. But again the software in bios is from Insyde Software Corporation. Best regards Torben Frøberg -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (2)
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Kai Ponte
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torben