ACPI -- Can someone tell me what this means?
I am getting the following two lines in my startup log -- <67> ACPI: Looking for DSDT in initrd... not found! <47> not found! Can someone tell me what this is talking about? I am not noticing any impact from this, but am just trying to be proactive. Greg Wallace
On Thursday 15 September 2005 09:15, Greg Wallace wrote:
<67> ACPI: Looking for DSDT in initrd... not found! <47> not found!
Hi Greg, Not to worry. It is looking for a "Differentiated System Description Table" in initrd and not finding it. It is an optional hardware profile meant to ease initialization / integration of ACPI functions. See: <http://acpi.sourceforge.net/dsdt/index.php> regards, - Carl Do they have Google up in Alaska, or is it just us in the lower 48? ;-)
On Thursday, September 15, 2005 @ 6:47 AM, Carl Hartung wrote:
On Thursday 15 September 2005 09:15, Greg Wallace wrote:
<67> ACPI: Looking for DSDT in initrd... not found! <47> not found!
Hi Greg,
Not to worry. It is looking for a "Differentiated System Description Table" in initrd and not finding it. It is an optional hardware profile meant to ease
initialization / integration of ACPI functions. See:
regards,
- Carl
Do they have Google up in Alaska, or is it just us in the lower 48? ;-)
Thanks. Sounds like I can safely ignore the message. Greg Of course we have Google! Really, Anchorage has most everything you could find in the lower 48. One thing you probably won't find, however, is a moose calf standing in the middle of a bike trail like I encountered earlier today when I was out for a run along the coast. It was drizzling and I didn't want to go off into the wet grass, so I just stopped running and started walking toward it. I could see its mother off in the woods to the left, unconcerned. When I got to about 10 feet away, it made some sort of high pitched noise and jumped off into the grass toward mom. I'd never heard any noise from a moose before. They usually just stare at you. I didn't wait around to see if I'd gotten mom upset (not a good idea) and took off on down the trail.
On Friday 16 September 2005 01:47, Greg Wallace wrote:
Do they have Google up in Alaska, or is it just us in the lower 48? ;-)
Thanks. Sounds like I can safely ignore the message.
Greg
Of course we have Google! Really, Anchorage has most everything you could find in the lower 48. One thing you probably won't find, however, is a moose calf standing in the middle of a bike trail like I encountered earlier today when I was out for a run along the coast. It was drizzling and I didn't want to go off into the wet grass, so I just stopped running and started walking toward it. I could see its mother off in the woods to the left, unconcerned. When I got to about 10 feet away, it made some sort of high pitched noise and jumped off into the grass toward mom. I'd never heard any noise from a moose before. They usually just stare at you. I didn't wait around to see if I'd gotten mom upset (not a good idea) and took off on down the trail.
Of course the Google question was a joke! And what a coincidence... we've had a lone, youngish bull moose wandering around the area for the past week. I keep missing him, but the neighbors have seen him several times. - Carl
On Friday, September 16, 2005 @ 4:26 AM, Carl Hartung wrote:
On Friday 16 September 2005 01:47, Greg Wallace wrote:
Do they have Google up in Alaska, or is it just us in the lower 48? ;-)
Thanks. Sounds like I can safely ignore the message.
Greg
Of course we have Google! Really, Anchorage has most everything you could find in the lower 48. One thing you probably won't find, however, is a moose calf standing in the middle of a bike trail like I encountered earlier today when I was out for a run along the coast. It was drizzling and I didn't want to go off into the wet grass, so I just stopped running and started walking toward it. I could see its mother off in the woods to the left, unconcerned. When I got to about 10 feet away, it made some sort of high pitched noise and jumped off into the grass toward mom. I'd never heard any noise from a moose before. They usually just stare at you. I didn't wait around to see if I'd gotten mom upset (not a good idea) and took off on down the trail.
Of course the Google question was a joke! And what a coincidence... we've had a lone, youngish bull moose wandering around the area for the past week. I keep missing him, but the neighbors have seen him several times. - Carl
So where are you? I know you're not in the South if you're seeing moose. Greg
On Friday 16 September 2005 09:00, Greg Wallace wrote:
So where are you? I know you're not in the South if you're seeing moose.
Central Maine +/- 43 people per sq. mile in the densely populated areas :-) see www.cehartung.com Are you subscribed to OT? This stuff actually belongs there, too. - Carl
On Fri, 2005-09-16 at 08:25 -0400, Carl Hartung wrote:
Of course the Google question was a joke! And what a coincidence... we've had a lone, youngish bull moose wandering around the area for the past week. I keep missing him, but the neighbors have seen him several times. - Carl
Well if your missing obviously your scope is ranged incorrectly. -- ___ _ _ _ ____ _ _ _ | | | | [__ | | | |___ |_|_| ___] | \/
participants (3)
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Carl Hartung
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Carl William Spitzer IV
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Greg Wallace