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GNOME Power Manager project gets underway

GNOME System Tools
GNOME System Tools

GNOME Power Manager is a GNOME session daemon that acts as a policy agent on top of the Project Utopia stack, which includes the kernel, hotplug, udev, and HAL. GNOME Power Manager listens for HAL events and responds with user-configurable reactions. Currently it supports UPS's, laptop batteries and AC adaptors. Its goal is to be architecture neutral and free of polling and other hacks.

Linux power management on laptops sucks. Project Utopia is all about making things "Just Work" and that's how power-management should be.

The site can be found here with lots of screenshots.

There is a CVS repository available with the latest and greatest code.

Note: The project is at alpha status and at this stage I’m looking for preliminary feedback on initial concepts, and people’s views on how this should be done.

I run FC3 on updated with the

I run FC3 on updated with the latest stable kernel - 2.6.10.1.770_FC3 - and while I understand that newer versions will most probably fix at least part of the ACPI problems (its been steadily improving anyways), what I can't understand is how can Knoppix do it when FC3 cant?

Ye Knoppix ships with a highly customized 2.4 kernel.... but FC3 doesn't ship with an un-customized one either.

The real problem I guess is everyone waiting for Intel to support ACPI properly or at least reveal how they've done their half-baked rendition of it.

That still doesn't explain how Knoppix does it though.

Gerard Fernandes