Note: tested to work at least on Thinkpad X60, Debian unstable, recent 2.6 kernel.
# apt-get install hibernate
# hibernate-ram
Done.
I thought a lot of people knew this already…
PS. You might need to set IbmAcpi yes in /etc/hibernate/common.conf.
Edit: thanks to Evgeni Golov for the even shorter command.
etch is finally out of the door! Hooray! Congratulations to everyone involved, forget about what the /. crowd is saying, this looks likely to be a very solid release.
If you happen to be in Hong Kong, there will be a Debian etch release party this Sunday afternoon. Please do come along, it’ll be fun.
I’ve also translated the etch release announcement into Chinese, but it seems a bit more work needs to be done before it will appear on the Debian website. In the meantime following is a copy of the Chinese translation:
Continue reading ‘Debian etch released!’
恭祝你福壽與天齊
慶賀你生日快樂
年年都有今日
歲歲都有今朝
恭喜你, 恭喜你!
Sadly no Debian birthday party tonight in Hong Kong, since everyone is so busy… actually which DD is still in HK nowadays?
Just back in Hong Kong for a few days and have to think about the next trip already… damn. San Francisco next month, for the LinuxWorld trade show. Apparently my employer has a booth there (SW Linux, #2034). Debian is about 100 feet away at booth #2037 (floor plan here); perhaps I’ll see some of you again there.
I think this is the first Planet Debian meme I’ve been in…

First of all, thank you DebConf5 organizers! You guys did a fantastic job in providing the opportunity for both DDs and non-DDs alike to meet face-to-face with each other. Debian definitely is alive and kicking!
So it is with great disappointment to see articles like this (”No Way For Linux To Replace Proprietary Software”) when I came back to Hong Kong. It’s an op-ed piece in a local newspaper by Charles Peter Mok, and begins by attacking last week’s Evans Data report for lacking objective data, therefore the conclusion reached (OSS adoption is speeding up) is too far-fetched. This is followed by (translation to English mine):
In fact, due to their love of open source systems (sic), open source supporters
often are shallow when it comes to analysis and reaching conclusions, and confirming
their subjective wants become their priority; of course, open source critics, like
the Microsoft Windows camp and Sun Micro’s Unix camp, sometimes do the same thing.
Maybe he takes the /. crowd too seriously? Anyway, he then essentially translates the month-old SG Cowen report as an example of an objective argument… actually the translation is rather dubious. For example, the report only said “Linux seems to be hitting a limit” (via BusinessWeek); he translated that as “Linux’s development has reached the stage where it’s facing piling limitations”. What a nice and objective extrapolation!
Moving on, he uses the report to reach the conclusion that (again translations mine):
… whether Linux will still enjoy considerable growth, or the red light has been lit, is at the
moment too early to say. Enterprise and personal users who use proprietary software
such as Windows are still the majority.
Thanks for stating the obvious, Charles. So where’s the objective argument that supports the title of the article?
I’m still arranging things, but it’s looking very likely that I will be at Debconf5…
Jeff Licquia’s proposal for making Debian LSB compliant is the same one that we’ve discussed about internally at work: namely to replace ld-lsb.so with a linker script such that LSB-compliant programs get linked to LSB-compliant libs. It is a good idea. The reason this wasn’t done for RAYS LX was simply due to a lack of time. Shoddy, I know.
This has been done before in the past, I think by Mandrake… or was it Caldera?
Thanks to a reminder from Olaf Meeuwissen yesterday regarding an RC bug blocking im-sdk from entering sarge, I went to check out all open RC bugs for my package, only to find that I haven’t received any email from the BTS for a few weeks already. Sure enough, a search revealed that all of them have been marked as spam by GMail.
Luckily they haven’t been deleted yet.
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