(In reply to comment #4)
> > this a regression.
>
> Definitely not a regression, if anything, it's a kernel one. The ibm-laptop (or
> whatever the kernel module is called for Thinkpads) module changed behaviour.
I am not qualified to pinpoint the component which caused the change in behaviour -- I've just pointed out that something which used to work in Fedora 11 now behaves in a less desirable way.
> With a good BIOS, the BIOS should remember the previous state, and use that.
The BIOS hasn't been updated/changed since I used Fedora 11 on this machine. So it has to be something between F11 and F13 (well, F12 and F13, even though I am not 100 % sure what the behaviour on F12 was) that changed in an undesirable way. And I'd like to find the cause and bring back the pre-F13 behaviour.
(In reply to comment #4)
> > this a regression.
>
> Definitely not a regression, if anything, it's a kernel one. The ibm-laptop (or
> whatever the kernel module is called for Thinkpads) module changed behaviour.
I am not qualified to pinpoint the component which caused the change in behaviour -- I've just pointed out that something which used to work in Fedora 11 now behaves in a less desirable way.
> With a good BIOS, the BIOS should remember the previous state, and use that.
The BIOS hasn't been updated/changed since I used Fedora 11 on this machine. So it has to be something between F11 and F13 (well, F12 and F13, even though I am not 100 % sure what the behaviour on F12 was) that changed in an undesirable way. And I'd like to find the cause and bring back the pre-F13 behaviour.