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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Telnet session does not expire Post 54131 by beilstwh on Tuesday 3rd of August 2004 11:48:39 AM
Old 08-03-2004
If it is anything like my handheld (axim), it has a second internal battery to hold memory while you change the battery. The old Palms had an internal capasitor that supplied power for up to a minute to give you time to replace the batteries. If you really lost all power, the memory would go back to default..
 

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WMACPI(1)						      General Commands Manual							 WMACPI(1)

NAME
wmacpi - Battery status monitor for systems supporting ACPI SYNOPSIS
wmacpi [ -c value ] [ -d display ] [ -m battery no ] [ -s sample rate ] [ -f ] [ -v ] [ -n ] [ -x ] [ -a samples ] [ -v ] [ -h ] DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the wmacpi command. wmacpi is a program that displays the current battery status in a WindowMaker dock app, on systems that support Intel's Advanced Configura- tion and Power Interface specification (ACPI). The program monitors a battery, displaying its current percentage charge via a bar and a numeric value. It also displays the current power status for the system, the time remaining (calculated based on the remaining battery capacity and the current rate of power usage), and a scrolling message with some hopefully useful information. Clicking on the window cycles through the batteries that the ACPI system knows about. OPTIONS
-c, --critical=percentage Set critical low alarm at <percentage>% (default: 10%). -d, --display=display Set the X display to open the window on. -m, --battery=battery number Set the battery to monitor initially. -s, --sample-rate=sample rate Set the rate at which to sample the ACPI data, in number of times per minute. Minimum is 1, ie once a minute, default is 20, maximum is 600. -n, --no-blink Disable blinking power glyph when charging. Note that it still blinks when the battery reports its capacity state as critical. -f, --force-capacity-mode Force the use of capacity mode for calculating time remaining. By defalt wmacpi will use the reported values of remaining capacity and present rate to calculate the time remaining on battery. This flag will force the use of the remaining capacity and time samples to calculate the present rate of drain, and from there the time remaining. Note that this mode of calculation generally underreports the time remaining. This mode works around certain buggy ACPI BIOSes that fail to report the current rate. -x, --cmdline Run wmacpi in command line mode. -a, --samples=samples Average the time remaining over num samples. This greatly improves the accuracy of the reported time remaining. -V, --verbosity=num Increase the verbosity of the program. Setting this to 1 will print extra error information; 2 will produce informational output; 3 will produce copious debugging output. -v, --version Print the version information. -r, --no-scroll Disable scrolling message. -h, --help Display help. AUTHOR
wmacpi was originally written by Tim Copperfield <timecop@japan.co.jp>, then completely rewritten after 1.34 by Simon Fowler <simon@himi.org>. This manual page was originally written by Simon Richter <sjr@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system, and then updated by Simon Fowler. Last modification by Simon Fowler <simon@himi.org>, 2007-07-13. July 13 2007 WMACPI(1)
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