Dysan911 Posted December 28, 2007 Share Posted December 28, 2007 I thought one of the benefits of using the Vanilla Kernel was that it basically fools OSX into thinking it's the real deal.. So this should work for any OS Updates right but what about Sleep Mode? Is that still a no go? My Lenovo T60 successfully goes to sleep but when it wakes up it says: ERROR 0192: System Security - Embedded Security hardware tamper detected. Thanks! P.S. I'm using the EFI 8.x from the Kalyway 10.5.1 release on a GUID Partition and the Vanilla Kernel and the ACPI one as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
macgirl Posted December 28, 2007 Share Posted December 28, 2007 No. But there is a 9.1.0 Sleep ToH kernel. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dysan911 Posted December 28, 2007 Author Share Posted December 28, 2007 okay so the Vanilla kernels are just good for doing system updates, etc right? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
P2iM-0 Posted January 29, 2008 Share Posted January 29, 2008 ERROR0192: System Security - Embedded Security hardware tamper detected. I'm curious about this as well. I'm running Kalyway 10.5.1 on my T60p 8741-CTO. Vanilla Kernel (uname -r = 9.0.0) EFIv8 AppleSMBIOS - from EFIv8 package AppleACPI Package from EFIv5 package QE/CI - works - hardware acceleration Audio - works Wifi (Atheros) - works Bluetooth - works Full Resolution - works The only thing I can't seem to get working is sleep. I get the same error as Dysan911 above. I'm curious, is it possible to run the Vanilla Kernel just for software upgrades and then run TOH the rest of the time for Sleep support? (I haven't tried TOH for sleep support yet. I'll do this and post back while at work tonight.) Also, is 10.5.2 out somewhere? When I do a software upgrade I installed new versions of iTunes, security update, etc but I've heard a lot of people talking about 10.5.2, but I can't find info anywhere saying whether its released or not. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Superhai Posted January 29, 2008 Share Posted January 29, 2008 There is sleep and there is sleep. A PC is largely dependent on the bios to wake up (or the efi as in macs). The code (the kernel) obviously needs to be able to communicate with the hardware (bios). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thefinalprophecy Posted January 30, 2008 Share Posted January 30, 2008 I can put mine to sleep and re-wake it up within a few minutes just fine, but if it's asleep for more than a few minutes, nothing will appear on the monitor. Not even an error message. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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