Re: ATX power on

1999-06-17 Thread Hamish Moffatt
On Wed, Jun 16, 1999 at 06:36:34PM -0400, David Todd wrote: > On some boards, it's a matter of connecting two pins on a jumper on the > motherboard, the case switch performs that connection. That should translate > to (if these two pins are connected, the power supply is supposed to be on, > unt

Re: ATX power on

1999-06-16 Thread Carl Mummert
> Does anybody how to make an ATX motherboard boot without having to >press the 'power' button everytime? That is, I want an standard AT >behaviour: if there's power in the line, then I want the machine running >without having to press anything. There was a long discussion of this on slashdo

Re: ATX power on

1999-06-16 Thread David Todd
On some boards, it's a matter of connecting two pins on a jumper on the motherboard, the case switch performs that connection. That should translate to (if these two pins are connected, the power supply is supposed to be on, until the drop and then go on again.) Your BIOS manual might tell the

Re: ATX power on

1999-06-16 Thread Gary L. Hennigan
Pere Camps <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Does anybody how to make an ATX motherboard boot without having to > press the 'power' button everytime? That is, I want an standard AT > behaviour: if there's power in the line, then I want the machine running > without having to press anything. This

Re: ATX power on

1999-06-16 Thread Jean-Yves F. Barbier
Pere Camps wrote: > > Hi! > > Does anybody how to make an ATX motherboard boot without having to > press the 'power' button everytime? That is, I want an standard AT > behaviour: if there's power in the line, then I want the machine running > without having to press anything. > >