Your report appears to confirm that the Radio button on the PC is purely a momentary press-to-make type... the state associated with it is held by a system I/O device register and therefore lost when power is removed from all but RAM on S3 suspend.
What a shame... that means we're back to the solution being to add support for the RFKILL API to the acerhk driver.
Your report appears to confirm that the Radio button on the PC is purely a momentary press-to-make type... the state associated with it is held by a system I/O device register and therefore lost when power is removed from all but RAM on S3 suspend.
What a shame... that means we're back to the solution being to add support for the RFKILL API to the acerhk driver.