Hello all. Excuse the repost of parts of this info. But I foolishly added this topic to my reply to Bryce's reply about my Mandrake install problems, and there was really no relevance to that. It's a separate problem. I just upgraded my system with a Soyo KT333 Dragon Plus motherboard, and either (a) I installed it incorrectly (b) it's defective (c) the components are incompatible (unlikely since I bought it as a bundle with CPU and RAM) or (d) the company's product brochure lies when they say it supports Linux. Judging from Soyo's website (which I should've checked more thoroughly before ordering the thing, I guess) there's no reference to Linux except to one case where a person was removing it. Anyway, this is the symptom: Sometimes the system runs for a few hours, sometimes for 10-15 minutes. It appears that it only hangs when the screen saver is on - probably not because of the screen saver, but because of some sort of related inactivity function. I rebooted the machine and checked the "messages" files, and at the end there are a number of entries that say: Dazed and confused, do you have an unsual power-saving mode enabled? I tried to go into BIOS and turn the power-management stuff off, but there appears to be NO option to do so: only to change between "S1" and "S3" functions, or both. Is this crazy or what? If I knew I couldn't turn off power management I wouldn't have bought this board. (Political rant: forcing computers to "save power" is like telling peole they can't run their gas-powered lawnmowers when there's a coal-fired power plant next door.) To add insult to injury, Soyo's email support form on their web page has about 15 fields, all of which are mandatory. One is for the BIOS version number. Nowhere on any of the BIOS screens does this number appear. It doesn't appear at startup, and if it ever flashes to the screen during the boot process it's too quick to see. Why would they have hidden the version number, or do you have to be running Microcrap to be able to see it? I know that a person can load a new version of BIOS into flash, and that if you screw it up, you have to send it back to the company, so I'm a little reluctant to do that. Do BIOS's sometimes have secret or hidden options? Is there perhaps a good resource or website for secret BIOS tips of the masters? I'm hoping not to need to send this sorry hunk of junk back to the vendor, but it's not looking good at this point. Thanks, Vaughn Treude