07-17-2019, 12:10 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-29-2019, 07:10 PM by User 12559.)
@pfeerick But then you‘d lose the functionality of those LEDs... One might rather get hand-on oneself and drill some holes into the laptop to put the LEDs in there... Too bad there are no GPIO pins left, at least I did not see any on the pictures so far (also suspiciously low USB port count for such a device, though normal on modern „ultra“books (I‘m looking at you, Macbook )), so you would have to put the LEDs in line with the peripherals that are switched off, then they‘d turn off automatically. One might also use some software stuff, e.g. a desktop application like Conky. It couldn‘t communicate directly with the firmware, of course, however it could check the kernel or device files (I‘m not a Linux/Unix expert yet, so do not ask me what exactly, though I think it might be a file in /dev/) whether it is still there/online.