User Manual Chapter 1
1-5
The green LED next to this icon turns on when the notebook is
powered on. When the system is suspended to RAM, the LED
flashes. When the system is suspended to disk, or when the
system is powered down, the LED turns off.
The LED next to this icon turns on green when the battery inside
the notebook is fully charged. When the battery is charging the
LED turns amber. When there is less than 3 minutes of battery
capacity left, the LED turns red and flashes, while an audible
warning beep sounds.
Keyboard
Most versions of the built-in keyboard use 86 keys. Some non-English
keyboards may have one or two extra keys. Some keys are embedded with
several keystrokes so that the keyboard can duplicate all the keystrokes of a
standard desktop AT or PS/2 keyboard with 101/102 keys. The keyboard is
optimized for Windows and has two kinds of special Windows keys. On top of
these standard desktop keyboard functions, the notebook keyboard also has hot
keys to give the user direct access to a series of often-used functions (See
chapter 2 for more information on the keyboard.)
Touchpad
The touchpad is your notebookâs pointing device. In a graphical environment
like Windows, the touchpad surface acts like a representation of the built-in
screen. When you move your fingertip over the touchpad surface, the pointer
on the screen moves in the same direction. (See chapter 2 for more information
on the touchpad.)










