เมื่อ ศ. 2007-01-05 เวลา 22:57 -0800, Marc Shapiro เขียนว่า:

> Cybe R. Wizard wrote:
> > Marc Shapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  said:
> >   
> >> I can claim firsthand experience with exactly that.  Box overheated.  
> >> Fried capacitors.  Required new motherboard and CPU.  Fortunately I
> >> was able to get a similar MB, only slight upgrade, so I was able to
> >> use my old memory and  didn't have to replace that, too.  If the
> >> problem is the power supply (mine was) it is much cheaper to replace
> >> the PS now than the MB in a few weeks.  Other fans and heatsinks are
> >> still less expensive than a new CPU (and, possibly, MB).
> >>     
> >
> > I had much the same experience but my loss was total.  That brings up
> > the question of how to tell if the PS is going out.  My motherboard had
> > fan, temp and voltage sensors that I /finally/ got working but the PS
> > didn't seem to be represented in those.  Are there physical hints
> > pre-death (enough pre-death for box salvage) for a power supply?
> >   
> I had been hearing whining on and off from my PS for at least a few 
> weeks.  If I had paid attention to it I could have picked up a PS 
> locally for about $35 and avoided the hassle, cost and downtime.  I now 
> have mbmon installed to check the temp and fan speed.  My new processor 
> seems to run very cool, however.  I don't think I have seen it hit 40C 
> yet and I keep it running 24/7.  It is an AMD Mobile AMD Athlon(tm) XP-M 
> Processor 2800+.
> 
> -- 
> Marc Shapiro
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]


The heat increase because cpu run in full speed. So I enable cpufreq
scaling and install cpufreqd deamon
The cpufreqd control cpu frequency by rule in configuration file. So I
can insert rule to reduce frequency when hight cpu temperature.

Kan

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