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Re: Pismo status



At 9:51 AM +0000 5/20/00, Sergio Brandano wrote:
 I do not know why I am wasting time with this issue. Anyway, I have a
 very different experience on cooling both cars and computers. All the
 cars I happen to see do run the fan after shutdown (I can clearly
 hear the quiet after shutdown, then the sound of the fan after a few
 seconds). This is probably due to a different design for countries
 with a warm weather, as you report otherwise.

My car (designed for a country with warm weather) does not do this. Many cars aren't even capable of it: they don't have an electric engine fan, choosing instead to run the fan off an engine accessory drive belt, meaning that the fan can only run while the engine runs.

 Concerning computers,
 and Linux, it is running this OS that the situation improved, as far
 as Intel processors are concerned. I can say that the cpus, before
 the advent of the caged P-II, where so cold that I could safaly touch
 them. This was, again, using Linux. Using MS-Windows, instead, I
 could *not* do the similar thing for sure.

So you never did anything processor intensive under Linux, eh?

 And I have been using
 Intel processors for a long, long time. I have a very different
 experience with PPC. I purchased my first one last summer, and it is
 damn hot. How is that Linux does not help here? How is that PPC is
 claimed to be cooler than Intel? The bla-bla takes a different shape
 when you touch with the finger eh?

If you're talking about notebooks, the problem is that Apple doesn't do a particularly good job of getting rid of heat. They've been getting better with recent models, but many of their notebooks just don't have very good cooling systems and thus build up to a high temperature easily. There is a difference between temperature and heat.

If you're talking about desktop machines where cooling systems are much easier, you're nuts. Look at the heatsink and fan on a Pentium II, then look at the heatsink on a G3 (comparable processors; a G3 is about as fast as the next speed grade up of PII, e.g. 266 G3 is about equal to 300 PII). Apple doesn't even have to put a fan on the heatsink (all they need is airflow created by the power supply or case fan), and it's a hell of a lot smaller than the PII heatsink.

 I also experienced that GNOME's
 screen saver pumps up the CPU to 100% when it is active. If the
 PowerBook is cool before triggering the screen saver, it gets boiling
 hot (with fan spinning) after 30mins. Why is that? I would expect it
 to shut the display off and similar things, rather than deliberately
 trying to fry my baby. Anyway, I am done with this topic.

If you try to use a graphically intensive screen saver to cool down the machine, you're stupid. Sorry, I can't help you with that. But if you do want to give the machine a rest when you're away, run pmud instead (pmud = pmu daemon, search the mailing archives for info).

  Tim Seufert



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