http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=10658
------- Comment #80 from len.br...@intel.com 2009-03-15 12:22 ------- Thanks for the log in comment #75 > 16:07:04 - 92C > 16:07:28 - 97C Running at 2GHz, the temperature on this box rose 5C in only 14 seconds?! I don't know how the timestamps and the temperatures line up, but the temperature rises seem to leap even faster when we go from 1.6GHz back up to 2GHz -- 12C in 3 seconds?! Then between 16:08:09 to 16:08:13 the temperature is reported to drop from 99C to 68C -- 31C in 4 seconds?! I don't think this could possibly reflect reality. The temperature readings here seem to go in the right direction, but to be un-calibrated or something. Martin, Can you boot your XP partition again and observe if they see the temperatures jump around this fast also? Also, on Windows, what is the highest temperature you can achieve -- can you force it up to the ACPI CRT threshold? I'm wondering of thermal.nocrt is the right workaround for this box (what do you see when you try it -- how high can you go?) for it seems we are trying to design an algorithm to handle what appears to be semi-random input... -- Configure bugmail: http://bugzilla.kernel.org/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Apps built with the Adobe(R) Flex(R) framework and Flex Builder(TM) are powering Web 2.0 with engaging, cross-platform capabilities. Quickly and easily build your RIAs with Flex Builder, the Eclipse(TM)based development software that enables intelligent coding and step-through debugging. Download the free 60 day trial. http://p.sf.net/sfu/www-adobe-com _______________________________________________ acpi-bugzilla mailing list acpi-bugzilla@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/acpi-bugzilla