On Fri, Jan 8, 2010 at 3:42 AM, Klistvud <quotati...@aliceadsl.fr> wrote:

> Dne, 07. 01. 2010 16:08:40 je George napisal(a):
>
> On 1/7/10, Arthur Machlas <arthur.mach...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 8:50 AM, George <pinkisntw...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >> I just installed Debian on my laptop and I notice that the CPU fan is
>> >> working much more than it used to work on windows. It must be that
>> >> Debian changed the temperature threshold. How can I change it back?
>>
>
> Apparently, ACPI implementations in laptops are buggy (or let's say
> non-standardized) more often than not. I suspect M$ must have several
> workarounds in place in order to run -- at least in general -- cooler and
> more power-savvy than GNU/Linux. These workarounds may well be industry
> secrets between M$ and the laptop vendors for all we know ... You may read a
> write up on my humble experience with a heated, noisy, jumpy laptop (gosh,
> sounds like my wife), by hopping over to the link provided at the end of my
> post; just look for the heading "Laptops in Heat". There you'll find more
> about ACPI, the thermal kernel module, the trip points and related stuff,
> and also some relevant links for further reading.
>
> --
> Regards,
>
> Klistvud
> Certifiable Loonix User #481801
> http://bufferoverflow.tiddlyspot.com
>
In addition to the info above, I use the PHC patch to allow undervolting of
the CPU, or in my case CPUs. Without it on a default kernel my fan kicks in
every 30 seconds or so. With it it doesn't kick in at all unless I do
something like render video or compile a kernel. Haven't bothered to check
the temp differences or do any real benchmarking.

Best,
Arthur

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