On Fri, 10 Jun 2011 20:21:34 +0100, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:

> On Thu, 2011-06-09 at 18:46 +0000, Camaleón wrote:
>> > which is which ? CPU ? Motherboard ?
>> 
>> Most probably the CPU, as Brian pointed out (there should be an icon
>> identifiying the item)
> 
> both icons are identical !!!

And what do they represent? A CPU chip?

>> but 74°C and 95°C -being Celsius- are a bit high values for whatever
>> they meassure (even for a laptop). From what source (s) does
>> "sensors-applet" gather the data?
> 
> I don't know. but the following should help... I hope it does :)
> 
> root@wheejy:/# sensors-detect
> No i2c device files found.

This doesn't look good. 

Ah, it's a solved bug, at least if you are running wheezy/sid:

http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=628228
 
> root@wheejy:/# sensors
> acpitz-virtual-0
> Adapter: Virtual device
> temp1:        +57.5°C  (crit = +126.0°C)

This looks like the CPU sensor. It is still a bit high but dependending 
on the CPU model it could be in the safe range.
 
> nouveau-pci-0100
> Adapter: PCI adapter
> temp1:        +79.0°C  (high = +100.0°C, crit = +110.0°C)

Ah, this seems your VGA card's sensor.
 
> I can add that these 2 values (79 and 57) are actually the ones
> displayed by the applet. both the "sensors" and "sensors-detect"
> programs are part of the "lm-sensors" package.
> 
> Can you guys make some sense out of these informations ?

Yep. They now make more sense. But take an eye to the CPU temp, it should 
not exceed its limits (neither 74°C nor 95°C are good numbers).

Is this a notebook? Notebooks CPUs tend to be more heat and they support 
higher values for T junction.

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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