On Thu, 2004-11-25 at 07:19 -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Ron Johnson wrote:
> > On Wed, 2004-11-24 at 23:31 -0900, Greg Madden wrote:
> >
> >>On Wednesday 24 November 2004 07:36 pm, H. S. wrote:
> >
> > [snip]
> >
> >>Use sensord/sensors in user space and, I2C/LMsensors, in your kernel.
> >>
Apparently, _Greg Madden_, on 25/11/04 03:31,typed:
On Wednesday 24 November 2004 07:36 pm, H. S. wrote:
Just wondering how to check temperature on my desktop. On a laptop I
use "acpi -V" to see the temperaute.
I was checking my desktop's(running Debian Sarge and kernel 2.6.9)
moth
Ron Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2004-11-24 at 23:31 -0900, Greg Madden wrote:
On Wednesday 24 November 2004 07:36 pm, H. S. wrote:
[snip]
Use sensord/sensors in user space and, I2C/LMsensors, in your kernel.
ACPI isn't relevant, afaik.
Alternatively, mbmon. Pure userland.
Did not know about that one
On Wed, 2004-11-24 at 23:31 -0900, Greg Madden wrote:
> On Wednesday 24 November 2004 07:36 pm, H. S. wrote:
[snip]
> Use sensord/sensors in user space and, I2C/LMsensors, in your kernel.
> ACPI isn't relevant, afaik.
Alternatively, mbmon. Pure userland.
--
On Wednesday 24 November 2004 07:36 pm, H. S. wrote:
> Just wondering how to check temperature on my desktop. On a laptop I
> use "acpi -V" to see the temperaute.
>
> I was checking my desktop's(running Debian Sarge and kernel 2.6.9)
> motherboard's spec
Just wondering how to check temperature on my desktop. On a laptop I use
"acpi -V" to see the temperaute.
I was checking my desktop's(running Debian Sarge and kernel 2.6.9)
motherboard's specs and notice it could be supporting temperature
sensors. However, the boot log i
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