Re: how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-25 Thread Ron Johnson
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. > >>

Re: how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-25 Thread H. S.
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

Re: how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-25 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
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

Re: how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-25 Thread Ron Johnson
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. --

Re: how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-25 Thread Greg Madden
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

how to check temperature on my desktop

2004-11-24 Thread H. S.
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