On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 7:08 AM, Andre Rodovalho <andre.rodova...@gmail.com>wrote:
> Ali, why don't you monitor the temperature to be sure the core temperature > is anormal? > All the monitors [1] says: 40 C while on BIOS, it says 68 C - 70 C > I didn't understand this: > > By the way, even when I opened the cover and even when everything cooled > down a bit, while watching, CPU was minimum at 80%. > CPU Usage is high while watching the video. > This is exatcly the reason for the processor to be hot, is over a big > load... > Indeed, this is what I was talking about :) > Another thing, it might me good to check temperature on BIOS, to check, if > available! > > See above :) > Anyway, I guess an video overload on your system intends to heat your > chiptset, not your CPU... The problem is, this very compacted videos > require too much processing, for decoding, it's the oposite work of > decoding, less effort, but for those new tecnology, that might be enough to > make your CPU quite busy... > But Federico mentioned that the videos I'm watching are not HD?! > Different chipsets can handle differently video information, your netbook > might be newer, and better prepared for those video compression > technology... > My ASUS F3F Laptop has 512MB RAM and Intel Core Due at 1.86GHz. [1] - http://askubuntu.com/questions/15832/how-do-i-get-the-cpu-temperature -- "All of us are smarter than any one of us." *Best Regards,* *amjjawad <https://wiki.ubuntu.com/amjjawad/>* *Start Ubuntu<https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lubuntu/CommunicationsTeam/WOWLubuntu/StartUbuntu> * *My Own Business <http://alilinx.blogspot.com/>*
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