Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-10 Thread J. Javier Maestro
On Nov Mon 10 2003 20:05, Michael Schmitz wrote: > > > setting during sleep. But so far, we just lack informations about > > > how those things work on most models. The albooks seem to use known > > > industry thermostat though, it may be possible to write drivers for > > > them, though I don't hav

Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-10 Thread Michael Schmitz
> > setting during sleep. But so far, we just lack informations about > > how those things work on most models. The albooks seem to use known > > industry thermostat though, it may be possible to write drivers for > > them, though I don't have time to dive into that now. Every single > > motherboar

Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-09 Thread J. Javier Maestro
On Nov Sun 09 2003 22:15, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote: > > > > > My previous laptop, an old Pentium 233MMX Toshiba, used to have an > > address that when written some values, it would start/stop the internal > > fan. I don't know if something similar exists for the Powerbook, but > > sometimes,

Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-09 Thread Benjamin Herrenschmidt
> > My previous laptop, an old Pentium 233MMX Toshiba, used to have an > address that when written some values, it would start/stop the internal > fan. I don't know if something similar exists for the Powerbook, but > sometimes, the fan kicks in when the computer is iddle doing nothing (I > mean,

Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-07 Thread J. Javier Maestro
On Nov Fri 07 2003 17:33, Michel Dänzer wrote: > On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 07:01, J. Javier Maestro wrote: > > > > I would like to post a comment on the Powerbook fans, ventilation and > > heat. > > > > I am currently using pmud+pbbuttonsd, and I configured pmud to have > > six running levels for the

Re: Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-07 Thread Michel Dänzer
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 07:01, J. Javier Maestro wrote: > > I would like to post a comment on the Powerbook fans, ventilation and > heat. > > I am currently using pmud+pbbuttonsd, and I configured pmud to have > six running levels for the processor, 3 for AC, 3 for battery namely: > >

Fan speed and Heat

2003-11-07 Thread J. Javier Maestro
Hi everyone, I would like to post a comment on the Powerbook fans, ventilation and heat. I am currently using pmud+pbbuttonsd, and I configured pmud to have six running levels for the processor, 3 for AC, 3 for battery namely: minimum: AC - 500-667 MHz