Author Topic: CPU Temp  (Read 1360 times)

Totally offtopic and not trying to deral but...
I never understood why america never switched to celcius. I mean seriously, the whole word uses uses celcius except america has to be "special" and use fahrenheid.
Even authentic weather agrees.

Sure costs allot of mobey to change everything but come on.
Fahrenheit, in my honest opinion, is much more practical for common talk. The entire scientific community uses Celsius, however, which is what its really meant for (its zero is the freezing point of water). 0 is cold. 100 is hot. This is for temperature outside - its more "zoomed" in than Celsius, where its easier to say its "70 degrees out" than "its 21.1111 degrees out".

I would also like to ask what cpu cooler do you have.

where its easier to say its "70 degrees out" than "its 21.1111 degrees out".
thats bullstuff and you know it
you would say 21 or 22 not loving 21.1111

Do you give time to the exact minute when someone asks you the time?

Do you give time to the exact minute when someone asks you the time?
yeah i might give the minute but im not gonna say seconds

yeah i might give the minute but im not gonna say seconds

I was talking to Swat but you're doing it wrong as well. When giving the time you say the closest of the following; just gone X o'clock, 10 past, quarter past, half past, quarter to, ten to, X o'clock. If anyone's asking for the time they never need the exact minutes and giving them the exact minutes wastes time.

But that's off-topic, the comparison still stands though


wastes time.
How?
if it's like an brown townog clock or whatever it's called then yeah i'll give approximate
but a digital clock it doesn't take any more time

How?
if it's like an brown townog clock or whatever it's called then yeah i'll give approximate
but a digital clock it doesn't take any more time

More words, easier to stutter and trip over your own words. Compare saying "twenty-seven minutes past" with saying "half past"

I would just say 9:06, the current time, as nine-oh-six.

It is currently noon-time eastern standard, ten 'n half past at the 14th day of the 11th month of the 15th year of 2k

or you can tell people the time however you want but okay

Anyone who cant tell the time on thier own, based on not owning a cellphone or watch, cant be trusted.

thermal paste isn't really something that "goes bad"
you really only replace it if you have to take the heatsink off for whatever reason
okay, i was just wondering.

start with basic stuff like blowing out dust
I did that earlier and the temperature remains the same.
are you even sure the temperature readings are accurate? a lot of users here have posted temperatures that were unreasonably low/high because their sensors are just off.
Its not that the sensors are off its just that one program, because other programs tell me its at 104-113F.

okay, i was just wondering.I did that earlier and the temperature remains the same.Its not that the sensors are off its just that one program, because other programs tell me its at 104-113F.
do a burn in test
if it goes over 90 stop using the computer

thermal paste isn't really something that "goes bad"
you really only replace it if you have to take the heatsink off for whatever reason
yes it does
old thermal paste can dry up and lose contact over years of use

do a burn in test
if it goes over 90 stop using the computer
Which program should I trust? Multiple programs are telling me different readings.