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CPU Temperature and Fan Speed for Phoenix Bios D686.

 
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Ohm

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Since: Feb 24, 2005
Posts: 2



(Msg. 1) Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 7:55 am
Post subject: CPU Temperature and Fan Speed for Phoenix Bios D686.
Archived from groups: comp>sys>ibm>pc>hardware>chips (more info?)

Hi,
Is there a free tool API or library avaiable to read the CPU
temperature and the FAN speeds once the Windows is up and running?
The BIOS shows it at the booting time, I like to get it once the system
is up and running.

Appreciate any help.

Sam

 >> Stay informed about: CPU Temperature and Fan Speed for Phoenix Bios D686. 
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George Macdonald

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Since: Sep 09, 2004
Posts: 829



(Msg. 2) Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 12:42 pm
Post subject: Re: CPU Temperature and Fan Speed for Phoenix Bios D686. [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On 28 Apr 2005 07:55:14 -0700, "Ohm" <sams.DeleteThis@freeddns.org> wrote:

 >Hi,
 >Is there a free tool API or library avaiable to read the CPU
 >temperature and the FAN speeds once the Windows is up and running?
 >The BIOS shows it at the booting time, I like to get it once the system
 >is up and running.

I've seen Speedfan recommended by several people but you'll need to check
if it covers your mbrd and its monitoring chip, which you can determine
with Sisoft's Sandra. Check out <a style='text-decoration: underline;' href="http://www.majorgeeks.com" target="_blank">www.majorgeeks.com</a> for both.

--
Rgds, George Macdonald<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->

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GSV Three Minds in

External


Since: Aug 25, 2004
Posts: 200



(Msg. 3) Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 5:29 pm
Post subject: Re: CPU Temperature and Fan Speed for Phoenix Bios D686. [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Bitstring <1114700114.476948.204870.TakeThisOut@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com>, from
the wonderful person Ohm <sams.TakeThisOut@freeddns.org> said
 >Hi,
 >Is there a free tool API or library avaiable to read the CPU
 >temperature and the FAN speeds once the Windows is up and running?
 >The BIOS shows it at the booting time, I like to get it once the system
 >is up and running.

If an application will do (rather than an API or library call) try
Motherboard Monitor 5 (for most, but not all, motherboards/chipsets)

--
GSV Three Minds in a Can
Contact recommends the use of Firefox; SC recommends it at gunpoint.<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
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