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| ACPI vs APM |
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By nutela - Posted on September 8, 2006 - 09:39:26 (#20576)
Current version when comment was posted: 0.1 (RFC version) |
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This driver is not for me because I have centrino, I wonder if the source is availale? I'm doing some C stuff I'll be happy to look but don't expect something back : )
I wonder, can CPU speed be regulated by APM or can only ACPI do that?
And what the heck is Zeta's power management?
/boot/home/config/settings/kernel/drivers/kernel (txt)
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| Right ! It is SpeedStep, not Centrino... |
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By oco - Posted on April 4, 2006 - 16:35:31 (#19365)
Current version when comment was posted: 0.1 (RFC version) |
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It seems Intel marketing has some effects on my mind :-(
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| Powernow != Centrino |
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By paulauskas1 - Posted on March 30, 2006 - 13:17:54 (#19335)
Current version when comment was posted: 0.1 (RFC version) |
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Just to let you know,Powernow is similar to Intel's Speedstep technology, not Centrino. Centrino is just some gimmicky name that designates that its a Pentium M with built in Wifi.
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| re : cpu fan etc. |
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By oco - Posted on January 16, 2006 - 15:33:43 (#18852)
Current version when comment was posted: 0.1 (RFC version) |
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This driver does not control the fans. On my laptop (Acer Aspire 1510), fan speed seems to be related to the temperature. If the CPU is in the lower state, there is almost no fan. Fan speed increase with the workload.
I do not know if all laptops have this feature.
Or the driver simply does not work on your hardware. You can check this in the syslog file.
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| cpu fan etc. |
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By nutela - Posted on January 16, 2006 - 10:37:53 (#18849)
Current version when comment was posted: 0.1 (RFC version) |
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Will it controll the cpu fan as well? Or are fans on notebooks always full speed in Zeta , BeOS?
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