MICROSOFT WHY DOESN'T THIS SHOW TEMPS YET? WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU EVEN DOING?

MICROSOFT WHY DOESN'T THIS SHOW TEMPS YET? WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU EVEN DOING?

Attached: FUCKYOU.png (666x590, 39K)

Other urls found in this thread:

freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Intel paid MS money to not show temps

>intel processor
>showing temps
youmad

Attached: maxresdefault.jpg (1920x1080, 149K)

>implying intel temps are not fine

at least ican emulate PS2 games nerds

So can I, easily at 1080p with my FX6300 and RX 580.

because it's resources monitor not hardware monitor, dipshit

rekt

>reading temps on any platform
The horror is real.
Seriously, neither Windows nor Linux have it standard in any way. It differs by distribution, kernel version and hardware.

Knowing modern Microsoft, they'd likely fuck it up royally if they attempted it.

Attached: 1431288779135.jpg (500x532, 81K)

lm_sensors

External package. Someone who has done this work for you.
Try doing it without external packages.

that's what 3rd party software is for, getting basic os functionality in windows

>Temperature headroom is not a resource

And are you running your own kernel right now?

I try to avoid installing fuckloads of superfluous tools for on-off tasks on servers at my workplace.
Centos has a different path to Debian and all information I found is about Debian.

Is there even a distro with documented path structures? They all seem to have conventions about where stuff goes, but none seem to have guides for it.

dear user,

i understand yuor concern but this, will be extra for my c# expertise

retards

--
Prashanth Satyarashi
Platinum Assistant (3+ M points)
Microsoft Customer Service

Attached: final boss.png (465x493, 362K)

Under what metric do you class this?
For me I think of thermal throttling so it's a CPU speed metric to me more than a product lifetime longevity metric.

Is there any other reason to monitor heat that has a practical resource implication?

unironically Gentoo

What, you want your CPU to overclock itself or something?

freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/

>Is there any other reason to monitor heat that has a practical resource implication?
When you know the rack is in a location that might get really fucking hot in summer, so you set an alarm for when it starts heating up.

Unironically this, it's a nightmare and it's largely inaccurate as fuck. If you want any good accurate temps you need to be installing a hardware solution.
Modern MS has been doing a better job at providing more information at a glance though.

Attached: Gaming-Performance-video.png (927x585, 188K)

>disable alert scripts to punish the datacenter interns

Attached: devil hair.png (952x720, 654K)

what is this overlay?

Game bar