Laptop running very hot with UbuntuHP 4510s Probook Overheatingoverheating and reboot with ubuntu 11.10 and 12.04 on thinpad T500Why is my laptop getting hot using UbuntuNote book is getting very hot when using Ubuntu 12.04Why is my laptop running so hot with Ubuntu?My laptop is getting really hot after installing UbuntuUbuntu 14.04 Hangs While Screen is OffT430 i5 overheatingMy laptop is getting very hot during useUbuntu overheating laptopLaptop running very hotFans aren't fullspeed while CPU is 100°, then CPU frequency decreaseUbuntu on Laptop gets CPU very hotMy laptop is getting very hot

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Laptop running very hot with Ubuntu


HP 4510s Probook Overheatingoverheating and reboot with ubuntu 11.10 and 12.04 on thinpad T500Why is my laptop getting hot using UbuntuNote book is getting very hot when using Ubuntu 12.04Why is my laptop running so hot with Ubuntu?My laptop is getting really hot after installing UbuntuUbuntu 14.04 Hangs While Screen is OffT430 i5 overheatingMy laptop is getting very hot during useUbuntu overheating laptopLaptop running very hotFans aren't fullspeed while CPU is 100°, then CPU frequency decreaseUbuntu on Laptop gets CPU very hotMy laptop is getting very hot













8















My laptop seems to get very hot when running with Ubuntu. The vents aren't blocked and its got plenty of clear airflow when in use. It's noticeably hotter running Ubuntu than it is running Windows.



I haven't noticed any adverse hardware problems yet, but if it does get really hot it seems to become very slow.



  • Is this likely to be due to Ubuntu or just coincidental?

  • If it is Ubuntu is there anything I can do about it?

It's an Acer 5740g with an i3 2310m.



To add further detail, I'm running 11.10 x64 and the fans seem to run pretty much constantly.










share|improve this question
























  • I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

    – wisemonkey
    Nov 4 '11 at 21:57











  • Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

    – Danny Staple
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:04











  • Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

    – elmicha
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:13











  • I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

    – Rens
    Nov 5 '11 at 9:19






  • 1





    I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

    – Mysterio
    Nov 5 '11 at 14:17















8















My laptop seems to get very hot when running with Ubuntu. The vents aren't blocked and its got plenty of clear airflow when in use. It's noticeably hotter running Ubuntu than it is running Windows.



I haven't noticed any adverse hardware problems yet, but if it does get really hot it seems to become very slow.



  • Is this likely to be due to Ubuntu or just coincidental?

  • If it is Ubuntu is there anything I can do about it?

It's an Acer 5740g with an i3 2310m.



To add further detail, I'm running 11.10 x64 and the fans seem to run pretty much constantly.










share|improve this question
























  • I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

    – wisemonkey
    Nov 4 '11 at 21:57











  • Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

    – Danny Staple
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:04











  • Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

    – elmicha
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:13











  • I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

    – Rens
    Nov 5 '11 at 9:19






  • 1





    I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

    – Mysterio
    Nov 5 '11 at 14:17













8












8








8


6






My laptop seems to get very hot when running with Ubuntu. The vents aren't blocked and its got plenty of clear airflow when in use. It's noticeably hotter running Ubuntu than it is running Windows.



I haven't noticed any adverse hardware problems yet, but if it does get really hot it seems to become very slow.



  • Is this likely to be due to Ubuntu or just coincidental?

  • If it is Ubuntu is there anything I can do about it?

It's an Acer 5740g with an i3 2310m.



To add further detail, I'm running 11.10 x64 and the fans seem to run pretty much constantly.










share|improve this question
















My laptop seems to get very hot when running with Ubuntu. The vents aren't blocked and its got plenty of clear airflow when in use. It's noticeably hotter running Ubuntu than it is running Windows.



I haven't noticed any adverse hardware problems yet, but if it does get really hot it seems to become very slow.



  • Is this likely to be due to Ubuntu or just coincidental?

  • If it is Ubuntu is there anything I can do about it?

It's an Acer 5740g with an i3 2310m.



To add further detail, I'm running 11.10 x64 and the fans seem to run pretty much constantly.







overheating






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 22 '17 at 8:49









Zanna

51k13137241




51k13137241










asked Nov 4 '11 at 21:48









richzillarichzilla

8,004174461




8,004174461












  • I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

    – wisemonkey
    Nov 4 '11 at 21:57











  • Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

    – Danny Staple
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:04











  • Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

    – elmicha
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:13











  • I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

    – Rens
    Nov 5 '11 at 9:19






  • 1





    I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

    – Mysterio
    Nov 5 '11 at 14:17

















  • I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

    – wisemonkey
    Nov 4 '11 at 21:57











  • Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

    – Danny Staple
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:04











  • Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

    – elmicha
    Nov 4 '11 at 23:13











  • I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

    – Rens
    Nov 5 '11 at 9:19






  • 1





    I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

    – Mysterio
    Nov 5 '11 at 14:17
















I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

– wisemonkey
Nov 4 '11 at 21:57





I guess u should run 'top' for a while and notice if anything is eating plenty of CPU or RAM and then let users here know about it so they can help better

– wisemonkey
Nov 4 '11 at 21:57













Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

– Danny Staple
Nov 4 '11 at 23:04





Are you hearing the fan (if any) being used?

– Danny Staple
Nov 4 '11 at 23:04













Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

– elmicha
Nov 4 '11 at 23:13





Do you have lm-sensors installed and can you try running sensors-detect? And do you run Natty or Oneiric?

– elmicha
Nov 4 '11 at 23:13













I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

– Rens
Nov 5 '11 at 9:19





I have some sort of problem and saw that adobe flash is making my acer laptop crashing due to getting to hot.

– Rens
Nov 5 '11 at 9:19




1




1





I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

– Mysterio
Nov 5 '11 at 14:17





I have the same issue and have been told that there is an issue with the Linux kernel when using Intel processors. Hope they solve it by 12.04 because I stuck with Windows 7 right now. Ubuntu is just too hot to use in 11.10

– Mysterio
Nov 5 '11 at 14:17










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















5














It is quite possible that you have an ACPI (power saving) incompatibility.
You do not mention which version of Ubuntu you have; try with the latest.



You can try FWTS, which is a firmware and powersaving (ACPI) tool,
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Reference/fwts
It should help you identify what exactly is not working well.






share|improve this answer























  • I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

    – Kin
    Jun 8 '14 at 15:39


















4














You could try passing a boot parameter. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB, for example:



sudo -H gedit /etc/default/grub


Find the line that says:



GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


change it to:



GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="**acpi_osi=Linux** quiet splash"


then save and exit, and run



sudo update-grub


to make the change effective. Then restart.






share|improve this answer
































    2














    The overheating problem could happen due to the graphics card. Under Windows there is the so called Optimus technology, when you don't play games the laptop just uses the integrated Intel HD for the simple stuff.



    I believe that Ubuntu doesn't have that kind of technology yet so it uses the graphics card all the time. What you could do to solve your problem is find a program that acts like Nvidia Pptimus technology.



    A quick search lead me to the Bumblebee project.



    I didnt try this yet, so I can't guarantee anything. If someone knows/tries if this method works or if the above info is true please confirm, thanks!






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

      – Chuck R
      Oct 13 '12 at 5:54


















    0














    If you have Nvidia optimus try installing the new beta version of Nvidia 319.12 with bumblebee.



    sudo apt-get remove bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-current nvidia-settings
    sudo apt-get install bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-319 nvidia-settings-319


    Source: HOWTO: nvidia 319-12 drivers in Ubuntu-based systems






    share|improve this answer
























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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      5














      It is quite possible that you have an ACPI (power saving) incompatibility.
      You do not mention which version of Ubuntu you have; try with the latest.



      You can try FWTS, which is a firmware and powersaving (ACPI) tool,
      https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Reference/fwts
      It should help you identify what exactly is not working well.






      share|improve this answer























      • I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

        – Kin
        Jun 8 '14 at 15:39















      5














      It is quite possible that you have an ACPI (power saving) incompatibility.
      You do not mention which version of Ubuntu you have; try with the latest.



      You can try FWTS, which is a firmware and powersaving (ACPI) tool,
      https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Reference/fwts
      It should help you identify what exactly is not working well.






      share|improve this answer























      • I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

        – Kin
        Jun 8 '14 at 15:39













      5












      5








      5







      It is quite possible that you have an ACPI (power saving) incompatibility.
      You do not mention which version of Ubuntu you have; try with the latest.



      You can try FWTS, which is a firmware and powersaving (ACPI) tool,
      https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Reference/fwts
      It should help you identify what exactly is not working well.






      share|improve this answer













      It is quite possible that you have an ACPI (power saving) incompatibility.
      You do not mention which version of Ubuntu you have; try with the latest.



      You can try FWTS, which is a firmware and powersaving (ACPI) tool,
      https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/Reference/fwts
      It should help you identify what exactly is not working well.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Nov 4 '11 at 23:46









      user4124user4124

      6,70432232




      6,70432232












      • I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

        – Kin
        Jun 8 '14 at 15:39

















      • I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

        – Kin
        Jun 8 '14 at 15:39
















      I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

      – Kin
      Jun 8 '14 at 15:39





      I use Ubuntu 14.04 meet the same problem with my laptop ASUS VX32VD

      – Kin
      Jun 8 '14 at 15:39













      4














      You could try passing a boot parameter. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB, for example:



      sudo -H gedit /etc/default/grub


      Find the line that says:



      GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


      change it to:



      GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="**acpi_osi=Linux** quiet splash"


      then save and exit, and run



      sudo update-grub


      to make the change effective. Then restart.






      share|improve this answer





























        4














        You could try passing a boot parameter. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB, for example:



        sudo -H gedit /etc/default/grub


        Find the line that says:



        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


        change it to:



        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="**acpi_osi=Linux** quiet splash"


        then save and exit, and run



        sudo update-grub


        to make the change effective. Then restart.






        share|improve this answer



























          4












          4








          4







          You could try passing a boot parameter. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB, for example:



          sudo -H gedit /etc/default/grub


          Find the line that says:



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


          change it to:



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="**acpi_osi=Linux** quiet splash"


          then save and exit, and run



          sudo update-grub


          to make the change effective. Then restart.






          share|improve this answer















          You could try passing a boot parameter. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB, for example:



          sudo -H gedit /etc/default/grub


          Find the line that says:



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


          change it to:



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="**acpi_osi=Linux** quiet splash"


          then save and exit, and run



          sudo update-grub


          to make the change effective. Then restart.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 22 '17 at 8:18









          Zanna

          51k13137241




          51k13137241










          answered Nov 5 '11 at 9:10









          Brallan AguilarBrallan Aguilar

          1,04611425




          1,04611425





















              2














              The overheating problem could happen due to the graphics card. Under Windows there is the so called Optimus technology, when you don't play games the laptop just uses the integrated Intel HD for the simple stuff.



              I believe that Ubuntu doesn't have that kind of technology yet so it uses the graphics card all the time. What you could do to solve your problem is find a program that acts like Nvidia Pptimus technology.



              A quick search lead me to the Bumblebee project.



              I didnt try this yet, so I can't guarantee anything. If someone knows/tries if this method works or if the above info is true please confirm, thanks!






              share|improve this answer




















              • 1





                I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

                – Chuck R
                Oct 13 '12 at 5:54















              2














              The overheating problem could happen due to the graphics card. Under Windows there is the so called Optimus technology, when you don't play games the laptop just uses the integrated Intel HD for the simple stuff.



              I believe that Ubuntu doesn't have that kind of technology yet so it uses the graphics card all the time. What you could do to solve your problem is find a program that acts like Nvidia Pptimus technology.



              A quick search lead me to the Bumblebee project.



              I didnt try this yet, so I can't guarantee anything. If someone knows/tries if this method works or if the above info is true please confirm, thanks!






              share|improve this answer




















              • 1





                I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

                – Chuck R
                Oct 13 '12 at 5:54













              2












              2








              2







              The overheating problem could happen due to the graphics card. Under Windows there is the so called Optimus technology, when you don't play games the laptop just uses the integrated Intel HD for the simple stuff.



              I believe that Ubuntu doesn't have that kind of technology yet so it uses the graphics card all the time. What you could do to solve your problem is find a program that acts like Nvidia Pptimus technology.



              A quick search lead me to the Bumblebee project.



              I didnt try this yet, so I can't guarantee anything. If someone knows/tries if this method works or if the above info is true please confirm, thanks!






              share|improve this answer















              The overheating problem could happen due to the graphics card. Under Windows there is the so called Optimus technology, when you don't play games the laptop just uses the integrated Intel HD for the simple stuff.



              I believe that Ubuntu doesn't have that kind of technology yet so it uses the graphics card all the time. What you could do to solve your problem is find a program that acts like Nvidia Pptimus technology.



              A quick search lead me to the Bumblebee project.



              I didnt try this yet, so I can't guarantee anything. If someone knows/tries if this method works or if the above info is true please confirm, thanks!







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Oct 13 '12 at 5:05







              user61928

















              answered Jul 26 '12 at 18:36









              eagleeagle

              211




              211







              • 1





                I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

                – Chuck R
                Oct 13 '12 at 5:54












              • 1





                I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

                – Chuck R
                Oct 13 '12 at 5:54







              1




              1





              I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

              – Chuck R
              Oct 13 '12 at 5:54





              I've seen a lot of discussion on Bumblebee. I've yet to buy a laptop with Optimus yet because of this reason. The main issue with Bumblebee (from my last time researching it) is that it runs 100% on Intel unless explicitly invoked to use nVidia. So, if you wanted to run a program with the nVidia card, you'd have to do something like '[bumblebee command] alien-arena'

              – Chuck R
              Oct 13 '12 at 5:54











              0














              If you have Nvidia optimus try installing the new beta version of Nvidia 319.12 with bumblebee.



              sudo apt-get remove bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-current nvidia-settings
              sudo apt-get install bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-319 nvidia-settings-319


              Source: HOWTO: nvidia 319-12 drivers in Ubuntu-based systems






              share|improve this answer





























                0














                If you have Nvidia optimus try installing the new beta version of Nvidia 319.12 with bumblebee.



                sudo apt-get remove bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-current nvidia-settings
                sudo apt-get install bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-319 nvidia-settings-319


                Source: HOWTO: nvidia 319-12 drivers in Ubuntu-based systems






                share|improve this answer



























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  If you have Nvidia optimus try installing the new beta version of Nvidia 319.12 with bumblebee.



                  sudo apt-get remove bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-current nvidia-settings
                  sudo apt-get install bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-319 nvidia-settings-319


                  Source: HOWTO: nvidia 319-12 drivers in Ubuntu-based systems






                  share|improve this answer















                  If you have Nvidia optimus try installing the new beta version of Nvidia 319.12 with bumblebee.



                  sudo apt-get remove bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-current nvidia-settings
                  sudo apt-get install bumblebee-nvidia nvidia-319 nvidia-settings-319


                  Source: HOWTO: nvidia 319-12 drivers in Ubuntu-based systems







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Apr 22 '17 at 8:19









                  Zanna

                  51k13137241




                  51k13137241










                  answered Apr 30 '13 at 19:57









                  ThuenerThuener

                  34519




                  34519



























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