Well, i not familiar with Fahrengheit degrees,
so 35F means absolutely nothing to me,
but as i remember in Celcium degrees it must be
5/9*(35-32)=1.66666 C
so it not very cold for chips, but at this temperature
begins to be condensed moisture, and shorts circuits inside 
of chip and at boards and, what is worst of all, inside of
hard drive. Almost all computers tend to crash 
at this conditions, exept industrial and military ones.

Sergei

"Samuel W. Heywood" wrote:

> If the inside temperature goes down to about 35 degrees F, my computer will
> crash.  The hard drive will still be spinning.  There's no way to reboot it
> until inside temperatures again rise to about 65 degrees F.  In the
> summertime, my computer will crash if the inside temperature rises to about
> 85 degrees F.
>
> I understand that computer crashes are very common at temperatures above
> what is considered normal room temperature.  I think it is highly unusual
> for my computer to crash at temperatures of about 35 degrees F.  Don't
> most computers work OK at temperatures this cold?
>
> Sam Heywood

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