Happened to me too with my old compaq notebook. Turn acpi off for the
moment, and your cpu won't overheat.

-- 
regards,
Andre | http://www.varon.ca

On Tue, Jul 15, 2008 at 11:49 AM, Martin Acupanda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello PLUG,
>
> I have Ubuntu Linux 8.xx on an old toshiba with phoenix bios. I works
> nicely but unfortunately it suddenly "dies" without warning after a
> few minutes of cpu intensive work. I am quite sure its the temperature
> of the processor because the laptop's keyboard and case in the region
> where the processor is located gets very hot. The fan seems to be not
> working hard enough. I have already scoured the internet but found no
> solution in sight that deals with temperature or fan control for a
> toshiba with a phoenix bios.
>
> I have also checked the its heatsink but it is clean and not clogged with 
> lint.
>
> As shown below /proc/acpi/[fan|thermal_zone] is not helpful at all.
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls /proc/acpi/fan
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls /proc/acpi/
> ac_adapter  button               event  info            sleep         wakeup
> alarm       dsdt                 fadt   power_resource  thermal_zone
> battery     embedded_controller  fan    processor       video
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls /proc/acpi/thermal_zone
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$
>
>
> Before I open it up and hard wire the fan to its power supply anything
> you can advice, share so that I can at least control the fan to lower
> the temperature of the processor?
>
> --
>
> Regards,
>
> Martin Acupanda
> _________________________________________________
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