This report is quite hard to pin down as these are several different
models of computer being reported (effectively there are several bug
reports muddled up in one page).

The common trait I found between two of the output is that doing:

  $ cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/throttling

reports "<not supported>".  If your laptop doesn't match this, please
open a new bug report.

The next question is /why/ we're getting that message;  the hardware and
BIOS indicate whether throttling (rather than scaling) is possible and
this can be controlled via ACPI based on the safe temperature limits
provided by the manufacturer of that machine.

Somebody said that they'd had a specific success with Suse 10, in the
case where Ubuntu hadn't worked---what does the above file contain when
running on SUSE without the problem manifesting itself, does this proc
file still indicate "<not supported>"?

Since the last version of Ubuntu, the attempt now is to always use the
kernel's built-in "ondemand" scaling where-ever possible rather than
running the separate userspace application "powernowd" to make decisions
about what scaling speed (not throttling) would be best.

There's a possibility that a mix-up is occuring and 'powernowd' is
allowed to remain running in cases where it should not be.  This appears
to be what Trae McCombs is reporting (stopping 'powernowd' and manually
selecting 'ondemand' solves the problem).

Trae: what type of CPU do you have?  Could you tell me with the output
of running 'lsmod' whether 'p4clockmod' is in use, or another CPU
scaling module?

-- 
Laptop overheats during high CPU "throttling <not supported>"
https://launchpad.net/bugs/22336

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