Twelve years ago, most processors just had a heatsink. The only fans in most computers were the power supply fans..
Six years ago, every processor has a fan and larger heat sink. Graphics cards started having active cooling along with chipsets. The power supplies started adding dual fans.
Nowadays, computers have huge processor fans with huge heat sinks, heat sinks on the memory, heat sinks with active cooling on the chipsets, dual power supply fans, case fans in the front and back, hard drive fans.. The graphics cards come with insanely large fans and heatsinks.. and people often put 2 of them in the same computer.
Then, it seems to me that the people with these crazy hot computers seem to be completely ignorant about how much heat their computers are putting out. Pretty much everyone (on these forums at least) leaves their computers on 24/7..
Is it just me or is the trend of ignoring heat output on new hardware pretty alarming? I mean.. graphics cards get great reviews even if they put out more heat than a human body. Reviews seem to ignore how hot memory runs.. or how hot chipsets run. Also, processors are getting pretty nuts.. 100W of heat output now? Wasn't the average in 1995 like 25W? I'd really like to see more ratings that show how much heat components put out.
I'm sick of being told things like 'this 300GB hard drive runs really cool' and finding out that it runs hot.. just that todays' cool is yesterdays' 'fry an egg on it.'
I live in FL.. when I run my linux box (old 900mhz Athlon), there is no noticeable change in my room temperature. But, when I run my Windows box (2500+ Barton, Radeon 9500 modded to 9700), my room gets about 3-5 degrees warmer. The next computer I build, I'd like to be able to run it 24/7 without it causing me to have to run my AC all the time just to offset the amount of heat it puts out..
My roommates' computers are even more nuts than mine.. and they're nothing by todays' standards (9800 Pros, 3000+ Athlons).
Please, Mr. Anand, put a 'thermal output' category in the reviews/ratings of new hardware.
CLIFF NOTES:
- Computers are too hot
- You need to read more
Six years ago, every processor has a fan and larger heat sink. Graphics cards started having active cooling along with chipsets. The power supplies started adding dual fans.
Nowadays, computers have huge processor fans with huge heat sinks, heat sinks on the memory, heat sinks with active cooling on the chipsets, dual power supply fans, case fans in the front and back, hard drive fans.. The graphics cards come with insanely large fans and heatsinks.. and people often put 2 of them in the same computer.
Then, it seems to me that the people with these crazy hot computers seem to be completely ignorant about how much heat their computers are putting out. Pretty much everyone (on these forums at least) leaves their computers on 24/7..
Is it just me or is the trend of ignoring heat output on new hardware pretty alarming? I mean.. graphics cards get great reviews even if they put out more heat than a human body. Reviews seem to ignore how hot memory runs.. or how hot chipsets run. Also, processors are getting pretty nuts.. 100W of heat output now? Wasn't the average in 1995 like 25W? I'd really like to see more ratings that show how much heat components put out.
I'm sick of being told things like 'this 300GB hard drive runs really cool' and finding out that it runs hot.. just that todays' cool is yesterdays' 'fry an egg on it.'
I live in FL.. when I run my linux box (old 900mhz Athlon), there is no noticeable change in my room temperature. But, when I run my Windows box (2500+ Barton, Radeon 9500 modded to 9700), my room gets about 3-5 degrees warmer. The next computer I build, I'd like to be able to run it 24/7 without it causing me to have to run my AC all the time just to offset the amount of heat it puts out..
My roommates' computers are even more nuts than mine.. and they're nothing by todays' standards (9800 Pros, 3000+ Athlons).
Please, Mr. Anand, put a 'thermal output' category in the reviews/ratings of new hardware.
CLIFF NOTES:
- Computers are too hot
- You need to read more
