Originally posted by: Kougar
I have a Dell Pentium M 770 gaming laptop, and the temps to tend to climb to 60c-65c on stock voltage. The fans still cannot be heard however, and overriding the fan control improves these numbers a good bit. The problem is a laptop, even mine which has a good cooling system, can not compare to a desktop processor. Plugging a Pentium M into a desktop board and OCing to 3ghz wouldn't even stress the small cooler that came with Asus's Pentium M to 478 socket adapter.
The Pentium M, Dothan core, is indeed designed to operate within higher temps, with thermal throttling set to engage at 100c.
There are several things you can do however... I'd first recommend stripping apart that laptop and applying some AS5 to everything instead of the cheap thermal adhesive used. That seems to help things by 3-5c.
A quicker means is to simply UNDERVOLT the Pentium M. Any Pentium M can be undervolted through use of the SpeedStep technology... I personally use
Notebook Hardware Control. For instance I can lock my CPU to 800mhz, and drop the voltage to the lowest setting offered of 0.700volts, and get a good improvement in battery life at no instability. For full 2.13ghz speed I dropped the voltage from ~1.35 to 1.19 and it doesn't care. The temps dropped a little over 10c alone though from this... anyone that runs Folding@Home should know it's second best to CPUBurn! at heating things up

I actually have NOT tried to find the lowest voltage this chip can run on, as I don't want to push it to far. But undervolting is a great way to save on battery power and heat generation both...