Under Leopard, when the Arabesque screen saver kicks in, my fans fire off BIG TIME -- roaring in a way one should never hear a laptop fan roar.
Leopard has definitely affected the fan use -- for the worse. Whether it's because it's taxing the CPU much more for the equivalent function or the fans are invoked gratuitously, it's for the worse and I hope Apple rectifies it.
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Arabesque and the MacBook Pro Fans
#2
Posted 06 December 2007 - 02:06 AM
I get similar behaviour, usually if the screensaver activates while the CPU is otherwise-occupied. Clearly, it's a GPU-intensive screensaver probably a bit too much so.
I think that's why you're hearing more from the fans in Leopard (although for the record, the screensaver is really the only time the fans kick into high-gear on my MacBook Pro (2.33 CD2). Leopard offloads more tasks to the GPU. This is good for overall system performance, as the GPU performs better doing graphical processing than the CPU, and won't make your system seem sluggish. The downside is that when the video card in MacBook Pros gets a workout, so do your fans. I could be wrong, but I honestly don't think Apple has done anything to the fan settings in Leopard. I think it's just that your video card is getting used a lot more than it used to. All this said, my fans are still minimally used. What (aside from the screensaver) tends to trigger them on your system?
I think that's why you're hearing more from the fans in Leopard (although for the record, the screensaver is really the only time the fans kick into high-gear on my MacBook Pro (2.33 CD2). Leopard offloads more tasks to the GPU. This is good for overall system performance, as the GPU performs better doing graphical processing than the CPU, and won't make your system seem sluggish. The downside is that when the video card in MacBook Pros gets a workout, so do your fans. I could be wrong, but I honestly don't think Apple has done anything to the fan settings in Leopard. I think it's just that your video card is getting used a lot more than it used to. All this said, my fans are still minimally used. What (aside from the screensaver) tends to trigger them on your system?
#3
Posted 06 December 2007 - 07:16 AM
Well, the fans kick in even during benign sessions of browsing the web and checking e-mail, (where no streaming or graphics-intensive processes are involved). The fan kicks in under Leopard for tasks which under Tiger were quiet and where the fans remained off. In fact, under Tiger my fans NEVER turned on, and yet my MacBook Pro suffered no ill effects from heat.
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