Page 1 of 1

newbie question

Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2003 8:29 pm
by mel
Hi
I have 2 basic questions,

1. I was looking at the displays that fit in the 5 1/4" drive bays. All I really want to do is monitor cpu and case temps, simple functions like that. I'm more of a hardware guy but complicated software throws me for a loop. Do you have software that does this, what's it called and can a newbie use it?

2. I want to be able to see displays both day and night. Which background color and interface would you recommend for my purposes?

Many thanks

Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2003 10:51 pm
by leber
I'm the same way you are mainly hardware, and the software theu use is great. The software is lcdc which uses motherboard monitor 5 ( i may be wrong on rhe version), so if you can get motherboard monitor 5 working you shouldnt have any problem with getting the temps.

lcdc is really easy to use and has a crap load of differnt things to monitor, and there are alot of people making plugins, for all kind of stuff.

i dont know which color is the best for day/night veiwing but I have the new usb model with a blue background and white/yellowish characters and it is very easy to see during both day and night.

I was lucky enough to win this as a prize and at first was thinking that I would never use this, but man was I WRONG, If i had more money I would probably buy a bigger one (my current one is a 2 x 20 version)

Posted: Sat Feb 22, 2003 6:16 am
by mel
Thanks for the response. I looked up motherboard monitor and my motherboard is not on their list (ABIT KD7). Does that mean I can't use the program?

Posted: Sat Feb 22, 2003 6:40 am
by Cheese
Just download mbm5 and try it :)

Smae goes for the lcd software, try before you buy - you don't need an lcd to test it.

On another note if you're just looking to display simple things as you say then lcdc might be a little OTT (over complicated and $17.50) - there's plenty of other software that'll do the basic temps/system info (see http://www.matrixorbital.com/applications.htm for downloads).

Cheers,

Rob.