
Like boiling water in your lap
It is starting to look that the new range of Macbooks is
starting to show all Apple's latest flair for design genius.
Apparently the highly priced 17-inch MacBook Pro, which
uses the the Core i7-620M, runs a little hot. It seems that while the i7 is a fast chip, it produces
too much heat for the Apple chassis. One punter claims that the beast is "almost too
hot" to touch.
Tests on the web have found that when the machine was
under heavy loads the chip reached 101 degrees Celsius, which is hot enough to
boil water. The problem is down to the all-aluminum design of the
Mac. The design geniuses at Apple uses the entire body of a Mac to cool
the machine. This does work, but apparently Apple did not think that the
machine would get really hot. After all most of its users are not going to be
taxing the brain of the machine playing their Coldplay or surfing the net
looking for a girlfriend.
However when the machine overheats the chip will
automatically start to run in a slower, "throttled" mode, so less
heat is generated. It also goes unstable. No word about a fix from Apple, in fact the outfit has
yet to acknowledge there is a problem.