Smart Monitoring PC Hardware Launched By NVIDIA 82
MojoKid writes "NVIDIA has just introduced a new open-industry standard for real-time monitoring and control of PC power supplies, chassis, and water cooling systems. Dubbed ESA, which stands for Enthusiast System Architecture, the company hopes the standard will be adopted across the industry. A new wave of ESA compliant hardware that can be monitored and controlled via a standard interface could ensue, like smart health-monitoring power supplies and other components, that would increase system stability and reliability. 'The ESA standard is built around the USB HID (Human Interface Device) specification and has been submitted to the USB-if HID subcommittee for discussion and approval. ESA is essentially a hardware and software interface that takes data collected by analog sensors and converts it to digital information that can accessed via software. Below are a handful of slides taken from an NVIDIA-produced presentation on ESA.'"
Join my club! (Score:1, Funny)
* ATS: Ambiguous Three-letter-acronyms Suck
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LET'S GET READY TO WIKIRUUUUUUUUMMMBBBBLEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
Naah, just kidding, I wouldn't dream of starting a wikiwar just to get some karma points. Or would I?
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Are you sure? (Score:2, Funny)
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Hmm.... (Score:4, Funny)
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Printer Analog Sensors (Score:4, Funny)
Well, I would ramble on more about voltage flux warnings etc, but I have to run and change my print toner... I have less than 1000 pages left!
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Well, it depends on how you use the printer. Here I'm sitting near a printer used to print product catalogs. 1000 pages left is a sign of that if there's no extra toner left, ordering some now would be a very good idea.
Really the right thing to do would be making the threshold configurable. Also depending on the cartridge, the precise amount of toner might be hard to
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And yes, i think 1000 is a pretty good point for a warning. Remember, we're talking about company printers here. Getting a replacement cartridge can be pretty complicated depending on the company, and even then the supplier might not have stock of your specific cartridge type (Probably only with more exotic, older printers).
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I find using ketchup works much better than toner ink - although it does tend to drip a lot.
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(thanks folks, I'll be here all night)
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I hope the sensors work better than the ones in my HP printers.
I hope they work better than their own product [imageshack.us]. The CPU temp depicted is actually 51 degC, according to more accurate Core Temp and Intel TAT monitors. The nForce fan speed is actually ~5000 RPMs, but registers 11000 every few seconds without getting any louder. Occasionally the CPU core and FSB are drastically off.
Even with nVidia's integrated monitor, most "enthusiasts" (overclockers) end up trusting other independent utilities like SpeedFan and CoreTemp, and disregarding nVidia's monitor. Maybe that's w
Isn't this what SMBUS / I2C is for? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't this what SMBUS / I2C is for? (Score:4, Informative)
On the other side of the world.... (Score:4, Funny)
In soviet Russia, components inside your computer monitor YOU!
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Beef on wheels?
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IPMI Lite? (Score:3)
Re:IPMI Lite? (Score:5, Informative)
nVidia isn't the only game in town talking about internal standards for this, Intel for one definitely has been pushing their own ideas in terms of moving standardization to the interior of the systems.
I've wanted something like this for a long time (Score:4, Insightful)
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I currently have to use several programs and a manual fan controller to for half the capability this system offers. To read temps I have to use different programs for motherboard, case, and GPU, and several fans aren't even controllable, in hardware or software.
I'd love a nicely integrated solution. I don't have a high-end GPU right now but I went through all kinds of pain just trying to figure out if SMART reports correct data for my drives (more about this [latenightpc.com]). The short answer is that while I think it may have been wrong I still took the time to install some new quieter, high volume fans.
It seems like it's time for cooling solutions to enter the PnP age. Ever since MS strong-armed the industry into adopting Plug n Play it's been much simpler for computers to
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I use SpeedFan, but there is a lot it can't do:
I can't tell where the motherboard temperature sensors are.
It doesn't read temps or fan speeds or control fan speeds in the PSU.
It doesn't read temps or fan speeds or control fan speeds in the GPU (unless I plug the fan into a motherboard fan header.)
There is no standard hardware for attaching additional temperature probes.
In my case, some of this is moot - my GPU and PSU don't have fans. I take geek pride in having a quiet single fan system*. There ar
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Check out Everest Ultimate Edition [lavalys.com]. Here's a screenshot of the sensor page: http://img137.imageshack.us/img137/4020/everestoe0.jpg [imageshack.us]. Everest also shows VERY detailed information on every aspect of your hardware, operating system and software. It's quite an impressive piece of software, the only downside is that it's Windows only.
USB port usage... (Score:2, Insightful)
Apart from usb port shortage, this also means more wires inside the case will be restricting the airflow.
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It already exists and is more than fast enough. Seems like there is already a solution in place that may just need to be improved and not replaced.
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The only problem is that I2C and SPI are not ideal on longer lengths, and certainly not for inter-component (MBPSU) communication.
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Motherboards already use the SMBus to monitor temps and fans. So why go with USB?
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Why not just link to nvidia's page? (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing like primary source material [nvidia.com], folks.
I really grow tired of Slashdot linking to another site that describes a web page, instead of just linking to the page itself.
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Sorry, couldn't resist.
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Strange. That's essentially the policy WikiPedia has ... if you put up a good article using only primary sources you'll get dinged because This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Maybe for disciplines like history that makes sense. But it's a phenomenally stupid policy for technology, where secondary and tertiary sources are both rare and, mo
Is it interactive? (Score:3, Insightful)
Needs a better name (Score:2)
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More generic than ESA [wikipedia.org]???
It looks like one of the most generic TLAs out there.
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If it works....god bless em (Score:5, Insightful)
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First off, this isn't for sensors on the motherboard, but the likes of PSUs and water-cooling systems that don't currently have sensors, or at least not standard.
Second, you're absolutely right that reading sensors via the Linux means is a nightmare. Setting myself up for a troll mod here, I know, but I have to say the *BSDs have had the sensor problem all sewn up, for quite a while now. 'sysctl -a hw' properl
Ummm....SMB? (Score:4, Insightful)
SMBus is a mess (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Ummm....SMB? PMBus? (Score:2)
Also PMBus [wikipedia.org], which standardizes much more of the relevant stuff.
For the record, SMBus maxes out at 100 Kbit/sec. PMBus allows 400 Kbit/sec, as does I2C. Neither of them is really intended to be a multi-master bus, except in the very limited sense that they define a way to send notifications from slave to master. (Though the alternative SMBALERT# mechanism seems much simpler... I think the "notification" thingie was designed to prevent a simple migration path from I2C, and promote fancier Intel southbrid
Yay, another truly wonder tech... (Score:1)
I don't mean to be a troll, because this is a great sounding idea, but anything I get excited about seems to fizzle long before it even gets a chance to shine.
I know that I'll support this tech, but, getting other people to see the light will be, quite frankly, impossible.
Excuse me, Dave (Score:4, Funny)
HID? (Score:1)
Why not SNMP? (Score:4, Insightful)
SNMP is an industry standard, well-supported, flexible with multiple attractive interfaces... pretty sure it can be realtime and has the added bonuses of being networkable by default.
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Maybe because SNMP is IP-based. Now you do not want to assign IP addresses for all the components inside your computer, do you?
And no, rendez-vous or mDNS (or whatever the name-du-jour is for IP autoconfiguration is at Apple today) is not an answer...
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> Now you do not want to assign IP addresses for all the components inside your computer, do you?
Think IPv6 (where address space wouldn't be a problem) - and monitoring a farm of computers for something (example Fan speed). You could have query:able fans in different PC cases, all by using some sort of internal routing in the pc, some policys what's accessable (firewalling disks, making fans "read only, e.t.c.),
Upon further contemplation... (Score:2, Informative)
I just hope that the standard requires high-quality components, because I can see this backfiring. I have sold ASUS motherboards since I starting selling computers a few years back, and have had a lot of success (read: very very low RMA rate). Even though I choose to include only high-quality components, I have seen a situation where the motherboard -thought- it was running over temperature and began throttling itself (ASUS P4S800-X I think it was)...and this
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The P5K boards are supposed to be the upper echelon, no?...that's pretty said that they have such a flaw.
When you say "case", which sensor are you referring to? Do you mean chipset? Or is there another sensor I'm not aware of?
Will it help with diagnostics? (Score:2)
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