once i was copying files from a windows install on ntfs fs to an external ntfs drive on an old laptop. somehow the system got so hot, it permanently damaged the GPU, and left marks on the display
This is one of those things that sounds impossible but then I’ve also seen when someone I know used social engineering to get a malicious build of a free video game on to the laptop of someone else I know to delete all his files remotely and for some reason it actually overheated uncontrollably and melted. I didn’t believe that either until I went with him to get security footage from the university for the warranty claim.
That was early windows xp era though. I’d really like to believe a damned filesystem driver cand cause that kind of damage, please for the love of dog…
I know AMD had some issues a long time ago with thermal protection. Tom’s Hardware made a video on YouTube where they tested what happens when removing the CPU cooler on a system running Quake 3. As I remember it, all the Intel CPUs survived but most, if not all, the AMD CPUs died, one also damaging the motherboard.
Maybe I assumed incorrelctly what haplened, I can’t find a photo of it, it happened years ago.
Basically I wanted to back up a pretty old laptop with win7. I booted up an arch linix live usb. Started cp-ing from internal to external driver without default NTFS driver. Afer a few minites i noticed some random colored pixels creeping in from the top right side of the monitor. Most of the screen should have been black because it was displaying the terminal. By the time it finished there were multiple different lenght rows with random bright colors. After restarting on win7 these presisted. During a few days the lined got shorter, but never disapeared even after years.
once i was copying files from a windows install on ntfs fs to an external ntfs drive on an old laptop. somehow the system got so hot, it permanently damaged the GPU, and left marks on the display
This is one of those things that sounds impossible but then I’ve also seen when someone I know used social engineering to get a malicious build of a free video game on to the laptop of someone else I know to delete all his files remotely and for some reason it actually overheated uncontrollably and melted. I didn’t believe that either until I went with him to get security footage from the university for the warranty claim.
That was early windows xp era though. I’d really like to believe a damned filesystem driver cand cause that kind of damage, please for the love of dog…
I know AMD had some issues a long time ago with thermal protection. Tom’s Hardware made a video on YouTube where they tested what happens when removing the CPU cooler on a system running Quake 3. As I remember it, all the Intel CPUs survived but most, if not all, the AMD CPUs died, one also damaging the motherboard.
Damn, I remember that video, blast from the past… Also 29C? Shit, my gpu runs at 80 a lot of the time.
Maybe I assumed incorrelctly what haplened, I can’t find a photo of it, it happened years ago.
Basically I wanted to back up a pretty old laptop with win7. I booted up an arch linix live usb. Started cp-ing from internal to external driver without default NTFS driver. Afer a few minites i noticed some random colored pixels creeping in from the top right side of the monitor. Most of the screen should have been black because it was displaying the terminal. By the time it finished there were multiple different lenght rows with random bright colors. After restarting on win7 these presisted. During a few days the lined got shorter, but never disapeared even after years.
No idea how this happened