LibreHardwareMonitor
turing-smart-screen-python
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LibreHardwareMonitor | turing-smart-screen-python | |
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50 | 14 | |
3,871 | 840 | |
6.2% | - | |
7.7 | 9.1 | |
2 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C# | Python | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
LibreHardwareMonitor
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Need some help compiling an opensource .Net project
I really want to get this project https://github.com/LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor compiled and make some modifications.
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I need help with my PC
OHM hasn't been updated since 2020. You want LibreHardwareMonitor instead.
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Potentially stupid question
I have posted previously on here before (although a long time ago) about my pc randomly powering off and then refusing to boot despite powering on. I was looking through some threads and someone recommended this hardware monitoring software (https://github.com/LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor/releases). I've used hwinfo for years but this one seemed a bit more clean to see info in one go. Anyway I digress, having reseated my gpu, ram, CPU and even swapping out my PSU in the past, I saw on that but of software that my m.2 drive was reaching around 85 degrees Celsius. I know that's hot but would it be enough for the computer to shutdown to protect itself?
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Computer shuts down while playing games
Install something like Releases · LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor · GitHub & log what is going on both temperature, wattage & voltage before a crash & then check to see if anything stands out.
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[Gamers Nexus] We're Fixing this Anti-Consumer Nightmare | OpenPleb Sensors & RGB, ft. Wendell from Level1 Techs
There's LibreHardwareMonitor on Windows. The fantastic Fan Control uses it, allowing you to do things like control the speed of fans connected to the motherboard based on the temperature of the GPU—useful for me since I did the "zip-tied case fan" mod.
- Reasonable graphics card for Valve Index?
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Good Program for watching Temps?
You can give LibreHardwareMonitor a go. It's open-source, and allows you to add systray icons for whatever you want from the list of HW it detects/supports by right click any item and selecting "Show in systray". You can also change the color of the systray icon by right clicking it and selecting "Change color", making it easy to distinguish between, say, CPU & GPU corresponding temps (or whatever values you chose to display).
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LunchBox 2.3L (Dell 3260)
Thanks! I'm using Libre Hardware Monitor, as it's what this python library supported as a sensor. https://github.com/LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor
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What's the performance like at the current state of looking glass for gaming?
LibreHardwareMonitor for GPU status monitoring
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FanControl App - Not Allowing Control of All Seven Case Fans
https://github.com/Rem0o/FanControl.Releases/issues/69 And https://github.com/LibreHardwareMonitor/LibreHardwareMonitor/issues/1009
turing-smart-screen-python
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Help using Python Turing Smart Screen software? Please?
I'm referring to this: https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python
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Monitor help
You can get the exact same type from China for almost half the price (that's where I've seen them, I don't own one). For what it's worth: they're not monitors in the sense of computer screens (with HDMI/VGA/DVI input), but are displays that can be controlled over USB to show, for instance, CPU load. As I believe it's somewhat configurable/hackable, but as said: no knowledge from my end here, but you'd better first read this link before buying a display (so you know what is supported and what not).
- 7800X3D + 6950XT NR200P - Some modifications
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LunchBox 2.3L (Dell 3260)
So while waiting on parts in all these other stages, I decided to go down another rabbit hole with the Turing 3.5in screen to monitor the system as well. It claimed to be Aida64 compatible....it's not. .....and I'm not saying the shady software, from a vague risky click website that Turing provides, has malware, but I saw enough sus stuff going on, that a wipe and re-install was done ;) Then I discovered a community that developed a python library to run it (https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python), so I stumbled through a bunch of python coding to get the little screen to be on the front of LunchBox with the system stats rolling (had to order parts and make a 90 degree, USB A 2.0 male to USB-C male, mmmmmm smell them solder fumes). When at home and LunchBox is behind my monitor, the little screen comes off the front of the case and into a little stand below the monitor. I initially just wanted loads, temp, and power......and ended up doing a bit more.
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Use 5 inch turing screen for batocera.
I bought a 5 inch Turing smart screen and I would use it on a standalone pc running batocera v36. To work on linux I will use the github unofficial phyton system monitor Can I and how install modules in batocera? It is possible or not?
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I named it the Metal Butterfly - RTX 4080/ Intel 13600K / Xproto white + Flip Module
Just a heads up on that screen, more specifically the software that's in half english. It seemed a bit sus, as in after loading on my system, I was seeing some odd network traffic and system behavior. Not sure if it was the screen software or some other sketchy software I was downloading at the time (Ghost Spectre and something else), so I wiped and reloaded my system to be sure. I was going to return the screen, but instead, I ran across a community that built some python to run it. So I'm now running mine with Libre Hardware Monitor and the Python stuff available here, https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python. For sure not as friendly as AIDA64, but still good, and I just want 1 usb-c cable to it, not a usb and hdmi, etc...
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I hear all this talk about internal monitors, what about an external one?
Looks like a fun diy project. There are off the shelf displays that can achieve the same. I use this screen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09WJGP8B with https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python
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System Monitor - Pi or nah?
I'm thinking of buying that screen since there is a github project that deals with those screens ... https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python
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[Task]Help me setup a program from github on my computer, instructions are provided but I dont know how to proceed as it uses python. $5 USD
Sup folks, need some help here. Its just something I needed to display output on a small external screen. But apparently I need to install it through python and its very confusing. Program in question: https://github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python
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Best solution for small secondary (touch)screen for your gaming desktop with displaying hardware resource monitor with nice/useful dashboarding?
Using a Turing screen with this Python GitHub project Pro’s: - connects via usb, not hdmi/display -Cheap and seemingly easy to setup (around 25 euros , and seemingly straightforward install config) - could be montaged inside my desktop to be seen through the glass side panel
What are some alternatives?
liquidctl - Cross-platform CLI and Python drivers for AIO liquid coolers and other devices
sysmon - Graphical system monitor for linux, including information about CPU, GPU, Memory, HDD/SDD and your network connections. Similar to windows task manager.
FanControl.Releases - This is the release repository for Fan Control, a highly customizable fan controlling software for Windows.
Python-Data-Sampling-App - Data Sampling App from Serial to CSV file
LibreHardwareMonitorAfterburnerPlugin - MSI Afterburner monitoring plug-in that uses LibreHardwareMonitorLib enable monitoring of various hardware sensors.
raspberry_pi_capacitive_sensor_i2c_lcd - Using an NPN Capacitive proximity sensor as an object counter with a Raspberry Pi and displaying the information to a 16x2 I2C LCD
iGlance - Free system monitor for OSX and macOS. See all system information at a glance in the menu bar.
qnapdisplay - Qnap lcd python module, features both writing to the display as wel as reading keypresses from the panel keys. It was developed on a Qnap TS-459 and a TS-453A, it works on some other models as well.
wpfui - WPF UI provides the Fluent experience in your known and loved WPF framework. Intuitive design, themes, navigation and new immersive controls. All natively and effortlessly.
psutil - Cross-platform lib for process and system monitoring in Python
overlays - MarketerBay Overlays. Sandbox open source projects.
LoGiC.NET - A free and open-source .NET obfuscator using dnlib.