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  2. Windows 11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_11

    As of November 2024, Windows 11, accounting for 35% of Windows installations worldwide, [20] is the second most popular Windows version in use, with its predecessor Windows 10 still being the most used version in virtually all countries (with Guyana being an exception, where Windows 11 is the most used [21]), with it globally at over 2 times ...

  3. Never Plug These 12 Things Into Your Power Strip - AOL

    www.aol.com/never-plug-12-things-power-140000329...

    Leaving one plugged into a power strip not only risks overheating the strip but also creates a fire hazard if left unattended. Always use a wall outlet for these workhorses to keep things safe.

  4. Overheating (electricity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overheating_(electricity)

    Glitched and garbled display on a workstation laptop with a defective graphics card that underwent extensive overheating from use in a hot environment. The second image shows the same laptop failing to operate properly due to a graphics card defect, crashing the operating system and displaying a blue screen of death on the screen.

  5. Laptop cooler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laptop_cooler

    An active laptop cooler. A laptop/notebook cooler, cooling pad, cooler pad or chill mat is an accessory for laptop computers intended to reduce their operating temperature when the laptop is unable to sufficiently cool itself. Laptop coolers are intended to protect both the laptop from overheating and the user from suffering heat related ...

  6. Computer cooling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_cooling

    Evaporation, especially for 2-phase coolants, can pose a problem, [18] and the liquid may require either to be regularly refilled or sealed inside the computer's enclosure. Immersion cooling can allow for extremely low PUE values of 1.05, vs air cooling's 1.35, and allow for up to 100 KW of computing power (heat dissipation, TDP) per 19-inch ...

  7. Heat sink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_sink

    A fan-cooled heat sink on the processor of a personal computer. To the right is a smaller heat sink cooling another integrated circuit of the motherboard. Typical heatsink-fan combination found on a consumer laptop.

  8. Thermal cutoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_cutoff

    Thermal switches on microprocessors often stop only the fetching of instructions to execute, reducing the clock rate to zero until a lower temperature is reached, while maintaining power to the cache to prevent data loss (although a second switch, with a higher triggering temperature, usually turns off even the cache and forces the computer to ...

  9. How Trump’s proposed tariffs could affect the cost of jeans ...

    www.aol.com/finance/trump-proposed-tariffs-could...

    Clausing estimated that the combination of new tariffs Trump proposed could create consumer costs of at least 1.8% of GDP, not including additional costs from retaliatory tariffs and lost ...