So I recently bought an Aluminum Macbook (2.4 GHz C2D, 4 GB RAM). I'm a casual gamer, but the Pro was just too big for me. I was nervous about the NVIDIA GPU sharing main memory, but have been pleasantly surprised. WoW runs very well, 60 FPS in light traffic, 30 FPS in heavy traffic, medium graphics settings. But as everyone knows, the back half of the chassis (above and below the keyboard) gets quite hot.
That doesn't bother me too much. I actually like the fact that the aluminum chassis also acts as a heat sink, and the heat is away from the battery and hard drive. (Also my friend's pro gets just as hot while gaming) However, I need to know that I'm not shortening the life of the laptop. Consumer electronics should be able to sustain real world loads indefinitely under appropriate conditions (reasonable room temperature, sitting on a flat table).
I'm new to Mac, so what is a good temperature monitoring tool? What are good/bad temps? I want to be able to game for a few hours a night, and still get 4-5 years out of this laptop, so if my temps are going to shorten the life of the laptop, I'll get one of those lap/desk fan stand coolers.
That doesn't bother me too much. I actually like the fact that the aluminum chassis also acts as a heat sink, and the heat is away from the battery and hard drive. (Also my friend's pro gets just as hot while gaming) However, I need to know that I'm not shortening the life of the laptop. Consumer electronics should be able to sustain real world loads indefinitely under appropriate conditions (reasonable room temperature, sitting on a flat table).
I'm new to Mac, so what is a good temperature monitoring tool? What are good/bad temps? I want to be able to game for a few hours a night, and still get 4-5 years out of this laptop, so if my temps are going to shorten the life of the laptop, I'll get one of those lap/desk fan stand coolers.