Work Server | CPU: Intel Xeon E5-2650 v3 | Model: Cisco UCS C220 M4 (SFF) | RAM: 64GB (4x16GB) Cisco (Samsung) DDR4 2133Mhz | STORAGE: 4x Cisco (Seagate) 900GB 10K 2.5" (RAID 10) - 2x 32GB Cisco FlexFlash Boot Drive (RAID 1) | OS: vSphere 6. | Pixel 4XL 128GB - Clearly White - Unlocked - Carrier: Visible | Home Server | CPU: Intel Xeon E5-2690 (Sandy Bridge) | GPU: Quadro P2000 | Motherboard: SUPERMICRO X9SRL-F | RAM: 64GB (8x8GB) Micron VLP DDR3-1600 ECC | PSU: SUPERMICRO 665W 80 PLUS Bronze | STORAGE: 2x Samsung 860 EVO 500GB (RAID 1) - 4x WD 8TB Ultrastar (RAID 10) - Intel SSD D3-S4510 Series 240GB (BOOT) | COOLER: Noctua NH-U12DXi4 with 2x Noctua NF-F12 iPPC 3000 PWM | CASE: SUPERMICRO CSE-842TQ-665B 4U | OS: vSphere 6.7 Enterprise Plus U3 | Build Log in Progress | Gaming Desktop | CPU: Intel Core i7 9700K | GPU: Gigabyte RTX 2080 WINDFORCE 8G | Motherboard: ASRock Z390 PHANTOM GAMING-ITX | RAM: Ballistix Elite 32GB Kit (16GB x 2) DDR4-3000 | PSU: Silverstone SX700-LPT 700w 80 PLUS Platinum | STORAGE: 2x Samsung 970 PRO 1TB NVMe | COOLER: Noctua NH-L12 | CASE: Louqe Ghost S1 | OS: Windows 10 Pro | Build Log in Progress |
Laptop | CPU: Intel Core i7 6700HQ | GPU: Nvidia GTX 960M 2GB GDDR5 | RAM: 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4-2400Mhz | STORAGE: 512GB Hynix NVMe | OS: Windows 10 Pro | That works fine for the main CPU thread, Im using it to monitor the overall usage, however Im a geek so Im hoping to also monitor the individual core and even thread usage but with 6 cores and 12 threads it gets quite over kill. Work Server | CPU: Intel Xeon E5-2650 v3 | Model: Cisco UCS C220 M4 (SFF) | RAM: 64GB (4x16GB) Cisco (Samsung) DDR4 2133Mhz | STORAGE: 4x Cisco (Seagate) 900GB 10K 2.5" (RAID 10) - 2x 32GB Cisco FlexFlash Boot Drive (RAID 1) | OS: vSphere 6.7 Enterprise Plus U3 | License=Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 3.Work Desktop | CPU: Intel Core i7 4770k | GPU: Quadro K1200 | Motherboard: EVGA Z97 Classified | RAM: Corsair Dominator Platinum 32GB (4x8GB) DDR3-2133Mhz | PSU: Seasonic 750W SS-750KM3 80 PLUS Gold | STORAGE: WD 1TB Se Enterprise Grade Drive & Corsair Neutron NX500 400GB NVMe PCIe | COOLER: Enermax Liqtech 240 - 5x Noctua NF-F12 iPPC 2000 PWM | CASE: Corsair 600C | OS: Windows 10 Pro | Peripherals: Logitech MX Master 2S - Logitech K840 - INTEL X520 10Gb NIC - 3x Acer H236HL - Build Log | I've been using Notepad++ just to dabble while I get a handle of the basics.ĭescription=Simple Rainmeter Skin to display CPU and GPU Frequency & Temps. I was able to get the Max temp to dynamically display depending pn CPU usage but the frequency is just static.Ģ) Is there any video tutorials that newbies can watch to learn how to create Rainmeter Skins?ģ) How do get Rainmeter to use colours defined in a section and have it referenced throughout the skin?Ĥ) How do you get Rainmeter to display degrees celcius correctly as I keep getting that capital A (see image 2). So initially I wanted to just use the built-in monitoring tools of Windows (to keep it very light weight) but it transpired I couldn't and would need something like coretemp installed (which I have installed and use HWinfo - not used in this skin).īefore I waffle on too much lol, need help with the following:ġ) How do you display the frequency of the CPU and have it dynamically display depending on workload? What I'm working is a simple monitor rainmeter skin to get the fundamentals.
I need help as I just started dabbling with Rainmeter and didn't find a Rainmeter Skin I liked so I thought I'd make one myself.
First of all I thank JSMorley for the awesome application and to minhtrimatrix for the easy to follow code in the Hero Rainmeter Skin.