![]() ![]() Correct prices and promotions are validated at the time your order is placed. Despite our best efforts, a small number of items may contain pricing, typography, or photography errors. Quantity limits may apply to orders, including orders for discounted and promotional items. Price protection, price matching or price guarantees do not apply to Intra-day, Daily Deals or limited-time promotions. Prices, specifications, availability and terms of offers may change without notice. ![]() We greatly value your business and appreciate your ongoing patience as we work to get your order to you. We will send updates by email as soon as they are available. You may check your order status via our Track My Order page ( Click Here to log in). Our website reflects current product availability but circumstances are dynamic. We are working to meet the current extraordinary customer demand for our products. This should load your BIOS / UEFI interface, which for many Windows 10 users will include a CPU temperature readout. This is also where you can view the system restore and startup settings, as well as other recovery options. It should interrupt just before your typical boot and login procedures, and it will provide several advanced startup options. Your device will power down as usual and begin to restart. Scroll down to the Advanced startup heading and select the Restart now button.The new sidebar should load alongside the Update & Recovery panel. Select the Recovery tab in the left sidebar.Scroll down to the Update & Recovery tab at the bottom of the Windows Settings index.This will open a new index and search bar under the Windows Settings header. It should be just above the Taskbar icon and your PC’s shutdown options. Select the Settings button, indicated by a white gear icon.Open the Windows Taskbar at the lower left corner of your screen.It’s also important to remember that different methods may only apply to some users. In this procedure, you’ll rely on your device’s BIOS or UEFI (the contemporary equivalent of a BIOS interface) to check CPU temperature, as well as other hardware information and settings. Maybe your code is working now but I am looking in the wrong place for the values.First, let’s look at the DIY method for checking CPU temp on a Windows 10 computer. By the way, the other platform code in sensor.yaml is a template for sun azimuth and elevation. Still nothing appeared, but this time when I returned to File Editor the new code was still there. All of the changes I had made to sensor.yaml had vanished. I got a green light then, so I clicked Save, went to Developer Tools, clicked Check Configuration, and then clicked Scripts. I tried putting a "- " in front of the other “platform” line in my sensor.yaml, adjusting the subsequent lines two spaces to the right, and restoring your code to its original form. I then got “duplicated mapping key” with an up arrow seemingly pointing to “platform”. I tried removing the "- " in front of platform and I moved every other line two spaces to the left. When I put that code in my sensor.yaml, I get “end of the stream or a document separator is expected”. And while you are at it, can you explain why some lines in yaml files start with "- " and when lines need to be indented and by how much? Thanks. I hope that someone is willing to help an idiot. Furthermore, I need the other platform: entry. ![]() Probably, I do not understand how to use this code. I am expecting something to show up in Overview, but nothing does. There is a platform: template in the same file. That code still does not work, but now the complaint is that there is a duplicated mapping key – platform, I believe. One suggests adding this code to configuration.yaml: sensor:Ĭommand: 'cat /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp' I am trying to display the temperature of the CPU. ![]()
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