Release Version 0.3.2 Beta

  • Fixed the message box that is shown when the Open Hardware Monitor is started without extracting all files from the archive.
  • Fixed a spelling error in the report submitting dialog.

56 Responses to “Release Version 0.3.2 Beta”

  1. nemu says:

    Please make an installation version.

  2. Dean Blanscett says:

    Thank You, WONDERFUL software!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Requests:
    1. CPU > Load
    a. For the gadget, it has a nice horizontal bar graph; could a % be added
    2. System Memory % usage
    3. GPU memory % usage
    4. Hard Drive SMART pass/fail also the complete SMART information.
    Thank you very much for the very good work!!!!!!!!

  3. Phil says:

    Many thanks for this lovely software, everything is perfect on sandybridge with my z68 board. The software does matched the hardware voltages, fans speed, temperatures. I would like to see the next version to add on is CPU power watts, HDD temperature and possible to add 8 threads temperatures too for sandybridge i7 2600K.

    This software is far better than HWMonitor always a bugs on it.

    Many thanks! Keep it up 🙂

  4. VasekB says:

    Thank you,nice app.
    Feature request: add command-line support / time-interval for Saving of Reports. I’like to use your program for automatic monitoring of my PC and I need any TXT/CSV/XML for parsing of values.

  5. Friedel says:

    This is a really really great pice of software!

    Thank you for this!

    Going to post this on some hardware-sites, it´s very useful. 🙂

    One question: Can you ad System Memory % usage? This would make it PERFECT!!!

  6. retsmot says:

    excellent hardware monitor gadget, since its shows everything.

    needs more customization for the gadget GUI tho, like change colors for example. strictly a personal preference.

  7. Brandon Atkinson says:

    I am using windows 7 64 bit and I cannot find the gadget anywhere, the program works though just no gadget for the sidebar.

  8. Chewy says:

    I must say, this didn’t work for me when I first tried it earlier this year. I didn’t think about this software til about a month ago, and suddenly it works perfectly 😀 (I think the first version I tried was 0.2.x.)

    I only have a few requests (and I’m no programmer, so I have no idea how hard it will be to implement, sorry).
    1) a customizable alarm when values exceed a certain number (ex, beeping sound or alert box when CPU >95C).

    My other request hinges on something not happening that I have yet to try out (I didn’t notice some of the options til five minutes ago), so I’ll post back later.

    Thanks! Good that I could dump HWMonitor for good ol’ open source… and great that it shows even more stuff!

  9. tbizzle says:

    Great software. Big on the open source projects so that along with it actually working better than any other prog (besides somewhat aida64) for my Asus P8P67 Pro board. The board has the Nuvoton NCT6776F chip so the majority of other software doesn’t get it right, if it even shows anything at all. Plus it remembers how I like it displayed & I can rename/hide sensors. CPU temps as accurate as CoreTemp/RealTemp so no need for those anymore [running an Intel rig but CT/RT doesn’t work on AMD chipsets]. Some boards it’s still a bit “fuzzy” on but these will hopefully get ironed out over time. Love the software – keep on going b/c there’s definitely a lot of potential here…

  10. Andrei says:

    I’m using OHM on my Asus Eee PC T101MT for the tray feature. One question: the CPU temp has an offset by 5 degrees (Celsius) when comparing to HWMonitor.
    Is this 5 degrees offset ok ? Is OHM showing the real CPU temp or has an error of 5 degrees ?
    It’s interesting though that both OHM and speedFan show the same value. Do OHM and speedFan read other sensor/value than HWMonitor ? Which one is the real one.

    Keep up the goog work ! 😉

    Andrei