Use built-in tools like Device Manager or PowerShell commands. Avoid admin privileges for basic checks.
Use built-in tools like Device Manager or PowerShell commands. Avoid admin privileges for basic checks.
I checked the output and saw the current temperature listed as 2982. That number likely represents the temperature in Celsius, indicating the system's thermal zone status.
I want to express this in Kelvin, though that would imply around 2708°C—probably a sign the BIOS/UEFI is giving incorrect data. It seems your system isn’t functioning properly on my end. One value returns zero, another shows "Not Found." That’s the issue with WMI; you’re dependent on the BIOS/UEFI. Since Windows rarely uses the statistics it gathers, the BIOS/UEFI might be sending faulty information because it wasn’t tested for end users, so no complaints are made or implemented. Now we understand why the Windows Task Manager doesn’t display CPU temperatures. If it does, maybe vendors will finally act and fix the problem of CPUs running at such extreme levels.