Use an old credit card (or drivers license, or gift card, or any other small piece of plastic that is flexible) to scrape as much thermal compound off of the heatsink and processor as you can (be sure not to bend the processor pins) In addition to the instructions for removal do the following: The service manual also contains instructions on how to remove the HSF so you can re-apply thermal paste if needed. Here's the full service manual (direct PDF link) Pop the bottom cover off and dust it out with compressed air. Odd stuff.Odds are the fans/HSF is clogged with dust and the poor ventilation caused by the dock is causing it to shut down. You’ll see the client window open but no remote console will be displayed. Now here’s the weird part, these audio drivers also prevent the Hyper-V virtual machine remote console client (VMCONNECT.EXE) from connecting to a VM. Here’s what you’ll see in Device Manager: If you have the same issue, open Device Manager and uninstall the device labelled IDT High Definition Audio CODEC, be sure to also tick the option Delete the driver software for this device to remove the driver completely. Fortunately though, the drivers are not required for playing sound - Windows 7 will find the audio hardware out of the box. I’ve tested these on a 32-bit install of Windows 7 on two machines - a Latitude XT2 and a Latitude E4200, with the same result.
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