Wall of text incoming so brace yourselves. If anyone does get through it, I will greatly appreciate you taking your time to read this.
So a little bit of background: I bought this laptop in July 2010 since I was going to leave for school. It was on sale and also on the day of no taxes so it was a steal. It seemed decent enough for a buy so I eagerly bought it. For what I was to use it for, it seemed perfect. No problems with it on doing "normal" stuff. However, "normal" stuff just isn't cutting it for me nowadays. "Normal" stuff being just using it for homework, casual internet browsing, and things of that nature. Soon enough I tried playing WoW on it since I didn't have my desktop with me at that time. Tried it out and CoreTemp tells me I'm running at 85C. I figured "Hmm my limit is 105C so I'm good." After playing for like an hour I'm sitting at around 98C then I decide it's time to stop. Didn't really play WoW on it after that since I brought my desktop over. (INB4 use speedfan whatever the other one is, those register me running idle at 65C which is complete BS) For the specs my computer has, I think it's safe to assume its definitely good enough to run WoW on lowest settings without any problems.
However, since my desktop has a worse processor, Intel Core 2 Duo (or something like that don't remember right now), I figured that I should do my video rendering and whatnot on my laptop. I started recently taking music videos, movies, and other media in other languages and adding subs to it. Since it's all 1080 quality stuff, it takes quite a bit of power to render it. All goes well until I start climbing the load percentage and sit at almost 70. Virtualdub, what I use to add the subs onto the AVI file, makes my computer heat up to WoW temps or even higher. I also have to convert any raw files without subs into AVI's so I can use them in virtualdub. Yesterday while converting a 3:45 long file my comp went to 103C and I freaked out.
Here are my specs since it would be useful to have them I assume:
Intel core i5-450M @2.40 and autoclocks to 2.66 I believe if on more than a certain amount of load.
Windows 7 Ultimate
4GB DDR3 System Memory
NVIDIA GeForce 310M Graphic Processor, 512MB Shared Memory
Here is a link to the computer closest to mine. I think they discontinued my model but it is only like 1 version lower than this and is in essence the same: http://www.samsung.com/us/computer/l...U01US-features
So is there any hope for my laptop? I don't want it to kinda go to waste. I mean, I know I bought it for school but I rather would not have it just sit there and gather dust. My brother is a whiz at computers, but he has no experience dealing with laptops. I myself know a thing or two on getting those pesky cores to not heat up (Getting the Pentium4 Prescott AKA LOLOL Press-hot to run super overclocked while not reaching 60C) but I've never had to deal with laptops. I don't think dust is a problem, but I'll get that problem fixed soon enough. Another thing I've realized is that sometimes the manufacturers will gimp you in terms of thermal paste. I've seen a few laptops that come with absolutely abysmal amounts of paste straight from the box. I'll be sure to add more if necessary. I don't know how good external cooling (aka cooling pads) will fare, but I'm assuming not much. The only place the computer gets hot is the place where the GPU and CPU are set on.
INB4 use your desktop, I need to replace the motherboard since one of the RAM slots is shorted and I can't access more than one stick at a time. Thinking about building a new rig altogether, but as I don't have the money at the moment, I'm stuck between a rock and a hard place.