well I will set up ONE, you can set up the rest.
it looks like everything you want is in "sensors it8721-isa-0a10"
for example to get the output for "fan1" the Conky code will follow the following form for grep.
Code:
${font}FAN1: ${alignr}${exec sensors it8721-isa-0a10 | grep 'fan1' | cut -c13-16}RPM${font}
So lets look at what this line is doing. First, "${font}" is setting the following text as your default font. You can change this by changing it to "${font
name_of_font : size=
any_number_here}. Next "FAN1: " is simply printing text to the Conky; you can call this what ever you want and change it to "Spinning Whirl-A-Mo-Bob:" if you wish . "${alignr}" is aligning the remaning text to the right side of the conky window.
"exec sensors it8721-isa-0a10" is telling conky to run "sensors it8721-isa-0a10" in terminal. "grep 'fan1'" is telling conky to search for the resulting line containing "fan1". And "cut -c13-16" is telling conky to display the 13th to 16th characters in the line containing fan1. Again you may have to adjust this, I'm just guessing at the cut points.
"RPM" is again simply printing text to conky (anything not wrapped between ${ } will be printed directly to conky). And "${font}" is setting the following text as your default font (in case you changed the font in the first font command).
I do hope the Conky Gurus will forgive my simplification and misclassification of how Conky actually interacts with Linux.
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