Your Raspberry Pi is probably thermal throttling, and you don’t even know it
A Raspberry Pi is great at feeling “fine” right up until it starts wasting your time. Services stay up, the status lights blink like everything’s normal, and you chalk the occasional lag up to a cheap SD card or a noisy container update. Under the hood, though, the Pi can quietly reduce its clock speed to keep temperatures under control. That’s thermal throttling, and it often manifests as small annoyances rather than a dramatic failure.
A Raspberry Pi is great at feeling “fine” right up until it starts wasting your time. Services stay up, the status lights blink like everything’s normal, and you chalk the occasional lag up to a cheap SD card or a noisy container update. Under the hood, though, the Pi can quietly reduce its clock speed to keep temperatures under control. That’s thermal throttling, and it often manifests as small annoyances rather than a dramatic failure.
Mario Jean
Switzerland
Switzerland
Published by: aplhsindia.in
