The author of Her Asian Adventures is a solo female travel blogger from Spain. With over 10 years of experience in more than 15 Asian countries, she shares expert travel guides and tips to show that luxury experiences can be enjoyed on a budget. Passionate about empowering women, she is on a mission to help solo female travelers explore safely, affordably, and confidently.
Rpcs3 High Cpu Temp __exclusive__ 🆕 No Login
Result : Base clock only (e.g., 3.6 GHz instead of 5.0 GHz). Many games still run full speed (RPCS3 often gets memory-limited before clock-limited) but temps drop 20°C. | Symptom | Fix | |---------|-----| | Temp jumps 15°C when entering menus | Disable “Shader compilation in background” (compiles shaders on every core at once) | | Random 95°C spikes then normal | Set “SPU Cache” to “Precompiled” – avoids on-the-fly LLVM recompiles | | Only one core hits 100°C | That’s the PPU thread. Set “PPU Decoder” to “Recompiler (ASMJIT)” instead of LLVM | The Golden Rule RPCS3 is not a stability test – if your CPU hits 90°C+ but stays under TJmax (usually 100°C), that’s “normal” for this emulator. The real goal is preventing throttling. Use HWiNFO64 to watch for “Core Thermal Throttling” – not raw temperature.
What a clever title! I had never even thought about whether it snows or not in Singapore.
You had me reading on to see if it actually snowed in Singapore! Glad to know it does not. The tropical climate is what would draw us to return to Singapore – even in the winter! We would certainly like smaller crowds, a bit cooler temperatures and less rain.
Hmmm. Snow? Tropical Singapore? You had me going. Good advice for the winter (or anytime in Singapore I guess)
My brain was turning into a pretzel when I read your headline: snow? in Singapore?! Could it actually be true?
Thanks for untwisting my brain: Loved your article, great insights!