This accidentally fell out of her pocket when I bumped into her. Took me four goes.

Wednesday, February 22

Geek

Daily News Stuff 22 February 2023

So Perish All Unbelievers Edition

Top Story

  • Is the Supreme Court going to gut CDA Section 230 like a fish?  Probably not.  (Tech Crunch)

    The court heard oral arguments in Gonzales v. Google today, and will hear arguments in another case also hinging on Section 230 today.

    Both cases involve recommendation algorithms promoting terrorist content - not the modern type of "stochastic" terrorism like unbowdlerised editions of Roald Dahl, but the real kind with guns and bombs and random body parts strewn all over the landscape.

    The question at hand is whether actively recommending and promoting such content has the same protection as merely failing to remove it.  The tenor of the questioning from the justices - and not just the liberal whack jobs - suggests that the court is disinclined to strike down the law.

Tech News

  • Airtable, a software startup developing code for codeless coding whatever the fuck that means, suddenly has a lot fewer coders after laying off 20% of its staff.  (Tech Crunch)

    "We have plenty of money from the last investment round", said Airtable spokesman Bob "Bob" Bobson, "but with the fuckwits running the planet these days were unlikely to see any more."

    This article is actually two months old - I don't remember if I saw it at the time - but tripping over it today I found a link to Layoffs.FYI which is pure automated schadenfreude.

    Polygon laid off 20% of its staff today?  Guys, your entire blockchain got derailed by a game about growing flowers.

    Digital Ocean laid off 11% last week?  Well, that actually sucks; they provide a good service and I haven't heard of them being insanely woke or any other variety of asshole.

    GoDaddy laid off 500 staff?  Was that before or after you discovered that hackers had free roam of your hosting platform for several years?

    Dell is laying off 6650 employees - which seems like a lot but apparently represents just 5% of its workforce.


  • Best of hands: A Pentagon email server was apparently connected to the internet without a password.  (Tech Crunch)

    I'm not even sure how you do that.  Email servers are normally connected to the internet without a password - passwords apply to individual user accounts, not to the server itself.  But apparently they managed:
    The exposed server was hosted on Microsoft’s Azure government cloud for Department of Defense customers, which uses servers that are physically separated from other commercial customers and as such can be used to share sensitive but unclassified government data. The exposed server was part of an internal mailbox system storing about three terabytes of internal military emails, many pertaining to U.S. Special Operations Command, or USSOCOM, the U.S. military unit tasked with conducting special military operations.

    But a misconfiguration left the server without a password, allowing anyone on the internet access to the sensitive mailbox data inside using only a web browser, just by knowing its IP address.

    Again, I don't know how this is even possible.  It takes real talent to screw up this bad.


  • Got $15,000 of someone else's money burning a hole in your pocket and a hankering for some obsolescent hardware?  Dell has you covered with the Precision 7865 workstation.  (Hot Hardware)

    Inside and outside it looks like crap to be honest, but it works well.  The 64 core AMD Threadripper Pro 5995WX has not actually yet been superseded (though the latest Epyc server CPUs are faster) and the Ampere-based A6000 graphics card is still as fast as a 4070 Ti.

    Plus, although the look the review provides at the cooling solution raised questions, it gets the job done and fan noise only hits 45 dB at maximum speed under the FurMark stress test.

    It uses more power than a regular desktop PC, but not that much more - and actually less than a system based on Intel's 6GHz 13900KS limited edition.



Disclaimer: We lay the staff off now, then hire them back again, we blame it on the market and investor confidence.  We raise an IPO and we retire to Grand Cayman - that's what it's all about.

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Tuesday, February 21

Geek

Daily News Stuff 21 February 2023

Less Than Zero Edition

Top Story

  • How AI will make the Semantic Web possible.  (The AI Maze)

    It won't.  It will do the opposite - fill the web with plausible garbage to a degree that makes search engines utterly useless.

    In fact, this is already happening.

    R2-D2 was always an oddity because speech synthesis is a much simpler problem than speech recognition.  And comprehension is a harder problem than just taking dictation.

    In short, we're doomed.

Tech News



Disclaimer: There lived a certain germ in Russia long ago;
He was small and round and he gave you polio.

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Monday, February 20

Geek

Daily News Stuff 20 February 2023

Viking Land Sale Edition

Top Story

  • AMD's new 7745HX laptop CPU looks pretty good.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The 8 core chip - a separate family with 12 and 16 core versions will come later - is as fast as Intel's 14 core 12900HK from last year, 12% faster than Apple's 12 core M2 Max, and 32% faster than the previous generation 6900HX.

    It can't keep up with Intel's new (and power hungry) 24 core 13900HX, but you wouldn't really expect it to.  That's the job of the upcoming 12 and 16 core parts.

    Will anyone make a laptop based on this chip that isn't horribly flawed in multiple ways?

    <shake shake>

    Signs point to "fat chance".

Tech News

  • Need a motherboard for your new Intel workstation CPU which you don't have because they're not out yet?

    ASRock has the W790 WS.
    Asus has the Pro WS W790 Ace at the low end, and the Pro WS W790E Sage SE at the high end.

    The ASRock and the Ace are designed more for the W-2400 range, with four channel RAM and only five PCIe slots, while the Sage is designed specifically for the more expensive W-3400 range of chips.

    Couple of things worth knowing: The two families of CPUs use the same socket and the same chipset, and any chip will work in any of these motherboards.  If you use a W-2400 chip in the Sage only half the DIMM slots will work, and only four of the seven PCIe slots.  On the other hand, if you put a W-3400 in the other boards, everything on the board will work, but half the memory channels and 3/7ths of the PCIe lanes on the CPU won't be wired up to anything.

    Overall it's a good deal; you can start with a $359 6 core CPU and scale up to a 56 core CPU without changing motherboards.

    The other thing is that memory.  AMD Threadripper motherboards let you use either desktop or server memory - not both at the same time, but whichever one makes sense for you.  These motherboards use DDR5 server RAM only, and a quick look around regular retailers like Amazon, Newegg, and Micro Center didn't find much of that available.  Zero, in fact.

    It exists, but going to Kingston directly didn't really help except for telling me they have a four module per customer limit.  That Sage motherboard has eight memory channels.


  • Is Nvidia doing it again?  (WCCFTech)

    Leaked model numbers from Gigabyte indicate three different models of the RTX 4070 - with 10GB, 12GB, or 16GB of RAM.  That necessarily means different bus widths, and likely different performance levels.

    The 4070 Ti is a 12GB card already, so a 16GB card seems a bit odd here, but there's already the example of the 3060 which has more RAM than the 3060 Ti, 3070, 3070 Ti, and the regular version of the 3080.


  • How to keep your Twitter secure without giving Elon Musk any money.  (Tech Crunch)

    Follow the instructions on Twitter.  Seriously.  That's what these idiots are bitching about.


Disclaimer: All the Hoovers down in Hooverville liked Christmas a lot, but it was the Great Depression and they didn't get squat.

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Sunday, February 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 February 2023

All Quiet On The Weastern Front Edition

Top Story


Tech News



Disclaimer: Slow news is no news.

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Saturday, February 18

Geek

Daily News Stuff 18 February 2023

Not With A Bing But A Whimper Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • The Auspicious Machine is like a chunky Blackberry.  (Liliputing)

    It has a 640x480 LCD screen - rather low resolution in this day and age, a physical QWERTY keyboard, a D-pad for games, a tiny trackball, and no CPU, memory, or storage whatsoever (though there is a micro-SD slot).

    That's because it's designed as a carrier for a Raspberry Pi Compute Module - specifically the CM4 - or anything with a compatible connector and form factor.  The CM4 is just 40x55 mm - 1.6x2.2 inches - so it easily fits within a phone-sized device, and is available with up to 8GB of RAM and 32GB of storage.

    Not a terrible idea, though the CM4 is much slower than current phone models, even budget ones.


  • The 7950X3D appears to be slower than the 7950X in Geekbench and Blender.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The 5800X3D was also slower than the regular 5800X in common benchmarks, while turning in amazing results in certain game titles.  (TechSpot)

    Nothing seems to have changed there, so if you mostly play Apex you can give this one a pass, but if you enjoy racing sim Assetto Corsa you could see a 40% increase in frame rates (if your graphics card can keep up).


  • Nvidia's RTX 40980 Ti and Titan RTX Ada: Everything we know.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Which is basically nothing.  It's all speculation, though we do know that the 4090 only enables 8 out of 9 of the shader clusters on the AD102 chip, leaving room for a new card to be all of 12.5% faster.



Disclaimer: Just stick that ice pick in and swizzle it around a bit and all your problems will be over, replaced by a whole new set of problems.

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Friday, February 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 February 2023

Meowing Nuns Edition

Top Story

Tech News


Disclaimer: Hey ho and up she rises, hey ho and up - wait, that's the same song!

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Thursday, February 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 February 2023

You Can't Get That From Here Edition

Top Story

  • Full details of Intel's new range of workstation CPUs are out.  (AnandTech)

    Prices start at $359 for a 6 core part, with 4 memory channels supporting up to 2TB of RAM, and 64 lanes of PCIe 5.0.  Except you can't buy that one, it's OEM-only.

    Price for a 16 core model is $1389 with 4 channel RAM and 64 PCIe lanes, or $1589 with 8 channel RAM and 112 PCIe lanes.  That's not a big difference but the motherboards for the latter version are likely to cost more as well.

    It's likely to be slower than AMD's Ryzen 7950X - clock speeds are lower by about 1GHz - but if you need lots of RAM and/or PCIe slots it could be a viable option.

    Benchmarks coming at the end of the month I think.

    The chipset only comes with 2.5Gb Ethernet, which I think is a misfire.  Workstation class systems like this should have 10GbE as standard.

Tech News



Disclaimer: But it's enough.  More than.

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Wednesday, February 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 February 2023

Something Something Edition

Top Story

  • The Bing chatbot needs therapy.  (Tom's Hardware)

    No, it's not sentient.  It needs to be scrapped and replaced with something that works.
    Don't get us wrong — it's smart, adaptive, and impressively nuanced, but we already knew that. It impressed Reddit user Fit-Meet1359 with its ability to correctly answer a "theory of mind" puzzle, demonstrating that it was capable of discerning someone's true feelings even though they were never explicitly stated.
    Here's where people misunderstand what ChatGPT does.  It's a language model, so it does well on language puzzles.  But it has no theory of mind, which you can tell because as soon as you change the puzzle it gets things horribly wrong.
    This sentence is an example of a Winograd schema challenge, which is a machine intelligence test that can only be solved using commonsense reasoning (as well as general knowledge). However, it's worth noting that Winograd schema challenges usually involve a pair of sentences, and I tried a couple of pairs of sentences with Bing's chatbot and received incorrect answers.
    Yeah, no shit.

    Funny they mention Terry Winograd, because he wrote a more impressive AI than this for his PhD thesis...  Back in 1970.

    And then abandoned AI research because he considered it to be mostly trickery playing on the preconceptions of humans.

Tech News

Disclaimer: Johnny can however navigate his way through seven levels of parental controls to play Roblox at 10PM.

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Tuesday, February 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 February 2023

Search Delenda Est Edition

Top Story


Tech News



Disclaimer: See, not everything is bad.  I try to include at least one positive news item every month.  Sometimes there aren't any though.

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Monday, February 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 February 2023

Mi Gato Es Su Gato Edition

Top Story


Tech News



Disclaimer: Unless it doesn't, in which case not.

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