Friday, May 23
Daily News Stuff 23 May 2025
Computer Tax Edition
This is the intro music for new Phase Connect vtuber Clio Aite - that is, she's new to Phase Connect; she's been a vtuber for years. She's an Australian (well, Irish-British-Australian but an Aussie citizen) history professor with a fanatical devotion to 4X strategy games and an endurance to match.
Computer Tax Edition
Top Story
- Nvidia hates you and doesn't care if you know it. (The Verge) (archive site)
They are lying to you, and also don't care if you know it.
They still want your money, but they get enough of that from the AI slop industry so they don't care all that much.
But what they really hate is reviewers telling the truth, because if you know the truth you might not hand over your money.
Tech News
- Do you need a 976TB direct-attach storage array? Got $130,000 to drop on it? HighPoint has you covered. (Tom's Hardware)
Though to be fair, the standalone 8-bay NVMe storage array costs $1799. The other $128,201 is for the eight 122TB SSDs.
- AI can't replace programmers. (NMN)
The companies replacing programmers with AI aren't.
They're just running stealth layoff programs.
- Mozilla is killing Pocket and Fakespot. (Thurrott.com)
And Mozilla.
- Destructive malware in NPM went unnoticed for two years. (Ars Technica)
It's called NPM.
- The HackberryPiCM5 is a Blackberry-like device built around a Raspberry Pi compute module. (Liliputing)
It's fairly chunky by modern standards at 0.7" thick, and at the moment you'll have to build it yourself because the completed models are out of stock.
But you can build it yourself.
Maybe.
- What are Jony Ive and Sam Altman building? (The Verge) (archive site)
Looking at the wreckage of the AI device market, they're building failure.
Musical Interlude
This is the intro music for new Phase Connect vtuber Clio Aite - that is, she's new to Phase Connect; she's been a vtuber for years. She's an Australian (well, Irish-British-Australian but an Aussie citizen) history professor with a fanatical devotion to 4X strategy games and an endurance to match.
Disclaimer: Pippa, we can't just hire everybody you know! Not all at once, anyway.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:03 PM
| Comments (5)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 306 words, total size 3 kb.
1
Companies have been trying to replace programmers for as far back as I can remember.
Posted by: Frank at Friday, May 23 2025 07:44 PM (+i6Xr)
2
Companies have been trying to replace programmers for as far back as I can remember.
Posted by: Frank at Friday, May 23 2025 07:44 PM (+i6Xr)
3
Ok, in the early 70s, it seemed like companies appreciated
programmers, because we could creat code that they could sell to
hospitals, etc.
In the 80s, well, ok, programmers were all the rage because, "ooo computers."
In the 90s? Yep, still ok, though things were getting sort of odd. "Are you sure you like computers? Because they might seem a little odd."
2000's? Ack! Y2K! <spasm>
And now, AI. Good grief, media just keeps spouting idiocy.
In the 80s, well, ok, programmers were all the rage because, "ooo computers."
In the 90s? Yep, still ok, though things were getting sort of odd. "Are you sure you like computers? Because they might seem a little odd."
2000's? Ack! Y2K! <spasm>
And now, AI. Good grief, media just keeps spouting idiocy.
Posted by: Tim Turner at Friday, May 23 2025 08:27 PM (As8gg)
4
AI will make it possible to make more mistakes better and faster than ever before!
Posted by: normal at Friday, May 23 2025 08:30 PM (bg2DR)
5
In fairness, with humans who are genuinely of very high intelligence, what the intelligence allows is making mistakes more quickly, efficiently, and effectively. Wisdom is how we label having whatever level of intelligence, and /not/ using it to screw up a bunch.
Posted by: PatBuckman at Saturday, May 24 2025 12:56 AM (rcPLc)
53kb generated in CPU 0.0142, elapsed 0.1237 seconds.
58 queries taking 0.1133 seconds, 364 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
58 queries taking 0.1133 seconds, 364 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.









