Back in a moment.
Thank you Santa.
Tuesday, April 12
Pixylon 5 Edition
Top Story
- There are curtains in the bedrooms. Not in the media room or the main living / dining area though. The listing photos didn't show any curtains at all, but they were there by the time of the video walkthrough. (Brand new house.)
I don't mind installing matching curtains in the other two rooms, even if that accounts for half of all the windows in the house. I get to see just how they fit in with carpet and paint colours rather than having to guess.
And I was leaning towards curtains rather than blinds anyway because as a modern design there's not a lot of warmth or soft edges and also blinds suck.
- Pinterest plans to block all climate misinformation. (The Guardian)
Wait, there's information on Pinterest?Pinterest is defining misinformation broadly: the company will take down content that denies the existence or effects of climate change or its human causes, as well as content that "misrepresents scientific data†in order to erode trust in climate science and harmful, false or misleading content about natural disasters and extreme weather events.
Awesome!
So the idiots who blamed the Tongan volcanic eruption on global warming? Banned.
People who claim to be fighting global warming but also oppose nuclear power? Banned.
Michael Mann? Banned.
NPR? BANNED!
Wait, they're not actually going to enforce their rules? Well, that sucks.
Tech News
- Intel has moved up the start of its 18A manufacturing to the second half of 2024. (AnandTech)
18A is 18 angstroms, or 1.8nm. Marketing numbers, but supposed to be comparable to TSMC and Samsung's marketing numbers.
It's a pretty tight schedule. 4nm in the second half of 2022, 3nm in the second half of 2023, 2nm in the first half of 2024, and 1.8nm in the second half.
TSMC and Samsung are currently shipping 4nm parts, and with TSMC expecting 3nm in the first half of 2023, and Samsung in the second half. So if Intel meets this aggressive schedule, the three companies will essentially be at parity on their leading edge tech.
Which is great, because these newer nodes back far more transistors onto a chip and so can produce more chips per wafer.
- Poopocalypse no more: The new Roborock S7 MaxV has 3D poop detection to prevent turning pet accidents into pet catastrophes. (WCCFTech)
Because by the time the poop is 2D it's a bit too late to do anything about it.
- Apple has started manufacturing iPhones in India. (Reuters)
Good.
Still not getting one.
- Dell is running trials of a four-day work week in the UK and the Netherlands. (The Registe)
But what are people going to do with the other four days?
- The Vivo X Fold is an 8" Android tablet that folds in two to become a 6.5" phone. (Liliputing)
This is another of those devices that would be amazing at $400 but is priced at $1400.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
03:43 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 497 words, total size 5 kb.
Monday, April 11
Hold The Roomba Edition
Top Story
- Contract for the house came through at around 5pm. Have a call with my lawyer scheduled for noon tomorrow to go over a couple of details.
- Silicon Valley billionaires plan to turn Twitter HQ into a homeless shelter.* (Bloomberg / MSN)
Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Marc Andreeson are backing the plan, as are 91% of Twitter users.
* You mean it wasn't already?
Tech News
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 had a $71 million opening weekend - the best ever for a film adapted from a video gam. (MSN)
Why should you care?
Because the initial cut of the first movie was a train wreck - and they listened to fans, fixed it, and now have a hit sequel.
Also, it probably took in more at the box office in that one weekend than all the recent Oscar nominees combined.
- Here are all he annoying changes you can avoid this year by remaining on Windows 10. (Bleeping Computer)
Neat.
- TVs suck. (ZDNet)
"Jump ads give participating programmers and brands the ability to present an interactive overlay at the conclusion of linear TV programs, directing viewers into a supporting app on Vizio's operating system to continue their viewing experience," Vizio said.
They're one step away from blipverts.
And if you think a premier brand like Samsung might be better you're going to have a really bad time with your new $3000 in-home billboard.
I'm looking at a 48" OLED monitor for the new place. It has plenty of room for something bigger, but there aren't many monitors larger than that.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:07 PM
| Comments (10)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 296 words, total size 3 kb.
Expect to sign the contract tomorrow or the day after.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
01:11 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 34 words, total size 1 kb.
Sunday, April 10
Four Ticking Clocks Edition
Top Story
- Couple more house notes:
- 9' ceilings. I'd forgotten to ask, though it was clear from things like the hanging kitchen lights and the amount of wall above doorways that they were more than 8'.
My current place has 8' ceilings, and in the ensuite which is directly under the main bathroom upstairs, only 7'. A little less in fact because the floor is raised by the tiles. I can stand in the shower and place the palm of my hand flat against the ceiling, and I am not particularly tall.
- What the heck is going on with those power points in these photos? Zoom. Enhance. Aha, USB!
Forgive me if I test those with my oldest and least favourite device first. Wonder if I can get a cheap USB power tester for that matter.
Handy though.
- Chilled and boiling water on tap in the kitchen. Nice. Oh, and a digital shower temperature thingy in the ensuite. Which I expect will fail after a few years and cost a fortune to replace.
There's a reason this one cost 10% more than the other house the same size: They filled it up with neat toys. And I don't dislike neat toys.
- Double glazing throughout. Never lived in a place with that before; never needed it before. But in May last year - not even winter - there were already six nights below freezing up in - well, it's not a huge secret; there aren't many towns in Australia above 3000 feet elevation. One of those few.
Come to think of it, double glazing would be great where I am right now - not for thermal insulation but for noise. Why are there toddlers screaming in the driveway at 1am?
- All electric except for the stovetop, but with a big solar array to cut down on bills. Ducted HVAC and also underfloor heating, which again I've never had before.
- AMD's "Raphael" Ryzen 7000 desktop CPUs go into mass production this month. (WCCFTech)
That would put them on track to be in retail in September or October, assuming no hiccups.
New features to look forward to:
- Zen 4 core - about 25% faster than Zen 3
- DDR5 and PCIe 5 support
- Built-in USB 4 / Thunderbolt 3 with dedicated PCIe lanes
- Integrated graphics included on (all?) CPU parts as well as "APUs"
- Max TDP increased from 105W to 170W
Questions and Answers
- From Lothar of the Hill People:
Tech question; Hardware RAID Problem. Dell T1700 Workstation Service Tag JT1YB42 with Intel Premium RST Controller and BIOS.
Well, that's certainly a question. I'd suggest posting on the Dell subreddit.
ISSUE: Win 10 64 bit 2021 2H update failed, leading to a very long automatic Windows system rollback / restore. The Intel Driver assistant also installed a different driver and at the same time dis-abled the desktop app used for managing the RAID Array (Raid 1 Mirror with 2 HDD). Worse, the failed update broke one drive in the array. I installed a new drive, and used the Intel boot BIOS to join the new HDD to the array. It joined but never rebuilt and because the Intel Raid Management App was then disabled, and is now not supported by Intel, I can't use any app to tell the RST controller to rebuild the array. I'm running on one HDD.
I've bought 2 more drives, but cannot proceed until I find a compatible RST hardware driver and an associated Intel app that can be installed on this machine.
My questions are: 1. How can I find the correct recent driver with it's desktop management app for this chipset? Intel has dozens, Dell hasn't helped.
An alternative that should be possible with Windows 10 - I think - would be to use Storage Spaces to mirror your existing drive. That doesn't care about the RAID controller or drivers or management software; it's all done by Windows itself.
- From Pixy Misa:
Anyone have experience with Roombas and similar robot vacuum cleaners?
Your best bet is to - wait a minute.
This house is twice the size of my current house, and all on one level except the garage, so it seems like a reasonable thing to get, where it would be entirely useless where I live now.
Tech News
- GitHub can now alert you to supply-chain vulnerabilities in the dependencies (third-party libraries) in your code. (Bleeping Computer)
Well, that would just be an alarm that goes off all the time, so more relevant is that it can tell you where these issues are and what you can do about them.
- California is looking to regulate AI-based employee hiring systems. (The Register)
At multiple levels, such that both the customers and the vendors could face legal liability if the software is found to unfairly discriminate.
I'm of two minds about this, because on the one hand most of this software is complete crap, and on the other hand California.
- How does a high-end SSD from 2018 fare when reviewed in 2022? Not great. (Serve the Home)
Though to be honest, this is still not a bad drive. If I had one in an working system I would not feel any burning need to replace it.
- I hate Windows 11. Can I downgrade to Windows 10? (ZDNet)
This question came up here recently, and this is a fuller answer than I gave.
You can't roll back from pre-installed Win 11 to Win 10, but the two releases use the same activation keys (at least so far). If Windows 11 works on your PC you can download and install Windows 10. It will still be supported with regular updates through 2025.
- Amazon is fighting its warehouse employees' plans to unionise. (The Washington Post / MSN)
First time as tragedy, second time as farce. This is Microsoft's news site republishing a story by the Amazon-owned* far-left Washington Post about corporate-left Amazon fighting to destroy its working-class left employees.
There is not enough popcorn.
* Yes, Bezos rather than corporate, whatever.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
05:56 PM
| Comments (6)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 1050 words, total size 8 kb.
Saturday, April 09
And Then There Was One Edition
Top Story
- It's the weekend again, meaning we survived the week, which is good, but also that there's another week coming up, which is less good. Though I suppose if you tore the page off the calendar and the next page was blank - and it wasn't January first - that would also be reason for concern.
Anyway, Question and Answer time. You know what to do.
- The owner accepted my offer. Contract is being prepared, deposit to be paid Monday.
- So now that I've found the house, I took the time to look at some details like a topographic map of the area. This particular street is not 3000 feet up; it's more like 3400, well above the town center. That's higher than all but a few of the peaks in the Blue Mountains region west of Sydney.
Unlike random mountain peaks I can get gigabit internet (full 1000Mb up and down) at this address but yikes is that expensive. I'll probably go for a business-grade 250/100 plan. Which will be cheaper than the mobile bill I just paid from the time my internet was out and I blew my 4G data cap to smithereens.
- AMD currently makes the best CPUs for high-end workstations. Shame that you can't get them anywhere. (The Register)
The new Threadripper Pro 5000 is only available through launch partner Lenovo, who, uh, don't have any. Well, they say they have them, but they won't sell you one, which is odd. Availability is expected to improve in Q3 of this year, jus before the new Zen 4 core launches and renders it obsolete.
Meanwhile the older Zen 2 based Threadripper Pro 3000 parts have disappeared from the distribution channel so you can't get those either.
But it's not like AMD is hurting financially - the company is selling everything it can produce.
This is part of why you get such weirdly out-of-touch statements about the economy - rosy pronouncements delivered by the managerial class a working and middle-class population facing the highest inflation rates in - for many - their entire lives.
Select parts of the economy are overheated, while other parts are limping along. If half your body is on fire and the other half is submerged in liquid nitrogen, on average you are perfectly comfortable.
I work in the overheated part and I'm doing fine financially - much better than in recent years - but since I actually listen to people I know my experience is anything but universal.
Tech News
-
Anyone have experience with Roombas and similar robot vacuum cleaners? This house is twice the size of my current house, and all on one level except the garage, so it seems like a reasonable thing to get, where it would be entirely useless where I live now.
- Do you need 8 full-speed USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 ports on a single compact PCIe card? No? Here's one anyway. (Tom's Hardware)
Just $400.
The reason it's so expensive is that no-one makes an 8-port USB-C chip. It has four two-port chips, plus a PCIe bridge chip to divide a x8 slot into four x2 connections on the board.
On the other hand, that no-expense-spared design means that all 8 ports can handle 10Gbps in both directions simultaneously. Exactly what you'd be doing to drive that much traffic I don't know, but if you're editing 8k video for a feature film, the last thing you need is for your cheap USB controller to get in the way.
- My first thought on seeing this article was, is Twitter planning to use this to censor conservatives, or to protect communists from well-deserved criticism? Twitter is experimenting with "unmentioning" - the ability to remove yourself from a conversation. (The Verge)
Given the weird way Twitter handles "conversations" - a feature that doesn't actually exist but is cobbled together from a history of mentions, replies, quote tweets, and retweets - the ability to silence notifications for a conversation where you have been randomly tagged is definitely needed.
But they already have that. There's a menu option labelled Mute this conversation which does exactly this.
So what is this new "unmentioning" feature? I'll see if I can find out what they're doing - it's in a limited beta release right now - but it's a safe assumption it's bad.
- If your Snap-on spanner set is connected to the internet, unplug it now. (Bleeping Computer)
I don't know that Snap-on actually makes WiFi-enabled spanners, but nothing would surprise me these days.
- It put on some weight during the lockdown, leave it alone. (Quanta)
Physicists have discovered that the W boson is 0.1% heavier than it should be. This is not a new result; they've been checking and double-checking the data for ten years because it seemed more likely to be experimental error. And it's not a one-off; it's based on four million individual observations.
If borne out, that tiny one part in one thousand difference could be the biggest shakeup in particle physics in fifty years.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:01 PM
| Comments (4)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 855 words, total size 7 kb.
So, the main downstairs area of my current house - front hall, hall to the main bedroom and the first metre of the bedroom (it sticks out the front by 2.4m or so), ensuite, laundry, kitchen, lounge / dining area, and stairs - measures 8m x 6m. (I got one of those laser measury things.)
The living room of the new house measures 7m x 6m - and is just part of a large open-plan area that flows off via two hallways to the rest of the house.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
02:00 AM
| Comments (4)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 114 words, total size 1 kb.
Friday, April 08
Deadly Hellscape Edition
Top Story
- Made an offer today on house #4, the one with the built-in Pepsi fridge that's directly adjacent to a nature reserve, or as one commenter noted since this is Australia, a deadly hellscape.
This one is "only" about twice the size of my current place, but that's what I need. I'm kind of wedged in at the moment and don't have room to arrange things more efficiently, and with this house I can pile everything in to one half while leaving the other half free to set things up properly.
Plus gigabit internet access, plus only two neighbouring properties instead of eight. And up in the hills where this town is, they haven't been having F*CK ME IT'S POURING WITH RAIN AGAIN.
- Ahem. Anyway it will be great to get off the rental treadmill and own something, not because I mind renting so much as I mind someone else getting to set my schedule like this.
- Update: They asked for $5k over my offer. I said yes.
So... What's the next step? Something involving money, I think. I'm new to this game.
- AMD's new Ryzen 7 5800X3D is the fasted CPU in the world for playing Shadow of the Tomb Raider. (Tom's Hardware)
16% faster than Intel's factory-overclocked Core i9-12900KS.
Exactly why you need to see Lara Croft's boobs at 231 FPS I don't know.
Tech News
- Gigabyte has a new motherboard for AMD's Threadripper 5000 Pro. (Tom's Hardware)
A CPU which last I checked was only available via OEMs, and by OEMs I mean Lenovo. Who lock the CPUs to Lenovo motherboards.
I presume this is an indication that this will soon change.
- Meanwhile AMD's next-generation Epyc Genoa is getting close to launch. (Tom's Hardware)
With 12 memory channels and up to 12TB of DDR5 RAM per system, it supports up to 96 cores per CPU in a new 6,096 pin socket. Bergamo, to follow soon after, will go as high as 128 cores per socket.
- LG's Gram +View is a companion monitor to their LG Gram 16. (Tom's Hardware)
LG's Gram series is noted for being amazingly light, and this 16" 2560x1600 monitor weighs just 660 grams, or 990 grams with the included cover/stand.
Which means a Gram 16 and a second, matching screen together weigh just 2.35kg.
Price is $349 which isn't bad for a portable monitor with 99% DCI-P3 colour.
- Crystal 1.4 is out. (Crystal-Lang)
It seems like only a year ago that we got Crystal 1.0.
Oh, wait, it was.
- SolidRun's LX2-Lite is an Arm development board like the Raspberry Pi but. (Serve the Home)
But this one has eight gigabit Ethernet ports, two 10Gb Ethernet ports, and two 25Gb Ethernet ports, plus up to 16 Arm A72 cores and 32GB of RAM.
It's two inches square, so all those connectors are on a breakout board. You drop your selected version of the module into it (8, 12, or 16 cores) and then plug in all your networks.
- Twitter has changed how deleted tweets look on the Web. (Thurrott.com)
Well good luck with that guys, because your embed code still includes the entire content of the tweet.
Disclaimer: Your four-colour map theorem has no power here.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:27 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 542 words, total size 5 kb.
Thursday, April 07
Seventeenth Time's The Charm Edition
Top Story
- Looking at yet another house. About 10% more expensive than the one that got away, and a bit smaller overall, but closer to the shops and with nicer fixtures - like a built-in wine fridge (I don't drink), a butlers pantry (I may buttle on occasion), and an ensuite bigger than my current bedroom.
There are some brand new 4-bedroom houses that are 30% cheaper, but they're the type that are extruded by a machine and plopped down on a tiny block of land so there's a bare ribbon of grass on each side. This one is at the end of a dead-end street adjacent a nature reserve, so while not my first choice - or my second - it has some good points.
- If I get this place I'm going to fill the wine fridge with Pepsi just because I can.
- Australia reinforcement data quantum priority roadmap. (ZDNet)
Verbing weirds language, doubly so when governments do it.
Tech News
- Atlassian went down. (Bleeping Computer)
For two days.
And for many users is still down.
During their big annual conference.
In Vegas.
Priorities!
- MIT grad students have been de-ionised. (WBUR)
I think that's what happened.
- Canada wants to force Big Tech to compensate state media for linking to their propaganda. (CBC)
There aren't many cases where I'll take the side of Google and Facebook, but if against Fidel Castrato, sign me up.
- OpenSea is facing multiple lawsuits over mistakenly charging $80,000 for poorly-drawn monkey JPEGs. (Motherboard)
Not because the price was too high, mind you. Not because it was too high.
- Google has banned apps that secretly harvest your personal data. (WSJ)
Okay. Yes, I can see an argument for that.
- The Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7 is a 12th Gen P Series laptop with an OLED screen and the four essential.... Wait. (Tom's Hardware)
Fuck you Lenovo. Next!
- The Asus ROG Zephyrus M17 does not have the four essential keys. (Hot Hardware)
What it does have is a 14 core (ish) i9-12900H, RTX 3070 graphics, a 16-inch 2560x1600 165Hz display with 100% of DCI-P3 colour, DDR5 RAM - half of it soldered in place just to be annoying - and a bunch of ports including three video outputs and wired 2.5Gb Ethernet.
It's a gaming laptop that looks like a business laptop, which I do appreciate.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:26 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 408 words, total size 4 kb.
Wednesday, April 06
The Load Average Is Over 9000 Edition
Top Story
- Waiting for house news.
Update: There's a buyer for this one as well so I've upped their offer by $25k. I'll be cross if this one gets away because I've already set up a shopping list at Ikea.
Update: And now I'm probably going to be cross. The other buyers lost their house in the floods, and they've already paid the deposit, so unless they can't exchange contracts tomorrow the owners are going to take their offer.
Also, apologies are due to unknown real-estate agent #1 who I thought was playing games. That property - which had been on the market for quite a while - has sold.
- Had a report that one of my (virtual) servers was port scanning someone. I'm not sure if it was legit, and a scan of the server showed nothing untoward, but I have to take it seriously.
First step was to block unwanted outbound traffic at the firewall. The first thing I do with any server is to block unwanted inbound traffic, but everyone* does that these days so all the major exploits sneak unwanted data in on trusted connection. - like the huge Log4j mess a few weeks ago.
Easy peasy because if you screw up the firewall settings on a virtual server you can get in via the virtual console. I've done this on physical servers on the other side of the planet, with complex networking arrangements and no console, and that is nerve-wracking.
Next step was to rebuild that server entirely since all it runs is a proxy server (Caddy) and it's needed an update for a while. Before doing that I checked on the backups to make sure if anything went wrong I could easily restore and, well, f*ck.
The backup drive on the backup server is not responding at all. The syslog is full of ZFS deadman events. And the load average is a personal record, and I've worked on some pretty big servers.
That is not a happy 10-core bunny.
The backups run A->B->C where A is the active server and C is a an archive server that can collect lots of daily backups and B is broken. Which means that for, uh, ten weeks, no backups were going off site from that origin server to anywhere.
So, I arranged three off-site backups and then rebuilt the proxy server with the latest software and the new firewall rules and basically tweaked the config file at random and kept restarting it until it all worked. I don't know why that was necessary, but it was. At least I could flick the routes back and forth internally and didn't need to wait for DNS to update.
Then back to the backup server. Look at the I/O stats. It's written how much data? 18 petabytes? No wonder it's not working, the SSD must be fried.
Wait... Insert commas manually. 18 terabytes. That's not much at all.
Kill the stuck processes (all 24,000 of them). Load average goes up. Kill the parent process... Load goes up even more.
Guess it's reboot time.
And... It sits there with ping working but no other sign of life for ten minutes. (This one doesn't have a remote console either. I grabbed it during the datacenter fire last year and took what I could get.)
It does have a button to remotely power cycle the server but the page asks you not to do that if the server can ping because they'd rather have a technician look at it before the evidence of whatever the problem was disappears.
So I start writing a tech support ticket and just as I'm about to submit it the server comes back up and is working perfectly as if there was never anything wrong.
Okay.
How was your evening?
* Not everyone.
- Twitter is adding an edit button, maybe. (The Verge)
"Protecting the integrity of that public conversation" is of course Newspeak for eradicating dissent.
Tech News
- Over $50 billion worth of video cards were sold in 2021. (Tom's Hardware)
That's up 30% by value and 20% from 2020, and with 50 million cards sold last year that means the average retail price was $1000.
Which is far too much.
- The US government - which plans to replace its vehicle fleet with electric models - has nearly 1% of the charging stations it needs to do that. (Tech Crunch)
Sounds about right.
- Elon Musk is joining the board of directors of Twitter. (CNBC)
That's going to put the honey badger among the stool pigeons.
- Fire Toolbox turns your Kindle Fire into an Android tablet. (Liliputing)
Ish. Some things remain locked down - like the app launcher, which can't be entirely replaced - but it provides a lot of customisation options.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
02:03 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 814 words, total size 7 kb.
Tuesday, April 05
Oh Hi Edition
Top Story
- Elon Musk bought a 9.2% stake in Twitter, making him the largest individual shareholder. (CNN Business)
The share price rose 27% on the news that someone who isn't a braindead doctrinaire liberal might be involved at some level in the company's decision-making process.
Tech News
- AMD's Ryzen 5500 and 5600 are finally here and they are great value for money. (Tom's Hardware)
While slower than the 5600X they are not a lot slower, and the 5600X until recently sold at $299, while the 5600 is priced at $199 and the 5500 at $159.
The 5600 is pretty close in gaming performance to Intel's i5-12400 as well, and in 3d rendering benchmarks there's less than 0.3% difference between the two. Intel does currently have a single-threaded lead, but AMD chips scale better in multi-threaded work and catch up.
- There's also the 5700X. (Hot Hardware)
This is a cheaper, lower-power, 8 core CPU, and depending on the benchmark is either nearly as fast as the more expensive 5800X or nearly as slow as the 6 core 5600X.
Not a bad chip, but not ground-breaking.
- GitHub can now prevent you from accidentally committing code that contains API keys and passwords. (Bleeping Computer)
The way GitHub works, once a key or password is in there, it's very hard to remove entirely. It's out in the wild and you just have to go change the password.
So having it smack you with a ruler when you slip up like that is a very good thing.
- Hackers used MailChimps internal customer management tools to directly target crypto users receiving email notifications through the service. (Bleeping Computer)
This is not a very good thing.
- The Realme Pad Mini is a new 8.7 inch Android tablet with ugh. (Liliputing)
Decently fast A75 CPU but a disappointing 1340x800 screen, barely better than the 2012 model Nexus 7.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:44 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 321 words, total size 3 kb.
55 queries taking 0.2561 seconds, 389 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.