Is this how time normally passes? Really slowly, in the right order?

Sunday, June 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 June 2022

Make Me One With Everything Edition

Top Story

  • Me: This bathroom has space next to the existing towel rail and a convenient power point, perfect for adding a heated towel rail.
    Also me: I wonder what this switch does.  Doesn't seem to control the lights or exhaust fan.
    Also also me: These towels are unexpectedly warm and dry.

    If haven't figured out how to switch on the underfloor heating, and I haven't used the oven yet, but I think I've got everything else working.

    Update: Apparently the sides of the control panel slide out or fold out to reveal the actual controls.  The button on the front does nothing.  The newer model is a touchscreen but this one isn't.   


  • That billion dollars was probably sour anyway: After their cryptocurrency lost 99% of its value, the makers of crappy blockchain game Axie Infinity say it was never about the money.  (Bloomberg)
    [Co-founder Jeffrey] Zirlin said he empathized with people who’d lost money—life-changing sums, in some instances. But he added that a crash that got rid of Axie profiteers could have its upside, too. "Sometimes having to flush out the people who are just in it for the money,” he said, "that’s just the system self-correcting. The suckers can starve in the dark, I've got mine. Don't print that.”
    Zirlin may have added:
    "We have to be careful revealing our location, just like the president doesn’t always have to reveal his location,” he said. "We’re kind of like heads of state, or superhero actors dodging restraining orders.”
    Kind of like that, yeah.

Tech News

  • Bottom of the budget SSD market: The Teamgroup AX2 offers 2TB of SSD in a 2.5" SATA package for $130.  (AnandTech)

    Not sure I'd recommend that particular model, though; warranty replacement seems iffy.  Better to go with Samsung, or Micron/Crucial, who make their own flash chips and stand by their products.  I bought some Corsair drives and they seem to be working fine so far.


  • Top of the budget SSD market: The Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus offers 1TB of SSD in an M.2 NVMe package for $130.  (Serve the Home)

    Twice as expensive per gigabyte, but twelve times faster - 7000MB per second compared to 540MBps on the Team AX2 above.


  • Reparaibility on Dell's new XPS 13 is kind of crap.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Not only has soldered RAM, but a soldered SSD.  Two USB-C ports and that's it.  No options to expand or upgrade at all.


  • More details on that new Tachyum CPU that runs both Intel and Arm code.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's an in-order VLIW design that uses software translation for non-native code and to provide pseudo out-of-order execution.  This has been done before with mixed success, but nobody has thrown 128 cores running at 5.7GHz at the problem.  Maybe they'll do better than previous attempts.

    The largest, fastest model has a TDP of 950W - which is rather a lot - but if you're willing to back off on the clock speeds a bit you can still get the full 128 cores at a 300W TDP.

    Peak performance of 96 DP TFLOPS and 12 FP8 PFLOPS puts it in the class of specialised AI accelerator cards, which is not bad at all for a general-purpose CPU.


  • DNS is a database.  dns.toys takes advantage of that.  (DNS.Toys)

    Want to look up the time in a distant city, or the weather, or current exchange rates, but somehow the only tool you have available is DNS?  Problem solved.


  • GM needed a new part for the 2022 Tahoe.  Setup time for injection molding would have delayed production by weeks so the company 3D-printed it.  (CNet)

    Using a factory full of HP Multi Jet printers, which are not something I was aware existing, but given that I just threw out a 25 year old Laser Jet that still worked are probably a good investment.


  • Yep is a new search engine that proposes to give most of the ad revenue back to content creators.  (Yep)

    It seems to work.


  • There's an unfixable security flaw in Apple's M1 processor.  (Tech Crunch)

    And almost certainly in the M2, given the timing.  It takes a long time to fix these issues in hardware, when they can't be resolved with a microcode update.

    There's no current exploit, but this is something that could make a security flaw in regular code much more serious.

    You can try it yourself if you really want to.


  • So I want a laptop with at least an 8-core CPU - a 6800U, for example, or maybe Intel's i7-1280P, 32GB of RAM, a good selection of ports, dual M.2 slots, and a 2560x1600 screen, but still thin and light.

    GPD: Got you covered!  (Liliputing)

    Uh, maybe not that thin and light.  A screen larger than 10" is nice sometimes.


  • Google, hiring only the best and brightest and complete nutcases (hat tip HungarianFalcon):



    It's a chat bot, you idiot.



Disclaimer: Because you told me to.

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Saturday, June 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 June 2022

Superarctic Edition

Top Story

  • Did not got below zero last night in New House City, but 2C was quite cold enough when I had to sort through an unheated garage at 2AM looking for the two boxes with all the bedding.  They were supposed to be at the top, since they weigh almost nothing (one box was literally filled with pillows), but turned out to be underneath not only multiple layers of boxes filled with books, but under a stack of bookshelves as well.


  • Acer has warned of a potential oversupply of laptops as inflation begins to bite and supply chain issues are slowly corrected.  (Tom's Hardware)

    If you need a new laptop, keep an eye out for bargains on previous-generation models - Intel's 11th generation and Ryzen 5000.  They're perfectly good chips, and if manufacturers find themselves with growing inventories, they're likely to cut price to clear them out.


Tech News

  • AMD's Zen 5 - due in 2024 - will be a major redesign with wider instruction issue.  (AnandTech)

    Both AMD and Intel have been stuck at issuing a maximum of 4 instructions per cycle for the past decade.  It's a little more complicated than that...  It's a lot more complicated than that, but that's the essence.

    Issuing more instructions per cycle makes for a faster CPU, but it also makes for a more complex CPU, and the complexity rises a lot faster than the performance.  Still, with clock speeds only gradually drifting higher, and most software only taking advantage of a limited number of cores, it's a key change that designers will have to adopt.


  • If OpenSSL were a GUI.  (Smallstep)

    It's not the only command line tool that looks like this either.


  • Is the iPad a substitute for the PC yet?  No.  (ZDNet)

    It never will be so long as Apple maintains its restrictive software practices.  High end iPad hardware is powerful enough to act as a general-purpose PC, and the operating system is Unix.  But Apple blocks a whole range of useful functionality from appearing in the App Store, and also blocks you from working around that block.


Disclaimer: Not waving, drowning.

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Friday, June 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 June 2022

Departure Lounge Edition

Top Story


Tech News


Disclaimer: Not that superworms aren't cool.

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Thursday, June 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 June 2022

Just Say Ner Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • Physicists have discovered a new subatomic particle - the magnetic equivalent of the Higgs boson.  (Live Science)

    They were looking everywhere for it and it was right there on the kitchen counter all along.


  • Samsung's fridges are now also TVs.  (The Verge)

    I'm looking at a new fridge.  The one I have in mind doesn't even have an ice maker, let alone a built-in LCD display.  I just want a fridge.

    All the existing appliances in the new house seem to be appropriately dumb.  I mean, you can set the hot water temperature separately for the kitchen and each bathroom, but there's no app for it, you just use the wired controls.


  • Speaking of New House, heading back up there for the weekend.  Amazon delivered some stuff early and it's apparently sitting on the porch.


Disclaimer: Didn't think so.


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Wednesday, June 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 June 2022

Party Like It's 1177 BC Edition

Top Story

  • Apple's new M2 chip ain't all that.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's by no means bad, but it's pretty comparable to AMD's 6800U.  The M2 has better single-threaded performance; AMD has better multi-threaded.  The raw compute performance of the respective GPUs (10 graphics cores in the M2, 12 in the 6800U) is similar, but benchmarks of the Mac Studio showed it falling behind in all but a few very specific graphics benchmarks.

    And they're both 15W parts.

    Still, if you're Mac-inclined, and spending your own money, not a bad option.

Tech News

  • Apple's M2 Pro and M2 Max are still expected to enter production this year on TSMC's brand new 3nm process.  (WCCFTech)

    Given the lead times of advanced semiconductor fabrication - 4 to 6 months - and TSMC's own statements, we shouldn't expect completed products until 2023, and probably not in Q1 either.


  • Dell has announced a new Threadripper Pro 5000 workstation - the Precision 7865.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's not an impressive design though.  While it can house a 64 core CPU and a terabyte of RAM, apart from the USB-C ports the case could have come from 2002.  And they only provide five expansion slots for a CPU that has 128 lanes of PCIe.


  • A senior Chinese economist has written that China "must seize TSMC".  (Tom's Hardware)

    China's home-grown semiconductor efforts are currently about where Intel was in 2009 - which is not as bad as it seems, because Intel was doing great in 2009.  But many generations behind TSMC, Samsung, or Intel today.

    The problem with this idea is that TSMC is not, say, two hundred thousand square miles of prime agricultural real estate where if you drop a few bombs - or a few hundred - the value remains largely intact.

    It's more like a bridge, over an impassable canyon, made of glass.  Seizing it intact would require the cooperation of TSMC itself, which is unlikely to be forthcoming.


  • Want a bunch of NVMe storage for your new Threadripper Pro workstation?  Highpoint has you covered.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The card comes with eight M.2 slots, a massive heatsink/fan arrangement, and a PCIe switch.  $729 for PCIe 3.0, and $1099 for PCIe 4.0.


Disclaimer: Don't believe in yourself.  Believe in the you that believes in me that...  Let me start over.

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Tuesday, June 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 June 2022

Party Like It's 1979 Redux Edition

Top Story


Tech News


Disclaimer: Lift with your knees, not with your back.  -- Everyone
Fuck you.  -- My knees

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Monday, June 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 June 2022

Oops.

I didn't forget to post, I just went out to get dinner (back in Old House this week but already moved the fridge) and the place I was going to was closed and...

* Apple's WWDC starts tomorrow. M2 MacBook Air and Mac Mini expected. And an alleged Mac Mini Tower.

* A photographer is following the Willie Sutton rule and suing hosting provider Leaseweb for selling a server that was used to host infringing images. If that succeeds, we're all doomed.

* The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 is a pretty solid lightweight business gaming laptop, which is a double oxymoron, but it makes it work. Missing the Four Essential Keys though.

* Screen on my travel laptop is all crapped up after the flight yesterday. Not sure what happened, but it's very annoying because I have four monitors and four other laptops at New House but that's a bit of a walk.

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Sunday, June 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 June 2022

They're heeeere!

After looking at the stairs to the front door, one of the movers gave me a hug when I told him everything was going into the garage.  The fridge has a nice safe corner picked out where there's power (I'm getting a new one and keeping that for extra space).  The only thing I really need them to cart upstairs is the washing machine, and that comes with the next load.

The magic boiling / chilled water dispenser turns out to have another trick up its sleeve: It can dispense carbonated water.  Need to replace the CO2 cylinder if you use it a lot, and it doesn't have the option for boiling carbonated water which is a shame.

Meanwhile:

  • Security bugs in Confluence are under attack.
  • DDR5 RAM prices down 20% in May.
  • The SK hynix P41 is a pretty good SSD.
  • 32 ugly monkey JPEGs were stolen after a Discord server hack, with a total value of zero plus or minus $2 million.
  • Apple has space ambitions but everything the tech pundits are saying is bullshit.

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Saturday, June 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 June 2022

Actually made it to New House today. Turned out the real estate agent isn't open on Saturdays, but the agents are out doing open homes and my agent came back and gave me the keys and a little box of goodies that I can't eat.

New House is as expected. Took me a long time to find the heating controls - the panel is in the back hallway - so it was a pretty chill place for the first few hours.

Everything I tried seemed to work. I didn't have an Ethernet cable with me (those will arrive tomorrow) so I couldn't try out the fiber internet, but I did discover that there are four rooms wired with Ethernet, and a patch panel in the study where the fiber connection comes in. Unless they've used truly garbage cables I should be able to get at least 2.5Gb between those rooms.

Shower works. Built-in Pepsi fridge has a capacity of 24 1.25L bottles - or presumably 30 wine bottles. Boiling and chilled water on tap work. Garbage disposal - I didn't know there was one - seems to work.

I also opened the Never Open This Door door. Behind it are a lot of tins of paint, spare tiles, that kind of thing, a 3000 litre rainwater tank and pump, and a lot of dirt. No Eldritch Horrors so far.

Normal tech news to resume shortly.

Oh, and I found donuts. Gluten-free donuts. Bought half a dozen. They're going to be dinner tonight.

The one thing I really miss after a decade and change with Celiac Disease is donuts. If these are even half decent I'm going to buy a lot of them.


Donut Update: They are good.  Katz's, an American brand.  Made in New York, imported by a company in Virginia, Queensland.

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Friday, June 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 June 2022

I'm not in New House yet, but I'm in a motel in New House City. Picking up the keys in the morning.

Will take a quick look for tech topics while I eat a thing.

* The Radeon 6700 fits precisely in between the 6650 XT and the 6700 XT. 10GB RAM, 36 GPU cores.
* Why don't we know much about Nvidia's upcoming 40 series? Because it's upcoming.
* By now pay later with a high tech shine and a hugely overvalued share price is no better than the usual kind.

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