Wednesday, May 31
Rest Of The Owl Edition
Top Story
- The current AI boom is the crypto boom of recent memory, except without even the benefits of libertarian wish-fulfilment. The "AI bros" are just idiots:
No, Kody, I've never wondered what the rest of the Mona Lisa looks like, because there is no rest of the Mona Lisa.
His thread has accrued 6000 quote tweets so far, none of them kind.
Tech News
- Corsair has announced new DDR5 memory modules running at 8GHz. (AnandTech)
- SK Hynix has announced new HBM3E memory modules running at 8GHz. (AnandTech)
The difference is that DDR5 uses (typically) eight chips to populate a 64-bit memory bus, while HBM uses one chip to populate a 1024-bit memory bus. Which makes it just a tiny bit faster.
- ASRock has announced a 55" 8k monitor. (Tom's Hardware)
I've been looking at getting a 65" 8k TV to act as, well, a TV, but also as a computer monitor - though I just checked current prices and they're a complete joke. No, wait, there's one LG model that isn't insanely expensive. Anyway, to serve as a dashboard for everything I do that's legible from across the room and still looks sharp when viewed close-up.
An actual 8k monitor would be preferable, but the very few models available so far are aimed at professional use and cost a fortune.
We'll see how this one fares. With that 55" screen it clearly reuses a panel designed for TVs and should bring costs way down.
- Crucial's new T700 is the fasted consumer SSD available. (Hot Hardware)
Though if you try to run it without a heatsink it might slow down a little bit. Where a "little bit" in this case can exceed 99%.
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Tuesday, May 30
Euphemistic Eucalypt Edition
Top Story
- AI makes shit up. (PowerLine)
Crawford H. "Chet" Taylor served as the 14th governor of South Dakota, from 1949 to 1951. Taylor was born on July 23, 1915, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and he grew up in nearby Flandreau. Taylor attended the University of South Dakota, where he earned a law degree.
Of course, this is ChatGPT "hallucinating" again. Chet Taylor not only was never elected governor of South Dakota, no such person ever existed.
While Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is announcing incomprehensibly expensive AI supercomputers at Computex, the actual results of generative AI - in the field of language and information, where all the interest and the big money is right now - are frankly, shit.
Things are looking much better when it comes to AI-generated art, because there the look of the thing is what matters. Is that a period-accurate representation of 2nd century Rome in the background behind the topless gladiatrix? Nobody cares, so long as it looks good.
Well, one person cares. We'll get to him.
And Chet Taylor looks good too. He's just not real. And since ChatGPT can't sustain a hallucination long enough to form a coherent short story, just for a couple of paragraphs, so it's utterly valueless.
Nvidia still has a valuation greater than AMD and Intel combined, but at least one corner of that market cap is built on sand.
Tech News
- Computex - the world's largest computer industry show - is back after a three-year Bat Flu hiatus, and there's an absolute flood of announcements to catch up with. (The Verge)
Just kidding. There ain't shit.
- Solana's founder sees potential for it to become the "Apple of crypto". (Tech Crunch)
I've mentioned before that my job involves practical applications of blockchains, and I've worked with Solana.
It's crap.
- MediaTek's next high-end chip could contain four Cortex X4 cores and drop the low-power cores entirely. (Notebook Check)
If this comes to a laptop it could finally be worth checking out. Earlier attempts at Arm-based PCs have been pretty sad affairs.
- A professor who was stitched up by the FBI has won the right to sue the government. (NBC News)
Xiaoxing Xi was arrested in 2015 on charges of fraud related to economic espionage, but the case folded like a damp tissue when it went to court thanks to the FBI basically just making shit up.
As they do.
- What kind of idiot would buy a DRAMless PCIe 5 SSD? (AnandTech)
You'd only buy a PCIe 5 SSD if you needed the absolute best speed you can get, and most of the time you'd be better off with a regular PCIe 4 SSD with a DRAM cache than a more expensive PCIe 5 model without.
That Guy Video of the Day
Well-researched and well-argued, including a deconstruction of an old RadioLab episode that I had assumed was largely accurate. He is careful to address the argument rather than attacking the arguer except in the case of the BBC, who just made shit up and fully deserve it.
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Monday, May 29
Automated Poop Emojis Edition
Top Story
- Computex is here and Nvidia has announced another new graphics card. This model has 144TB of RAM, is cabled up with 150 miles of fiber optics, and weighs 40,000 pounds. (Tom's Hardware)
You can't even afford to ask for the price for this one.
Tech News
- The Snapdragon 8cx gen 4 is 32% faster than Apple's M4, at least on one benchmark. (WCCFTech)
Of course, neither chip is out yet, so take that with a sack of salt.
But it does look like the commodity Arm market is finally shaking off the dust and competing seriously with Intel and AMD for laptop parts.
- Meanwhile Arm announced an entire family of new cores, with 40% better performance, making them 15% faster. (AnandTech)
The catch there is that mobile chips come with a mix of fast, power-hungry cores, and slower more efficient cores. It's the slower cores that are 40% faster, and the faster cores are only 15% faster. That fast core - the Cortex X4 - is alternatively 40% more efficient for the same performance, but expect phone manufacturers to take the 15% and sacrifice your battery.
But the mid-tier and low-end A720 and A520 cores are both faster and more efficient, so if you're in the market for a $500 phone - or a $250 one - rather than a $1000 model, things look a bit brighter.
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Sunday, May 28
Frostbite Falls Edition
Top Story
- Elon Musk has withdrawn Twitter from the European Union's "voluntary" program to control online "disinformation". (Tech Crunch)
The media, and the bureaucrats, who believe they have the sole right to spread disinformation, are taking this about about as well as can be expected, with Thierry Breton, head of the European Union's Josef Goebbels Memorial Happy Fun Time Administration, issuing unveiled threats.
What they're really upset about is that Twitter isn't playing the game:The pan-EU law, which entered into force back in November, requires VLOPs like Twitter to assess and mitigate systemic risks to civic discourse and electoral processes, such as disinformation.
(My italics.)
The deadline for VLOPs’ compliance with obligations in the DSA is three months from now.
A request for comment emailed to Twitter’s press office returned an automated reply containing a poop emoji.
You don't have to follow the rules. You're entirely expected to cheat. But you have to play the game.
Tech News
- ChatGPT, Ace Attorney. (Volokh Conspiracy)
A lawyer needed to file a motion to dismiss. Being busy, lazy, or probably both, he assigned the actual work of drafting the motion to another lawyer at his firm.
Likewise busy, lazy, or probably both, the second lawyer handed the task to ChatGPT.
Being a pathological liar in a box, ChatGPT invented multiple entirely imaginary cases as precedent.
The judge is not amused.
This is just the start of it. Expect a lot more of this until OpenAI becomes a penny stock and everyone goes back to looking up stuff on paper.
- The "Hot Pixel" attack can leak data from almost any CPU at a rate of 100mbps. (Tom's Hardware)
Note the lower case m. We're talking millibits - so about one letter or digit per minute.
And it only works under perfect conditions, and requires access to run arbitrary code on the machine in question, so it's very likely you have more pressing concerns.
- Fancy a bit of light housekeeping? Here's your chance. (The Guardian)
The US government is giving away excess lighthouses made redundant by GPS, though you have to be a federal, state, or local government entity or an approved registered non-profit to qualify for a freebie.
If nobody on the list wants the lighthouses they will go to public auction.
- Amazon office workers are planning to go on strike over, uh, over having to work in an office. (CNN)
Thanks, said Amazon in a short note, though we weren't planning to announce the next round of layoffs just yet.
- Where's that story where the paid staff at a mostly-volunteer help line unionised and were all fired and replaced with ChatGPT?
Oh, here we go. (Gizmodo)
Right under an ad proclaiming that ChatGPT is revolutionising customer service. Yes indeedy.
You'd need to have a kidney of stone not to laugh.
Attention kids: ChatGPT ain't gonna put plumbers out of work, and you won't have $160k in student debt.
- Sales of the newly launched RTX 4060 Ti and Radeon 7600 graphics card are even more miserable than the miserable sales of other miserable graphics cards in this miserable generation. (Notebook Check)
Part of the problem is inflation, particularly that official inflation figures are a lie, and that where gamers expect graphics cards to get cheaper with each passing year, for once the costs to manufacture the cards have increased sharply.
And part of it is that Nvidia is coming off three years of government lockdowns, crypto mining crazes, and money printer go brrr where they could sell everything as fast as they could make it, and now that the economy has predictably gone splut nobody is in the mood anymore.
Nvidia doesn't care because it's happily selling high end cards at the price of a new car to the tech scam du jour, which is to say, AI.
And all AMD needs to do is be slightly cheaper than Nvidia. AMD created the chips for both the Xbox Series S / X and PlayStation 5 anyway, so they have that entire segment of the market locked up.
Gamers for whom money is no object, and professionals for whom time is money, have already bought high-end cards. Those who need to watch their budgets are buying last year's models on clearance. Nvidia's RTX 3060 12GB model (not the cut-down 8GB model), and AMD's Radeon 6700, 6700 XT, and 6800 are all good options.
And there's also Intel, which seems to have cleaned up its early driver mess, and is offering the Arc A750 at very attractive prices. If Intel can just make a decent card at a decent price with its upcoming "Battlemage" and "Celestial" cards, it might stand a chance of gaining significant marketshare. But those aren't expected to start showing up until at least the end of the year, and more likely next year.
Disclaimer: There is no spoon. Currently unavailable. We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
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Saturday, May 27
Termites R Us Edition
Top Story
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman-Fried shares his optimistic vision of our AI future. (Tech Crunch)
He explains that European-style regulation, which extracts huge fines from large American tech companies because there are no* large European tech companies for some strange reason, for any reason or none at all, is bad, while US-style regulation which simply crushes his smaller and less dementedly woke competitors is good.
* There is one - Dutch company ASML, which is perhaps the single most important company in the world today.
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman-Fried raises $115 million for a crypto company that scans people's eyeballs. (Ars Technica)
I am a meat popsicle.
Tech News
- Why have air conditioning when we could all live like termites? (Ars Technica)
Well, apart from the fact that you're talk about demolishing every human dwelling in the world and rebuilding from scratch, apart from the infrastructure problems of such dense living spaces - not to mention the psychological and sociological ones, apart from the fact that termite mounds are found in very few and specific locations in the world for a very good reason, apart from the fact that the one example presented is located in a city at an altitude of a mile where nobody needs AC in the first place, apart from the fact that in any cold climate the people on the outer edge of the building - you know, the only part that has windows - would all freeze to death when winter arrives - termite mounds not notably common in Norway, for example, apart from all that, the square-cube law would mean that twice a day you'd have hurricane-speed winds blasting through the insides of your incomprehensibly expensive new megastructures.
Apart from that, sure. Eat the bugs and live like them too. I'll be over here. In my house. Eating steak. Or chicken nuggets anyway, given the price of a good steak.
- Electric truck maker Nikola is at risk of being deleted from NASDAQ mostly because it hasn't made any electric trucks. (Tech Crunch)
It has faked some videos of electric trucks, though, so maybe Disney will buy it.
- IMEC - the global body that tries to manage the semiconductor industry the way an ailurophobe manages thirty to fifty feral cats - has laid out plans to reach the 2A node by 2036. (Tom's Hardware)
2A - two Angstroms - is 0.2 nanometres. Which is slightly smaller than a single silicon atom.
It might seem impossible to construct silicon chips with features smaller than silicon itself, and you'd be correct, except for the fact that these are not engineering numbers but marketing numbers, which is to say, lies.
And that would mean the whole plan is nonsense except for the fact that the current mainstream production nodes - 7nm and 5nm - are also marketing numbers.
So, yeah, chips are going to keep getting larger and smaller and more complicated at a rapid pace for at least another decade.
- Am I the asshole unethical one? (Daily Nous)
An ethics professor - I've made my opinions on the field of ethics clear before - made it very clear to his class that if they cheated on their exam, they would fail.
Then he posted a sample exam with obviously incorrect answers to a known cheating site. We're talking about 2 + 2 = banana kind of answers.
Then his students cheated.
At least he didn't have to fail them for cheating, because they failed in the old-fashioned way of getting zero on the test.
I think they have a bright future as ethicists.
- Don't buy HP printers. (The Verge)
HP offers a "Plus" program where - if you sign up within seven days of buying your new printer - you get "free" ink for "six months".
Oh and also HP locks your printer to prevent you ever buying non-HP ink cartridges, even if you later cancel your subscription, even though HP inkjet printers are certified as not locking out third-party ink cartridges.
Epson and Brother both sell inkjet printers with ink tanks that - this is complicated, so bear with me - you fill with ink.
- "China's" "home-grown" "Powerstar" CPU is a painted-over Intel 10th generation Core i3. (Tom's Hardware)
Not in the sense that China stole Intel's design and made the chips itself while claiming credit for the design effort, since Intel's 10th generation chips were made on a 14nm process and China does have 14nm production capability, but in the sense that these are made by Intel and then literally painted over with new part numbers.
Which is one way to do it, I guess.
- Meanwhile in Real China TSMC is preparing a 6x reticle size CoWoS-L super carrier interposer for extreme SiP processors. (AnandTech)
You know how a few years ago AMD launched its new Zen CPUs, and rather than making an 8-core chip for desktops and a 16-core chip for workstations and a 32-core chip for servers (which they couldn't do because they didn't have any money), they made a single 8-core design that you could use one or two or four of according to your need?
That's what this is about. Only six times bigger.
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Friday, May 26
Let's Not And Say We Did Edition
Top Story
- An idea so bad even the crazies at Ars Technica are calling it out: Google Search has started rolling out "ChatGPT-style" generative AI results. (Ars Technica)
The only thing we want from a search engine is to report accurately on what has been said on the web relating to our search term.
The most notable thing about ChatGPT and its relatives is that it will simply make shit up, including quotes that were never said and scientific papers that were never published.
This is going to be a disaster.
It's opt-in for now.
For now.
- JPMorgan says hold my Bud Light as plans leak for a ChatGPT-based investment advice service. (CNBC)
To be fair, the company hasn't officially announced anything; this could just be a case of staking a claim on a trademark to make sure nobody else nabs it.
To continue being fair, on the scale of dumb ideas this is a polar ice cap to Google's iceberg.
Either one entirely capable of sinking the Titanic, mind you.
Tech News
- Acer's new Swift Edge 16 is a laptop. (Liliputing)
It has the latest Ryzen 7840U - the lower-power variant of the 7840HS - with 8 Zen 4 CPU cores and 12 RDNA3 GPU cores.
The screen is a 16" 120Hz 3200x2000 OLED model covering 100% of DCI-P3 colour and reaching 400 nits brightness, all of which sounds good. It has two USB 4 ports, two USB 3 ports, HDMI, microSD, and a headphone jack, plus a 1440p webcam (commonly these are 1080p or even just 720p) and the latest WiFi 7.
The Four Essential Keys are present in the form of a three-column numeric keypad, which is not perfect but something I can live with. Price starts at $1299 with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of SSD, and there's a second M.2 slot for expansion.
Memory is soldered (LPDDR4 according to the article, which I suspect is wrong), but at least there's a 32GB model on the way though pricing for that is not mentioned.
The other point of note is that it weighs 1.23kg, which is actually lighter than my current 14" laptop. Could be worth checking out. There are plenty of more powerful 16" laptops with better keyboard layouts, but they are also anything between 50% and 100% heavier than this one.
- Western Digital's 2TB SN850X is available for $135. (Tom's Hardware)
This is a good drive. It's TLC, has a DRAM cache, and supports PCIe 4 with a top transfer rate over 7GB per second. It's a little more expensive than other models in the current market, but even so costs less than the cheapest, nastiest 2TB drives from just one year ago.
- Final Cut Pro is here for the iPad. It sucks. (9to5Mac)
Not because Final Cut Pro is bad. Not because the iPad hardware isn't capable of running it. But because Apple has deliberately crippled iOS to such a degree that it is useless for any remotely serious task.
For example, if you edit your video in Final Cut Pro, start exporting the final compressed version, and then switch over to play some Flappy Bird while that runs, your export will simply die, because iOS won't do that.
Can. iOS is Unix. Just won't.
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Thursday, May 25
Where There Isn't Brass There's Also Muck Edition
Top Story
- Another day, another mid-range video card launch. Today it's AMD's Radeon 7600. (Tom's Hardware)
This is basically an RDNA3 respin of the previous generation's 6650 XT, with 2048 shaders and 8GB of VRAM on a 128-bit bus. That's the same memory configuration that hampers yesterday's 4060 Ti from Nvidia, and really isn't acceptable on a video card that costs $399.
The reason I'm willing to cut AMD some slack here is that their card costs $269.
Which even in these trying times is still less than $399.
Personally I'd buy the current 6700 over the 7600 - it's the older RDNA2 architecture, but has 10GB of RAM on a 160-bit bus, giving it a bit of an edge. But the 7600 is an okay card at an okay price.
Which is to say that it's a miracle of modern technology, with 13 billion transistors in a chip smaller than your thumbnail, and we should be amazed that it exists at all, never mind that it's available so readily and so cheaply.
(My first computer had a Motorola 6845 video chip running at 3.5MHz and could be persuaded to display somewhere between 10 and 12 colours if you were really persistent.)
Tech News
- All Microsoft Surface Pro X cameras stopped working on Tuesday. (Tom's Hardware)
You will own nothing and they really don't care whether you like it.
- A look at the Framework 16 laptop display. (Frame.Work)
Little details like the fact that the (tiny, fragile) cable between the motherboard and the display module is socketed at both ends, so if it breaks you just replace the cable.
Suck it, Apple.
Hope this one comes with a Four Essential Keys module. It's designed for that but I haven't seen one yet.
Or a cursor pad module like HP's Omen 16.
- GitLab is great software but use it in private and was your hands afterwards. (Bleeping Computer)
I mean, put it behind your VPN. Yes, that's what I meant.
- Minnesota has passed right-to-repair legislation without having it filleted by the Wicked Witch of the East River. (The Verge)
Kathy Hochul. I'm referring to Kathy Hochul.
- The Beelink GTR7 and GTR7 Pro now have prices and are scheduled for release in less than two weeks. (Liliputing)
These are NUCs / mini-PCs with AMD's latest 7840HS and 7940HS CPUs, with 8 Zen 4 CPU cores and 12 RDNA3 graphics cores. (By comparison, the Radeon 7600 GPU mentioned earlier has 32 RDNA3 cores.)
They're a bit more expensive than the similar Minisforum models but have a few extra features: Dual 2.5Gb Ethernet ports, dual Thunderbolt ports at the back plus a separate USB-C port at the front, and front and rear 1/8" audio jacks. They share the configuration of dual DDR5 SO-DIMM slots and dual M.2 2280 slots.
Plus they come in a choice of of Avocado, Burnt Orange, Ultramarine, and London Fog. No Harvest Gold available at this time.
Unfamiliar Kettle Video of the Day
So it looks like our electric dolphin left VOMS because (a) another company waved a lot of money at her and (b) that other company has basically left its Japanese operations in the hands of a former drug-dealing Yakuza dragon who is close friends with said dolphin.
I heard the name mentioned over the past week but I've been too tied up with work to keep up to date with Vtuber corporate hijinks even when it involves some of my favourite talents.
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Wednesday, May 24
Where There's Brass There's Muck Edition
Top Story
- Nvidia has finally brought its new Linda Lovelace architecture (motto: Suck it, losers) to the mainstream with the RTX 4060 Ti, and there's never been a better time to buy a graphics card. (Tom's Hardware)
Just not this one, because it's garbage.
The only thing it achieves is making other cards look good by comparison. Certainly AMD's 6700 / 6700 XT / 6750 XT range is more appealing than they were last month, with more memory and more memory bandwidth than the 4060 Ti at a much lower price.
Tech News
- If you're looking for a 2TB M.2 2230 SSD Kioxia's BG6 looks like a good option. (Tom's Hardware)
It's DRAMless - there's not much room for a DRAM cache on a device the size of a postage stamp - but it's TLC rather than cheaper QLC, and runs at PCIe 4 speeds for up to 6GB per second transfer rates. Should be more than enough for any device that uses 2230-size SSDs.
- Clippy's Revenge: Microsoft is hell-bent on shoving AI "assistants" into everything. (Dev Class)
For example, the company promises a new AI assistant for configuring Windows, when all they need to do is fix the fucking settings panel, which has been broken for 14 years.
- Intel's new NUC 13 Pro is a different colour to the regular NUC 13. (Liliputing)
That's it, really.
- The Schenker Vision 14 has a 14" 2880x1800 90Hz IPS display, an Intel 13700H CPU, optional RTX 3050 graphics, two SODIMM slots for up to 64GB (and maybe 96GB) of DDR5 RAM, and a choice of 30 different keyboard layouts exactly none of which include the Four Essential Keys. (Notebook Check)
Because we can't have nice things.
Nvidia, Making Sure We Don't Have Nice Things Video of the Day
In some cases the 4060 Ti actually manages to lose to the 3060 Ti, which is impressive just not in the way Nvidia would like.
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Tuesday, May 23
New Broom Who Dis Edition
Top Story
- Blockchains suck.
- Facebook has been hit with a $1.3 billion fine for violating Europe's law against letting foreign companies keep their money. (The Verge)
Block the entire fake continent at the firewall.
Tech News
- Daylight, the LGBTQ+ neobank, is unexpectedly shutting down at the end of June. (Tech Crunch)
In a blog published today, [founder and CEO Rob] Curtis said he felt like "now is the right time to exit this market before the feds show up" and told customers that their "money is safe and will be fully accessible for transfer through 30 June probably."
This is my shocked face.
- In more unexpectedly news China is calling in its loans to unemployed nations who never had a chance of paying them back. (Fortune)
Well, not that shocked.
- Another day, another demarcation dispute: Journalists are in an uproar after a fake Bloomberg account on Twitter posted false news stories before they could. (Tech Crunch)
Look at me. I am the fake news now.
- TSMC is putting "bombs" in its machines. (Tom's Hardware)
Well, sticky notes that say "bomb" on them, so if the maintenance crews don't find them they get a demerit rather than blown into tiny pieces.
These machines are the size of a house and if not maintained properly can cost tens of millions in lost production and repairs, so a sticky note that says "bomb" seems an entirely reasonable precaution.
- The Minisforum UM790 Pro is now on sale. (Notebook Check)
This is a mini PC - the size of a sandwich, if you put lots of filling in your sandwiches - with AMD's latest Ryzen 7940HS CPU. 8 Zen 4 CPU cores and 12 RDNA3 graphics cores, which makes it three times as fast as the laptop I'm using right now, both for processing and graphics.
Prices start at $519 without memory or storage, and go up to $789 with 64GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. It has room for a second M.2 SSD, as well as two HDMI ports, four USB 3 ports, two USB 4 ports (which can also handle video, but are at the front of the system making that a little inconvenient), and 2.5Gb Ethernet.
A pretty nice system at a good price. Except that you have to order it from AliExpress.
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Monday, May 22
I Don't Like It Edition
Top Story
- AWS has a new billing dashboard. I spent the first decade of my programming career working on accounting systems, and I have to say that this particular system is dogshit.
- Is Peter Pan more like a hedgehog or a galaxy-sized agglomeration of sardines? (Nautilus)
Proof once again that the leading experts in a field (in this case, neuroscience) are very often completely retarded.
Tech News
- China has banned sales of Micron memory chips because they "failed a network security review". (Tom's Hardware)
Memory chips don't have networking, and don't have security. The Biden Administration's spokesmop is more believable than these idiots.
- Microsoft's Visual Studio code is a free framework that is utterly useless but has a dazzling array of third-party extensions. What could possible go wrong? (Programming Geeks Club)
Oh, yeah. Right.
- Let's put all the Python libraries created by all the programmers in the world in one convenient place. What could possibly go wrong? (Bleeping Computer)
Oh, yeah. Right.
- Google has no customer support because you're not the customer. (Vortex)
This is true even when you are the customer. We went through a similar situation at my day job when Google refused to assist us in any way when the only thing we needed to do was pay our bill.
- Don't buy HP printers. (Bleeping Computer)
Not only will they brick themselves if you try to use a less insanely expensive third-party ink cartridge, they will sometimes brick themselves if it's Tuesday.
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