Twelve years, and four psychiatrists!
Four?
I kept biting them!
Why?
They said you weren't real.
Monday, July 31
Sam The Many-Coloured Edition
Top Story
- Sam Altman-Fried, CEO of OpenAI (corporate motto: In a world of Saurons, be a Saruman), has run into a snag with his new venture, Worldcoin: It is a transparent totalitarian takeover and existing governments don't appreciate anyone muscling in on their turf. (Tech Crunch)
Worldcoin, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s bid to sew up the market for verifying humanness by convincing enough mobile meatsacks to have their eyeballs scanned in exchanged for crypto tokens (yes, really), only started its official global rollout this week but it’s already landed on the radar of European data protection authorities.
Tech Crunch is sounding almost appropriately cynical here.
Why should anyone feel the need to prove their humanness on the Internet? Well one reason is that by unleashing free power tools like ChatGPT Altman’s generative AI company is leading the charge to make it harder to distinguish between bot-generated and human digital activity. But don’t worry, he’s got an eyeball-scanning orb-plus-crypto-token to sell humanity on for that!
The idea behind Worldcoin is they will pay their victims - I mean, their early adopters, a small amount of cryptocurrency to have their retinas scanned and recorded.
A cryptocurrency they just made up.
And of which they have reserved a huge chunk for themselves.
And trust them, they would never permit all that critical biometric data to be misused in any way.
It's basically a credit card fraud ring combined with a massive Ponzi scheme, only with venture capital funding.
Tech News
- The Biden Administration is planning to spend $100 million on products produced from "transformed climate pollution". (Energy.gov)
You know what transforms "climate pollution"?
Trees.
On the plus side, $100 million is peanuts on the scale of things. A lot of peanuts, but still peanuts.
- Why do banks still use IBM mainframes? Because they work. (Ars Technica)
That's it. That's the story.
- After one disastrous quarter, Intel has returned to profitability. (The Register)
Good. They might not be my favourite company, but any company without adequate competition will turn rotten.
- Expect the Radeon 7700 and 7800 to be announced in three weeks. (Notebook Check)
And to be priced at $449 and $549 respectively.
The article gives price ranges of $399 to $449 for the 7700 and $499 to $549 for the 7800. But it also gives a price range of $579 to $649 for the 7900, and that has now been officially announced at $649.
A $399 7700 would kill the 8GB 4060 Ti, and a $499 7800 would kill the 16GB version, so we shouldn't expect to see either.
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Sunday, July 30
Global Pomufication Edition
Top Story
- So, that new room-temperature superconductor announcement? Maybe not, say other scientists. (Science)
And one of the tests supposed to illustrate its superconducting properties might just be demonstrating Lenz's law. Superconductors respond in interesting ways to static magnetic fields, but regular conductors can respond in similar ways to changing magnetic fields, so the actually demonstrate superconductivity you have to keep your field static, which they kind of completely failed to do, at least in one particular video.
It's not fraud or anything, since the paper describes exactly how to create the alleged miracle material, just possible bad research.
Tech News
- Elon Musk is the main reason why Tesla Model 3 owners are switching to other EV brands. (Notebook Check)
Terrible, terrible headline, because the actual story points out that of the Tesla customers who did sell their Model 3 and buy a different brand, 21.5% said it's because they're mindless Marxists angry that Twitter is no longer their own personal hugbox.
- Speaking of hugboxes Ars Technica managed to cover a Falcon Heavy launch of a 10 ton EchoStar satellite without the comment section turning into the Two Minute Hate in the first page. (Ars Technica)
There are a couple of such comments on page two but they got downvoted into oblivion.
Good for you, Ars Technica. Keep it up and we might be able to let play with the other children again.
- The latest Windows 11 update - currently only in the preview channel - breaks third-party apps that fix Windows 11's shitty start menu. (PC World)
If this makes its way to release I'll go ahead and reinstall this laptop with Windows 10 as planned. Good litmus test of whether Microsoft cares at all about its paying customers.
Windows 10 at least has the signal virtue that it's been abandoned except for security patches so Microsoft isn't actively trying to break it.
- Intel's 3nm node is on track for next year, says Intel. (Tom's Hardware)
TSMC started first production of 3nm last year, as did Samsung, but their respective 5nm processes are still used for most leading-edge chips. Apple's next iPhone - later this year - may or may not have a 3nm chip.
Next year we should see lots more 3nm chips from all three manufacturers.
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Saturday, July 29
Thread On The Wind Edition
Top Story
- As Threads "soars", Bluesky and Mastodon are adopting algorithmic feeds. (Tech Crunch)
You will eat the bugs. You will live in the pod. You will read what we tell you. You will own nothing and we don't much care if you are happy.
- Soars straight into the ground: Most of the hundred million people who accidentally clicked over from Instagram to Threads have stopped using it. (Ars Technica)
The article notes that Threads' count of active users dropped by 75% in two weeks. It doesn't mention that the amount of time the remaining users spend on the app also dropped by 75%.
Facebook and Instagram executives called this a positive sign and "better than expected". No, they really did.
Tech News
- AMD has announced the Ryzen 7945HX3D, their first laptop chip with 3D v-cache. (AnandTech)
One to look out for if you're after a high-end gaming laptop. I'd like to see a workstation version with the extra cache on both dies rather than just one. Since a laptop chip is already power-constrained, adding the cache to both dies is unlikely to cause heat problems.
- Aziyo Biologics has issued a product recall after its bone matrix material was found to be infected with tuberculosis. Again. (Ars Technica)
Have you guys ever considered not accidentally killing your customers?
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Friday, July 28
Do Not Meddle In The Affairs Of Lizards Edition
Top Story
- Conservatives were bombarded with misinformation in the leadup to the 2020 election according to a study by Facebook "researchers" who rank MSNBC as more reliable than the CRC Handbook. (Forbes)
Uh huh.
- Meanwhile Facebook has lost $21 billion to date on its virtual reality push because its "researchers" totally have their finger on the public pulse. (CNBC)
In the most recent quarter the company spent $4 billion on virtual reality compared to revenues of $276 million.
What the fuck they are spending all that money on I have no idea because it looks like a tech demo from 1993.
Tech News
- AMD has announced the Radeon 7900 Golden Rabbit Edition at $649. (WCCFTech)
I ignored this at first because it looked like a China-only release, but it now has official US pricing.
Compared to the 7900 XT this model cuts the core count by 10% and reduces RAM from 20GB to 16GB, but the 7900 XT launched at an MSRP of $899 so it's also a lot cheaper.
AMD is still expected to launch a 16GB 7800 at $549 and a 12GB 7700 at $449 in the coming months.
Ignoring the rabbits (which may not be an entirely safe thing to do) this means you can now build an AMD system with a 7900 CPU and a 7900 GPU.
- Congress is at it again with a bill that purports to protect children online but actually... Huh. (Congress.gov)
I'll need to read the whole thing because a quick skim didn't find the usual privacy horrors we see with this sort of thing.
- On the other hand, the new legislation is upsetting all the right people. (The Verge)
Digital rights advocates have also suggested that KOSA could prevent LGBTQIA+ teens from finding the resources they may need online without coming out to their parents due to the parental consent requirements of the bill.
Sounds unexpectedly based.
- The 4TB Western Digitial SN850X has now dropped to $269 on Amazon. (Notebook Check)
This is a solid SSD and that would have been an incredible price a year ago. The 4TB Team MP34 dipped as low as $160 a few weeks ago but that's half the speed of the SN850X.
- Elon Musk said that Twitter - that is, X - will be abandoning light mode and going dark only and The Verge had to run with the story in the five minutes it took for outraged users to swarm and the decision to be reversed. (The Verge)
They do still plan to remove "dim" mode which nobody anywhere has ever used.
Not Tech News
Is it any good?
Yes. It is. But it is also missing Terry Pratchett's deft touch of saying things without having to say them.
Area Rabbit Conspiracy Video of the Day
In which area rabbit Pipkin Pippa explains that the lizards running the secret world government are covering up the fact that UFOs aren't real to keep us all distracted from the war with the mole people.
And then the Phase Connect girls get their CEO on the line and ask him to explain circumcision, because it's that sort of company.
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Thursday, July 27
Worse Is Better Edition
Top Story
- You can't compete with free. (The Verge)
Neeva was a search engine startup founded by ex-Google engineers - back when Google still had engineers - to build a better search engine.
The founders noted a fundamental problem with Google. Being funded by advertising, and having a limited number of ads per page, there was a deep incentive not to push the best search results to the top.
So Neeeva built their own search engine focusing on paying customers - and went broke, because people didn't want to pay for a better solution when the bad solution was free.
How do we get out of this bind?
I see two possible avenues, both generally applicable:
One, an organisation that benefits from good search tools internally and is in competition with Google in other areas open-sources their work because first this gets lots of developers to contribute free work, and second it blows a hole in the competition's revenue stream. Facebook has done this with its AI research, clearly aiming at wrecking OpenAI and accidentally doing some good in the process.
Two, collaborative effort. One company can't afford $10 billion to develop a better search engine, but millions of developers pooling their resources? It's not Facebook's own AI research that has doomed OpenAI to extinction, but hobbyists frantically iterating on incomprehensibly sophisticated algorithms at 3AM so they can produce funny videos.
Tech News
- Thoughts on that room temperature superconductor announcement. (In the Pipeline)
Derek Lowe is a research chemist working in the pharmaceutical industry and not a solid-state physicist, but he's good at sniffing out suspect research papers and doesn't smell anything obviously rotten here.
Also his series of posts on Things I Won't Work With contains a number of timeless classics.
- Meanwhile another scientist who previously posted claims of room-temperature superconductors is having a second paper retracted by Physical Review Letters amid allegations that his doctoral thesis was largely plagiarised. (Nature)
Will the Great Lobachevsky please come to the white courtesy phone?
- Micron plans 32Gb DDR5 and 24Gb GDDR7 memory next year. (WCCFTech)
Maybe I should hold off on those 96GB memory kits if 128GB is coming so soon.
Also, 24Gb GDDR7 could salvage the 4060 Ti. Moving from 8GB of 18Gbps GDDR6 to 12GB of 32Gbps GDDR7 would provide 50% more memory and 75% more memory bandwidth, fixing both the cards issues at once without adding more chips.
The AD106 chip in the 4060 Ti does not, of course, support GDDR7.
- Jetbrains is integrating AI assistants throughout its IDE suite. (DevClass)
Dammit. I use (and like) Jetbrains tools.
- Lenovo has announced two new large Android tablets - 10" and 12" respectively - while their small tablet range continues to moulder into irrelevance. (Liliputing)
Except for the Legion Y700 which you cannot buy.
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Wednesday, July 26
Nuts To You Edition
Top Story
- Conservatives died more than liberals after the COVID vaccine rollout. (Ars Technica)
The study is just the latest to find a connection between political party affiliation and deaths during the pandemic. But, it takes the connection a step further, going beyond county-level political leanings and looking at how party affiliation linked to deaths at the individual level. The authors—all researchers at Yale University—focused on Ohio and Florida because those were the only two states with readily available public data on voter registration.
So they didn't have the cause of death or vaccination status, and if you read the study to the end (which they desperately hope you won't) they only had voter registration information for 57% of the people in the study.
The study involved death data on 538,159 people in Ohio and Florida, age 25 and older, and their linked voter registration files. The researchers did not have complete data—the linked data didn't contain a cause of death or vaccination status. But, they could evaluate excess weekly deaths by age, state, county, and party affiliation. They found that the gap in excess deaths was larger in counties with lower vaccination rates, suggesting that lack of vaccination among Republican voters may partly explain the higher death rates.
And they didn't control for any confounding factors at all, because the consumers of fascist fear porn don't give a shit.
- Indeed, all the studies so far trying to prove such a correlation have been complete garbage. (Marginally Compelling)
A good blog about the mathematics of the pandemic (and other things) and how everyone has a vested interest in lying to you.
Tech News
- The first room-temperature ambient-pressure superconductor? (Arxiv) (PDF)
Maybe. Good discussion on Hacker News.
The researchers appear to have a good track record publishing less exciting papers in this field, and the superconductor as described would certainly be a breakthrough but not actually useful for industrial applications - it fails under high current loads, which is one of the main things you want superconductors for.
But there's a history of superconducting materials being refined to support higher current loads, so if real, given time, this might change the world.
- The EU is planning to pile $47 billion in one place and set it on fire. (Tom's Hardware)
This is the European Chips Act. Where Japan is making a very specific hedge against China fucking things up, building a leading-edge chip factory specifically for Japanese customers, Europe is engaging in its usual omnixenophobia and paranostalgia:"With the Chips Act, Europe will be a frontrunner in the world semiconductors race," said Héctor Gómez Hernández, Spanish Minister for Industry, Trade and Tourism. "We can already see it in action: new production plants, new investments, new research projects. And in the long run, this will also contribute to the renaissance of our industry and the reduction of our foreign dependencies."
Wanna bet, Hector?
- Newegg's ChatGPT plugin helps you plan a PC build. (Tom's Hardware)
Very, very badly.
- OpenAI has shut down its AI detection tool. (Decrypt)
Because just like its AI, it doesn't work.
- The Gulf Stream could collapse by 2005 according to a new study. (The Guardian)
Wait, 2015. I mean, 2025!
- File under nobody cares: Actors out of work due to Hollywood disappearing into a Hellmouth of its own creation will not be permitted to launch podcasts discussing the prior output of the LA sewer system. (The Verge)
Okay. Sure.
- Just like Twitter in the bad old days Threads will regularly switch back from a chronological feed to its shitty algorithm no matter what you do. (The Verge)
You are not the customer. You are not the product. You are sand in the gears.
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Tuesday, July 25
Putting this here because YouTube is dumb.
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Unsightly Activities Undertaken At Reasonable Prices Edition
Top Story
- If you're going to be evil, be all the way evil: Google's new Web Integrity API plans to lock you out of your own browser and track your activity everywhere with in-depth fingerprinting and unblockable DRM. (Ars Technica)
I've switched to Brave. Finally.
Once Google was a tech company,
They wrote a lot of code.
But baby that was years ago,
Before the advertising motherlode.
For all their flaws Apple and Microsoft still make actual products. Amazon at least ships products. With Google, you are not the customer.
Tech News
- A 2nm fab - chip factory - is under construction in Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan's major islands. (Tom's Hardware)
The venture, called Rapidus, is backed by the Japanese government and a who's who of major Japanese companies from NTT to Toyota, and is in large part a hedge against China fucking everything up.
Worst case if cooler heads prevail and the world doesn't go up in radioactive smoke, they still have a home-grown, leading edge chip production facility.
- Intel's new AVX10 instruction set is AVX-512 without the 512. (Tom's Hardware)
AVX-512 has two features: 512-bit operations and a better-designed instruction set than AVX and AVX2. AMD actually implements it as two 256-bit operations in sequence, mostly using the existing AVX2 logic, and it still works very well.
Intel implemented AVX-512 as a full 512-bit design and has been having problems with it ever since. On servers it uses too much power and reduces clock speeds; on desktop CPUs it's simply broken.
AVX10 solves these problems by making the hard stuff optional. AMD's solution is still better, and proven to work, so it's not clear why Intel isn't following suit.
- Sam Altman-Fried's Worldcoin scans your eyeballs and puts them on the blockchain, because who wouldn't want to do that? (Tech Crunch)
This scheme from a third-rate Bond movie has raised $250 million so far.
- The Flipper Zero hacking security testing tool now has its own app store. (Liliputing)
Now your hacking tool can get hacked. How convenient!
- Lenovo's Slim Pro 9i Gen 8 14 (a.k.a Yoga Pro 9i Gen 8 14) has a 3072x1920 14.5" display with 100% everything and an eye-searing 1200 nits maximum brightness. (Notebook Check)
It has soldered RAM, but there are options for 32GB and 64GB as well as the base 16GB, and those options are actually available in Australia. Though if you choose the 64GB option here you also need to choose the fastest CPU and RTX 4070 graphics.
It actually might be the laptop I was looking for except that (a) I spent all my laptop money already, (b) I'm fairly happy with the much cheaper HP I have now, and (c) there are no good photos of the keyboard I can find anywhere so the Four Essential Keys are stuck in a state of quantum indeterminism.
The Yoga 9i 14 has four non-essential keys in the place of the Four Essential Keys, so PowerToys could turn it into something acceptable. But judging from the corner of the keyboard in one photo I think the Pro model does away with them.
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Monday, July 24
Three Times Is Amelia Watson Edition
Top Story
- Telescreens: Not just behind the painting anymore. (Forbes)
What do you get when you deploy vast networks of traffic cameras and feed them all into AI systems to track, well, everything?
One arrest and the eradication of privacy and Fourth Amendment rights.
Welcome to the goldfish bowl.
Tech News
- Solar panels built over irrigation canals could, like, do things. (AP)
They would reduce evaporation and generate electricity, so it's a twofer. But the correction at the end of the article is a doozy:This story was first published on July 20, 2023 and was updated on July 21, 2023 to correct the erroneous statement that panels over California’s canals could provide 13 gigawatts of power, enough to supply the city of Los Angeles from January through October. The proper term of measurement would have been gigawatt-hours rather than gigawatts, but additionally, researchers now say the total amount of energy that would be generated has not yet been scientifically estimated.
So if the corrected number is correct, it could power the city of Los Angeles for an hour each year.
- If you don't sign in to your Ubisoft account regularly, they will protect your privacy by deleting your account, and also your games. (PC Gamer)
Trying to win that coveted Worst Company in the World title away from EA?
- Testing seven M.2 2230 SSDs. (Tom's Hardware)
I have two laptops with 2230-size slots (in addition to 2280 slots). Recent Microsoft Surface tablets have 2230 storage, and so do some portable devices like the Steam Deck.
This review doesn't run the full suite of tests you usually see; just game loading times and basic read benchmarks, but all of the drives manage rates over 1.5GB per second, which is a lot for something the size of a postage stamp.
- AMD's Ryzen 7500F is a new 6 core model without integrated graphics. (Tom's Hardware)
At $179 vs. $229 for the 7600 with integrated graphics, and 5.0GHz vs. 5.1GHz, it makes sense for a budget gaming build where you wouldn't use the integrated graphics anyway.
Rumours are that Intel's upcoming 14100 could also be a six-core part (the 13100 has four cores) so that might be an even better budget part, but likely won't show up until January.
Containment Breach Video of the Day
"What about Second Kronii?"
"I don't think he knows about Second Kronii, Pippa."
The highly anticipated announcement of Hololive English Generation 3 has just been, uh, announced. Launch video Wednesday, debuts probably a couple of days later.
With Hololive Council - Generation 2 - they left a longer gap between the launch and the debuts, and YouTube and Twitter took the opportunity to suspend all their accounts, some multiple times. Hololive hasn't made that mistake again.
And yes, Amelia was just on holiday.
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Hololive EN Gen 3 reveal in two days.
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