Tuesday, November 28

All The Ti In China Edition
Top Story
- A land grab is under way in Australia for lithium mining rights. (Financial Times)
For the most part it's major Australian companies blocking foreign takeovers of lithium mining startups.
Despite a collapse in lithium prices, sales by Australia quadrupled in the first half of this year compared with 2022. All by itself that generated a 1% annual growth in Australia's GDP.
Tech News
- The latest NAS from AOOSTAR has 6 3.5" drive bays and 6 M.2 slots, powered by a Ryzen 5800U. (Liliputing)
When I saw the logo in the picture I thought it was ADDSTAR which is a not entirely terrible brand name, but no.
It has two 2.5Gb and two 10Gb Ethernet ports (though the latter will probably turn out to be SFP+), HDMI and DisplayPort, and four USB ports.
Price TBA.
- If you want something a bit smaller there's the FriendlyELEC CM3588. (Liliputing)
It has a Rockchip CM3588 Arm CPU, four M.2 slots (with only one PCIe 3 lane each, but that's still 1GBps), 2.5Gb Ethernet, two HDMI outputs, and an HDMI input for... Reasons.
Starts at $130 with 4GB RAM and goes up to $160 with 16GB.
- If you have a collection of old game consoles or home computers, but don't have a collection of old televisions or monitors, the RetroTINK-4K could be the device you need. (RetroTINK)
It accepts composite, S-Video, component, analog RGB, and HDMI inputs at resolutions up to 1920x1080, plus analog and digital audio, can decode NTSC, PAL, and SECAM signals, and can capture, upscale, and resample pretty much any resolution and refresh rate up to 1080p and produce a clean 4K 60p HDMI output. If it can't automatically lock on the the weird signal coming out of your 1987 Czechoslovakian Sinclair Spectrum knock-off, it has a micro-SD slot where you can install custom profiles.
There's just one tiny problem: It costs $750.
- The DevTernity conference has collapsed in disarray after it was discovered that the loudly promoted female speakers were fake AI personas. (404 Media)
Well, duh. There are no women in tech.
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Monday, November 27

The Bat Came Back Edition
Top Story
- While Americans are slowly waking up from their food comas, those crafty Chinese are preparing to start manufacturing 5nm chips... Sort of. (WCCFTech)
China has been banned from buying the machines to make chips below the 14nm node. They can make 12nm chips because 12nm is really just a tweaked version of 14nm. And they can make 7nm via a technique called double-patterning, which was used before EUV technology (extreme ultra-violet) made direct 7nm and smaller nodes possible.
Double-patterning is expensive and fussy and wrecks your yield - the percentage of good chips you get from a wafer - but it does work.
To get 5nm they would need to go to quad patterning, which is also a proven technology but even more expensive and a whole lot fussier, and the resulting yields would be in the toilet.
China can build its own machines, but to do so it will first need to build the machines for that, and currently it lacks the machines to build those machines. It's very complicated and requires incredible precision, and there really isn't any way to rush it.
Tech News
- Beej's Gude to Interprocess Communication. (Beej.us)
It's amazing how little this stuff has change since I was a baby programmer logging on to my first Unix system.
- So Cyber Monday is here, and with it lots of amazing computer deals like...
Nothing, really. I mean, the 4TB Samsung 990 Pro can be found for $250, but that was already true.
I got some cutlery and a fancy slow cooker. I bought a cheap Kmart slow cooker when I moved to a colder climate last year, and I use it all the time. This new one is bigger and has a timer and a temperature probe, and can allegedly roast an entire chicken.
I'll give that a try because it's not something I bother with very often because I hate cleaning the oven. With a slow cooker you can just put the cooking pot and the lid in the dishwasher and forget about it.
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Sunday, November 26

Trigger Words Edition
Top Story
- The immediate trigger behind the recent turmoil at OpenAI was a research paper into the risks of AI led by one of the board members. (WCCFTech)
The paper is idiotic drivel.
Tech News
- The Dunning-Kruger Effect is autocorrelation. (Economics from the Top Down)
That doesn't mean it's not real, it just means that all it's showing is that idiots are idiots, which we already knew.
- No it isn't. (andersource)
Well, that clears that up.
- AMD's new Threadripper 7980X is faster than any Xeon or Epyc server CPU. (Notebook Check)
On the Passmark benchmark, anyway. The single-core Passmark score correlates well with the software I run, so I keep an eye on it. The multi-core score doesn't seem to scale very well though. The 64-core 7980X is 70% faster than the 128-core Epyc 9754, and it really shouldn't be.
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Saturday, November 25

Istanbul Is Constantinople Edition
Top Story
- Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, says we should be full speed ahead and damn the torpedoes on AI.
Hmm.
- In just the past six months, Nvidia has shot up from the fourth highest revenues in the semiconductor industries to take first place. (Tom's Hardware)
Based almost entirely on sales of high-end AI chips, which go for twenty times as much as similar chips for the gaming market.
Tech News
- Researchers have bypassed Windows Hello secure logins. (Bleeping Computer)
All they needed to do was (checks notes) completely disassemble and rewire the laptop.
Windows Hello is designed to be secure even if you do that, but that's a pretty difficult task when your partners building the CPUs, laptops, and fingerprint scanners fail to follow the specs.
- AMD's Ryzen 8000 laptop chips are expected to be announced early next year, likely at CES. (WCCFTech)
These are a major advance over the already very good Ryzen 7000 chips. Although they still use Zen 4 cores, and are still limited to 8 cores, and still use RDNA3 graphics, and still only 12 graphics cores, and are still limited to DDR5 memory, and...
Wait, these aren't an advance at all. These are the same chips with the numbers changed.
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Friday, November 24

Natural Turkey Extract Edition
Top Story
- How it started: Exports of Nvidia's RTX 4090 to China will be banned starting November 17 following existing bans on high-end Nvidia AI cards. (Tom's Hardware)
- How it's going: Chinese factories are dismantling the RTX 4090s on their production lines and turning them into high-end AI cards. (WCCFTech)
So... You banned these products from being exported to the country that manufactures them?
Smart.
(The chips are made in Taiwan, and manufacturing of the cards will likely move to Taiwan as well, but there were a lot of chips already in China set to be turned into gaming cards and now destined for the AI market.)
Tech News
- Idaho National Laboratory has been hacked by gay furries. (The Register)
That's kind of embarrassing, but the furries have offered them a deal:The self-styled furry hackers meanwhile have offered to remove the staff records if the lab performs experiments that at best could be described as highly irregular.
You fools. You don't want Idaho for that. You want Omaha.
"We're willing to make a deal with INL. If they research creating IRL catgirls we will take down this post," the group said. The creation of real cat-human female hybrids is a frequently posted meme in certain corners of the internet, but it's not the laboratory's specialty.
- If your research data isn't giving you the results you need, try analysing it with ChatGPT. (Nature)
Your P-values hacked or double your money back.
- Anthony Levandowski is rebooting his AI church. (Bloomberg) (archive site)
It's not a cult. They're just devoted followers of CthulhuGPT and OpenDagon.
- That's enough internet for today. (Ars Technica)
Do not read before, during, or after eating. Not Ars Technica's fault this time either.
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Thursday, November 23

Bleh Edition
Top Story
- It would appear that everyone at OpenAI is either profoundly autistic or sociopathic. (Reuters)
But someone decided to give them billions of dollars anyway.
- The sociopath has a name that might rhyme with Pram Praltman. (Washington Post) (archive site)
This is not the first time Praltman has been fired from a company he was running.
Tech News
- The third - or fourth? - generation of Dell's Inspiron 16 Plus is here. (Hot Hardware)
It's a little faster than the original model (which I have) but is pretty meh otherwise.
- It looks like AMD's high-end graphics cards are now banned in shithole countries too. (WCCFTech)
If you live in Afghanistan, Belarus, Burma, Cambodia, the Central African Republic, China, Congo, Cuba, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Lebanon, Libya, Macau, Russia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela, or Zimbabwe, better give up any dream of playing Cities: Skylines II.
- Google Bard can now watch YouTube videos so you don't have to. (The Verge)
Okay.
- Twitter is going to add headlines back in to embedded news stories. (Tech Crunch)
Maybe one day they will make Twitter embeds work again.
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Wednesday, November 22

Per Astra Ad Aspera Edition
Top Story
- The DOJ has apparently succeeded in shaking down Binance for $4 billion. (Wall Street Journal) (archive site)
The fines will settle civil liabilities over violating US financial sanctions in allowing people to transfer imaginary money over the internet, and CEO Changpeng Zhao will plead guilty to one criminal charge and - since he's not a Republican - probably get off with probation.
Tech News
- Sarah Silverman's lawsuit alleging that all generative AI constitutes copyright infringement continues to fall apart. (Hollywood Reporter)
If only someone could have predicted this.
- Sunbird is a secure messaging app that doesn't store any of your private information on its servers. (The Verge)
It stores them on someone else's servers.
Unencrypted.
- Striated caracaras perform as well as Goffin's cockatoos with puzzle boxes. (Phys.org)
Wait, I think that might be the wrong link.
- Rich people have money. This is bad. (Phys.org)
The solution is to make sure nobody has any money, and if at all possible, make sure there are no people at all.
- Intel's Meteor Lake laptop chips - the real 14th generation, for small values of real - are almost here, and they're just plain not very good. (Notebook Check)
Lots of off-the-record quotes from laptop makers who are basically saying they're turning to AMD because Intel is a hot mess right now.
- Former OpenAI employees call Sam Altman a scum-sucking pig and soul vampire. (WCCFTech)
Well, they didn't use those words. Or they might have done; I didn't read it all.
But after he joined as CEO the company's attrition rate spiked to 50%.
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Tuesday, November 21

You Don't Hate Journalists Enough Edition
Top Story
- Elon Musk went nuclear on Media Matters. (Tech Crunch)
The article tries do pretend this didn't happen, because as the saying goes You don't hate journalists enough. You think you do, but you don't.
Media Matters ran a shock exposé showing that Twitter ran ads against extremist content, leading to a flight of major advertisers.
The only problem is, Twitter was watching while they did this.
What they did was create a new account and:
1. Follow every Nazi meme account they could found (which was not many).
2. Follow the major advertising brands they wanted to scare away from Twitter.
3. Sit there hitting refresh over and over until they got the screenshot they wanted.
Only problem with that is that Twitter logged everything they did and can show that the only account in the world that saw those ads on those tweets was Media Matters, because they spent an entire day setting things up to get that result.
Does Tech Crunch tell you that? No.
Does The Register tell you that? No.
Does Ars Technica tell you that? No.
They're all-in on censorship.
- Oh, and the Texas Attorney General has announced a criminal investigation into Media Matters conduct. (MSN)
You don't hate journalists enough - but maybe Ken Paxton does.
Tech News
- To be fair Ars Technica already filled its weekly quota of one article not hating Elon Musk. (Ars Technica)
Yes, the Starship flight was a good test. It might be too much to say it was a success, but it achieved the stated goals. If your kid comes home with a 90 on their math exam, you shouldn't complain that they weren't able to answer the bonus question which was actually a copy-paste of the Goldbach Conjecture.
- How many Jacaranda trees are there in Sydney? 1539. (Observable)
They specifically mean the central business district, not the metropolitan area, where there are far, far more of these purple fuckers.
- The DOJ is trying to shake down Binance for $4 billion. (Bloomberg)
What did Binance do? Apparently it sent customers' money where the customers asked for it to be sent, rather than stealing it the way FTX did.
- Airliners flying over the Middle East are experiencing advanced Denial of Service attacks on GPS guidance systems and nobody knows what to do. (Vice)
I can think of a couple of things.
- AMD's new Threadripper 7000 range is here. (AnandTech)
I'd like to get excited about these, but the price is simply too high - a 32-core chips is four times the price of a 16-core desktop chip - and for many task the performance barely improves.
If you do 3d rendering for a living, then one of these systems will dramatically improve your workflow and earn back the cost in no time. Otherwise make sure to find a benchmark that matches your workflow and decide whether it's worth it for you.
- Microsoft has hired Sam Altman and Greg Brockman after they were fired from OpenAI. (Tom's Hardware)
I have ceased to care about any of this nonsense.
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Monday, November 20

Picnics On The Sun Edition
Top Story
- A day after firing Sam Altman, OpenAI is in talks to bring him back. (Tech Crunch)
- No they're not. (Tech Crunch)
Well, that certainly clears that up.
Tech News
- Twitch founder Emmett Shear will be the new CEO of OpenAI. (The Verge)
It looks like the researchers and non-profit board wanted a CEO who would run the business, and not try to also run the non-profit side of things.
- Microsoft is celebrating the 20th anniversary of Patch Tuesday. (Microsoft)
Apparently with a driver update that broke the microphone in my laptop.
- After 33 years of searching, two groups of mathematicians have independently discovered the ninth Dedekind number. (Quanta)
The first four numbers are 2, 3, 6, and 20.
The ninth number is 286,386,577,668,298,411,128,469,151,667,598,498,812,336. So it does grow a bit after that start.
- There is no cloud, there is only someone else's computers... Or your own. (The Register)
Microcloud from Canonical - the company behind Ubuntu - is designed to make it easy to deploy your own small cloud - where "small" is anything from three Raspberry Pis to fifty 128-core AMD servers. Which is a pretty large value of small.
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Sunday, November 19

Up The Sideways Staircase Edition
Top Story
- Starship's second test flight successfully reached space - and then went boom. (Ars Technica)
Not everything went to plan, but it went a lot better than the first test, with all 33 engines in the booster working, a clean separation of the second stage of the rocket, and reaching a height of nearly 150km before the automated self-destruct system got bored and decided to join in the fun.
Tech News
- The Silicon Power UD90 is one of the cheapest 4TB SSDs around. How does it perform? Poorly. (Serve the Home)
It is rated for 5000MBps reads and 4500MBps writes, perfectly respectable numbers.
It gets just slightly over that read speed in independent tests... And slightly over 5% of that write speed.
Avoid.
- You can find the Team MP34 4TB for $151. (Tom's Hardware)
Its rated speeds are lower, but it actually delivers what it says.
- OpenAI's investors allegedly want the used car salesman back in charge. (Tech Crunch)
OpenAI has an odd corporate structure: It's a non-profit in charge of a for-profit company. The non-profit board fired the for-profit CEO, but there are investors putting money directly into the for-profit company and they want their snake oil guy back.
Fortunately companies like Mistral and Meta are working hard to make OpenAI irrelevant.
- AMD's previous-generation Radeon 6750 GRE comfortably beats Nvidia's RTX 4060. (Tom's Hardware)
You can't buy one though; it's a China exclusive. Because reasons.
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