WOULD YOU CARE FOR SOME TEA?

Tuesday, October 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 October 2025

Perbromate Edition

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Tech News



Chemical Interlude



To make a perbromate ion from scratch, first we must invent Bitcoin.



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: I met a wallaby.

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Monday, October 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 October 2025

All Your ID Are Belong To Us Edition

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Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Not often you get 4k video in a 4:3 aspect ratio.

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Sunday, October 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 October 2025

Trans-Hokkaido Panda Express Edition

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Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: I didn't hear nuthin.

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Saturday, October 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 October 2025

May You Live And Let Die In Interesting Times

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  • Just when we were starting to worry about things getting boring again China has blocked exports of rare-earth elements to the rest of the planet.  (MSN)

    There are 17 rare-earth elements, used in electronics (particularly magnets) and chemistry, and China has shut off sales of 12 of them.  China gained control of the market not because it has massive resources - Vietnam by itself has half the proven reserves of China - but because rare-earth elements are stinky and China didn't mind the smell.

    Past tense, because a lot of China's rare-earth production these days comes from slave camps in Myanmar and not from China at all.

    President Trump has announced a 100% tariff on all imports from China in response.

    This is hardly the first time China has pulled this shit - the same thing happened in April.  Which seems like hundreds of years ago, but trust me, it wasn't.


  • And share prices in Australian mining companies are booming as a result, because Australia is currently the largest Western producer of rare-earth metals.  (MSN)

    Because the funny thing is that rare earth elements aren't all that rare.  Vietnam, as I mentioned, Brazil, India, Australia, and the US itself all have millions of tons of reserves.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: What about the spiders, you ask?  Oh, they don't mind the smell.

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Friday, October 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 October 2025

Stunt Biscuit Edition

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  • Intel has taken the wraps off Panther Lake, its new laptop family due in January.  (Tom's Hardware)

    A full announcement is expected at CES and general availability by the end of the January.

    It includes new performance and efficiency cores, a low power core that isn't described in detail yet, and a new Xe3 graphics engine that provides a preview of the upcoming Celestial discrete GPUs.

    Also, while Lunar Lake was one size fits all, there are three different versions of Panther Lake:

    The cheapest version has four P cores and four LP cores, four Xe3 graphics cores, supports soldered or socketed RAM, and has eight PCIe 4.0 and four PCIe 5.0 lanes.

    The version for high-end laptops with dedicated graphics has four P cores, eight E cores, four LP cores, four Xe3 graphics cores, supports soldered or socketed RAM, and has eight PCIe 4.0 and twelve PCIe 5.0 lanes.

    And finally a model for fast laptops without dedicated graphics has four P cores, eight E cores, four LP cores, twelve Xe3 graphics cores, supports soldered RAM only, and has eight PCIe 4.0 and four PCIe 5.0 lanes.

    So you has to pick and choose.  There is no model that gives you everything.

    Though potentially the last of these can support CAMM2 modules to allow for expandable LPDDR5X RAM, and four lanes of PCIe 5.0 is enough to drive a mid-range laptop GPU.

    It's also supposed to user 30% less power than Lunar Lake thanks to the move from a 3nm to 1.8nm process.

Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: On second thought, better not to read the manual.

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Thursday, October 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 October 2025

Unexpectedly Based Edition

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Tech News




Not At All Tech News

  • Took my blood pressure this afternoon.  120/77.  It's always lower when I come in after a walk or working in the garden, but I hadn't done either, at least not in the past few hours.

    Just six weeks ago it was 70 points higher.


  • Tried out my new lawn trimmer that I bought to replace my old Bosch model that went phut last week.  It works.  It actually works great.

    I don't like the handle arrangement as much as the old model, but it was half the price with a battery of the Bosch without, and Bosch doesn't make the old model anymore and their new model has the exact same handle arrangement as this cheap one.

    Power Blade brand, if anyone is looking.


  • Got a couple of new roasting pans from Kmart to replace the old ones that had gone rusty, which I had also bought from Kmart.  I know, I know.

    The new ones were slightly more expensive which I put down to inflation, but they turn out to be far higher quality.  They weigh at least twice as much as the old ones, and seem to have a better non-stick coating as well.

Musical Interlude






Disclaimer: Not even the Hololive ones.

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Wednesday, October 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 October 2025

Sold Out Edition

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Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Amaris Yuri.  Now that's a name I've not heard in a long time.

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Tuesday, October 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 October 2025

All Your Hosts Are Belong To Us Edition

Top Story

  • Now it's AMD's turn.  (Serve the Home)

    A couple of weeks ago I wrote about Nvidia's plan to invest $100 billion in OpenAI in return for OpenAI spending $100 billion on Nvidia hardware.  Or some random amount - the scale is so absurd they're talking about graphics cards in gigawatts.  OpenAI is buying 10 gigawatts of graphics cards.

    Now AMD is sort of doing the same.  OpenAI is planning to buy 6GW of AMD Instinct cards and in return AMD has issued OpenAI a warrant for up to 160 million shares of its common stock, worth about $32 billion at current prices though since some of the shares wouldn't vest until the share price reaches $600 (from $200 today) it's potentially $100 billion again if the bubble don't burst.


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Pew pew.

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Monday, October 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 October 2025

Never Say Never Again Edition

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  • In May, OpenAI, which has never made a profit, spent $6.5 billion to buy Jony Ive's company io, which has never made a product. The first device to ship from the partnership? Anyone's guess, they're out of ideas. (Tech Crunch) (archive site)
    The FT now says that OpenAI and Ive aim to create "a palm-sized device without a screen that can take audio and visual cues from the physical environment and respond to users' requests."
    A phone? I'm told those already exist.
    But unresolved issues around the device's "personality," how it handles privacy, and computing infrastructure might delay the launch.
    Good grief, they've created the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation.
    "Listen," said Ford, who was still engrossed in the sales brochure, "they make a big thing of the ship's cybernetics. A new generation of Sirius Cybernetics Corporation robots and computers, with the new GPP feature." "GPP feature?" said Arthur. "What's that?"

    "Oh, it says Genuine People Personalities."

    "Oh," said Arthur, "sounds ghastly."

    A voice behind them said, "It is." The voice was low and hopeless and accompanied by a slight clanking sound. They span round and saw an abject steel man standing hunched in the doorway.

    "What?" they said.

    "Ghastly," continued Marvin, "it all is. Absolutely ghastly. Just don't even talk about it. Look at this door," he said, stepping through it. The irony circuits cut into his voice modulator as he mimicked the style of the sales brochure. "All the doors in this spaceship have a cheerful and sunny disposition. It is their pleasure to open for you, and their satisfaction to close again with the knowledge of a job well done."

    As the door closed behind them it became apparent that it did indeed have a satisfied sigh-like quality to it. "Hummmmmmmyummmmmmm ah!" it said.


Tech News

  • Intel is reportedly planning to pack 12 graphics cores into its next-generation Panther Lake laptop chips. (WCCFTech)

    That will give them 50% more GPU hardware than the existing Lunar Lake series, which relies on fast on-package LPDDR5X memory to keep the graphics engine fed, and delivers close to AMD levels of graphics performance.

    Panther Lake will support regular DDR5 RAM so we'll see if this works or if it ends up hopelessly bandwidth-constrained.

    Reminder that this is the same chip that will only have four full-size CPU cores. Up to 16 in total, but the remainder will all be either E cores (efficiency, half as fast) or LP cores (low power, even slower).


  • A fire has destroyed the South Korean government's cloud storage system. They don't have a backup. (Korea JoongAng Daily)

    Government workers - 750,000 of them - were encouraged to store work documents on the government-run cloud service because... Nobody has ever made an adage of putting all your eggs in one basket, right?

    Just to be clear, this is for working documents for individual staff members; the usual fleet of government databases are stored separately and did not go up in smoke yet.


  • How did Amazon become so rubbish, and how to fix it? (The Guardian)

    It's a Cory Doctorow article, so we know the answer won't be specific antitrust action against the purported monopoly, but communism for everyone.
    This flywheel is the direct product of a radical legal theory that has had the world in its grip since the late 1970s. From the 1890s until the Jimmy Carter administration, US corporations' power was blunted by antitrust law, which treated large companies as threats simply because they were large.
    That claim is partly true. The period from the 1930s to the 1970s was indeed marked by radical antitrust actions, leading Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart to remark: The sole consistency that I can find [in U.S. merger law] is that in litigation under [the Clayton Act], the Government always wins.
    A rival - and frankly terrible – theory of antitrust law says that the only time a government should intervene against a monopolist is when it is sure that the monopolist is using its scale to raise prices or lower quality.
    This is obviously the correct approach and indeed the method used in prior decades was discarded because it was inconsistent, unproductive, and unconstitutional, things Mr Doctorow doesn't appear to consider a problem.


  • Opera wants you to pay $20 per month for its new AI browser. (Bleeping Computer)

    No.

    See how easy this is, Cory?


  • You know, maybe it is a bubble after all. (MSN)

    Ya think?


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Share and enjoy!

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Sunday, October 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 35 September 2025

Eternal Neptember Edition

Top Story

  • The Eternal September is finally over after 34 years as AOL shuts down its dialup service.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Looking around and seeing the current state of the internet, I think they might have left it running a little too long.


  • Speaking of which, how does my upgraded 500Mb internet feel?

    Exactly the same as before, one 100Mb, to be honest.  Moving from ADSL (I got about 16Mb down and 2Mb up) to a nominal 100/40 connection was a huge upgrade.  At least it was until I got hit by lightning and my modem exploded.

    Since I mostly look at (and work on) US-hosted sites, that trans-Pacific latency erases any obvious gains.  The new plan is cheaper, though, and the next step down goes all the way to 50/20 and only saves $2.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Makes me want to say, STOP BITING ME!

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