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Tuesday, October 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 October 2023

Escape From New York Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Disclaimer: If we outlaw outlaws, only outlaws will have outlaws.

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Monday, October 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 October 2023

Sheeps Edition

Top Story

  • Minecraft has sold over 300 million copies.  (The Verge)

    That's a lot.  That's a lot of a lot.

    Also, with Henya pushing the crabs and Pina Pengin naturally enough backing the penguins, the Minecraft userbase voted for the armadillo to be the next animal added to the game.

    Seriously, what are they going to do?  There aren't any 18 wheelers for them to run under.


Tech News


Arr Music Video of the Day



Disclaimer: Unless you install the Create mod anyway.

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Sunday, October 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 October 2023

Not A New Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Disclaimer: There wolf.  There castle.

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Saturday, October 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 October 2023

Corporate Slave Cabbage Edition

Top Story

  • NASA has just launched its Psyche mission, an aptly named probe to explore the asteroid Psyche.  (Ars Technica)

    Sent into space atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy - and in fairness, it's much better for NASA to build just the spacecraft and leave the launches to private industry - the mission is expected to total $1.4 billion between the craft, the launch vehicle, and eight years of operations.

    The estimated value of the minerals on Psyche itself is in the range of $10 quintillion.  That's 400,000 years of the US GDP, or about 7 trillion times the cost of this mission.

    Say what you will about government waste; this one would appear to be justified.


Tech News



Not Even Remotely Tech News

The referendum for "The Voice", a bid to enshrine racism into the constitution of Australia, was held today.

It went worse than I could ever have hoped.

It needed to win a majority of the vote nationwide plus a majority of states to pass.

It seems to have lost in every single state - even communist Victoria.

Update: Oof.

http://ai.mee.nu/images/VeryverynoS.png

Also, Aussie Jacinta (Price) - a conservative Aboriginal Senator - is infinitely preferable to Kiwi Jacinda (Ardern).  I hope to see her Prime Minister some day.


Disclaimer: Perhaps in exchange for some of those little pancakes?

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Friday, October 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 October 2023

Poopy Edition

Top Story

  • In which The Verge tries to explain a joke.  (The Verge)

    So Rick and Morty is back with season seven, though without series co-creator and the voice of both Rick and Morty, Justin Roiland, who got Me Too'd.

    Given the way the show was headed in seasons four through six - straight downward - this is less of a loss than it might have been otherwise.

    But that's not the point here.  The point is that The Verge spends eight paragraphs discussing an episode called How Poopy Got His Poop Back and makes it sound about as entertaining as a simultaneous barium enema and double root canal.

    It's a talent.  Of some sort.


Tech News



Disclaimer: Wait, the entire thing is made of blancmange?

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Thursday, October 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 October 2023

Alan Moore Hornet Nest Edition

Top Story

  • CRISPR skimmed chicken: Genetically engineering chickens to not get sick and die by the millions any time a sparrow sneezes in Mongolia.  (New York Times)  (archive site)

    There are three specific proteins that the H5N1 virus hijacks in chickens to reproduce itself, and the scientists adjusted each one slightly so that it couldn't do that.

    Result: Chickens that don't catch colds.

    Or almost.  They've grown healthy chickens with any one of those genes altered, which are highly resistant to the flu, but not yet with all three genes updated; that's only been tested in cell cultures.

    Still great progress, and I'm expecting in five years or so we'll see these on the supermarket shelves, and shortly after that we'll be told that somehow they got pangolin genes in the mix and we all have to be buried alive for our own good.


Tech News


Disclaimer: Discontinue use of Daily News Stuff if any of the following occurs:
* Reboots
* Dropped connections
* Infuriating Twitter posts
* Random cat videos
* Hard drive failure
* Windows 11
* Immanentisation of the Eschaton
* Bats
* Skin irritation
* Sudden total existence fai

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Wednesday, October 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 October 2023

Remember the Lettuce Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • A tale of two websites:

    Sam Bankman-Fried was a terrible boyfriend.  (The Verge)
    I’ve got some shitty ex-boyfriends, but none of them made me the CEO of their sin-eater hedge fund while refusing to give me equity and bragging about how there was a 5 percent chance they’d become the President of the United States, you know? Absolutely counting my blessings after Caroline Ellison’s first day on the stand. I wonder how many of the nine women on the jury are doing the same.
    That's how the Teen Vogue of the tech world sees the story.

    The fraud was in the code.  (Molly White)
    Much of the conversation revolved around the allow_negative flag that was introduced to the FTX codebase on August 1, 2019. Wang testified that Sam Bankman-Fried had asked him and Nishad Singh (former FTX engineering director, who has also pleaded guilty) to add the flag. Github screenshots show Singh making a code change to add the column in the database, and adding logic to exempt accounts with the flag from checks that would otherwise determine if they had sufficient funds to withdraw.
    Same story, except actually covering the story and showing the precise code that allowed Caroline Ellison to withdraw infinite amounts of money from customer funds.

    Less of the former, more of the latter, s'il vous plait.


  • An 18th century Unicode.  (Public Domain Review)

    Pantographia, published the same year the Rosetta Stone was discovered, was an attempt to collect all the world's written languages - 164 alphabets in all.

    And since that was more than two hundred years ago, there's a link on that page to download it as a PDF.

    Very, very slowly for some reason, but there is a link.


  • A multifault earthquake threat for the Seattle metropolitan region revealed by mass tree mortality.  (Science)
    Here, we use dendrochronological dating and a cosmogenic radiation pulse to constrain the death dates of earthquake-killed trees along two adjacent fault zones near Seattle, Washington to within a 6-month period between the 923 and 924 CE growing seasons. Our narrow constraints conclusively show linked rupturing that occurred either as a single composite earthquake of estimated magnitude 7.8 or as a closely spaced double earthquake sequence with estimated magnitudes of 7.5 and 7.3.
    Pretty neat.  The article discusses how they cross-linked tree cores in the Seattle area with precisely dated samples from other regions to narrow down a catastrophic event a thousand years ago to within six months.

    And rather less neatly notes that Seattle is simply not built to withstand an earthquake of magnitude 7.8, and if one hit today the city would basically cease to exist.


Disclaimer: Which would be bad.

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Tuesday, October 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 October 2023

Oh No Edition

Top Story

  • John Riccitiello is now the former CEO of Unity.  (The Verge)

    Whether the company will survive its self-inflicted injuries remains to be seen, but unlike Hasbro it at least has had the sense to go look in the bathroom cabinet for Dettol and Band Aids.


Tech News


Disclaimer: I made a hat.

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Monday, October 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 October 2023

Norm Newmal Edition

Top Story

  • JavaScript has no place on the server part one: The barrel file debacle.  (Marvin H)

    After all these years, it's still a toxic hellbrew of bad decisions.  Not so much JavaScript in itself, which is merely eh, as the choice to use it in server applications where it is obviously completely unsuitable, to do so via an event loop, which is obviously completely unsuitable, and then to add the worst package manager ever devised, a software version of the Torment Nexus from the classic sci-fi novel Don't Create the Torment Nexus.*

    * Which doesn't exist, but should.


  • JavaScript has no place on the server part two: The hidden performance cost of Node.js.  (Software at Scale)

    Here the problem is trying to implement GraphQL naively in an event loop architecture, which creates a cascade of asynchronous requests - called promises - which totally gum up the works.

    This problem was solved all the way back in 1961, before the geniuses behind Node.js decided to inflict it on a whole new generation.


Tech News

  • Fine tuning Mistral-7B on Python code with a single GPU.  (Weights & Biases)

    Large Language Models have a lot of problems, stemming from the facts that they don't know anything except what words go together, they're promoted by frauds, and they are actively hamstrung from doing anything but reciting woke bullshit.

    But Mistral-7B is completely open-source and you can download it and do anything you like.  And if what you like is programming, well, it turns out you can get a long way in programming just by knowing what words go together.

    It helps because you can automatically check if the AI got the basics right - does the code it generated even compile, for example?

    I'm still more interested in using AI for testing than for generating code, but having a generally good LLM that is free to everyone and small enough to run on commodity hardware is a win either way.

Unrelated

647 MIPS on a 4GHz Zen 3 (Ryzen 5625U).  Good enough, particularly since that's with overflow checking enabled.  The performance impact of that was tiny; small enough that I had to test and confirm it was really doing the check.

About 20x faster than Python (though 3x slower than PyPy). 

And 6x faster than the same VM written in Nim, so I guess I won't be using Nim for this.


Disclaimer: Oh not.

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