WOULD YOU CARE FOR SOME TEA?

Friday, December 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 December 2025

Brown And Out In Beverley Hills Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • Want a high-resolution monitor but still need fast refresh rates for games?  Asus' new XG27JG has you covered.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's a 5k model which is good enough for almost anything, and runs at 180Hz which is also good enough for almost anything.  But if you drop the resolution to 2560x1440 you can boost the refresh rate to 330Hz, which is more than enough.

    HDR 600 and 97% of DCI-P3 colour.  One small catch: It doesn't work at its full resolution and refresh rate on an Nvidia 4000-series card, because those only support an older version of DisplayPort.  Previous generation Radeon 7000 series cards do work, as do all current-generation cards.

    Around $835.


  • Buying 1152GB of Frakenram for $8000.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The user put an offer in on a second-hand custom Nvidia AI system that originally cost around $80,000 and managed to get it working.


  • Over 10,000 Docker Hub images have been found leaking credentials.  (Bleeping Computer)

    It's over 10,000!


Musical Interlude

[ytlite=AAZQaYKZMTI[




Disclaimer: Buggrit, buggrem, millennium hand and shrimp!

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Thursday, December 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 December 2025

Elimination Of Process Edition

Top Story

  • Had a thunderstorm roll through last night and some of the lightning strikes came pretty close, but it passed without event.  Or so I thought.

    When I went to turn off the lights in the kitchen, it got very dark and very quiet.  The only light remaining was the clock on the oven; everything else had lost power.  And when I went downstairs to reset the breaker, it wasn't having it.

    Put the fridge on an extension cord overnight - the rest of the house had power - and left it for the morning.

    This morning I unplugged absolutely everything, reset the breaker - which now accepted its fate - and plugged things in again one at a time, waiting for it all to go phut.

    Got down to the bar fridge and the dishwasher, which are on the same plug somehow.  Took a deep breath, and plugged them in.

    They work.  Everything works.

    I dunno.


  • Operation Bluebird wants to steal Twitter's trademark from Twitter.  (The Verge)  (archive site)
    We have built a social platform that will look familiar to those that used legacy Twitter, but with new tools that provide a safer experience and empower the user to decide what types of content they engage in.
    It's a hugbox for crazies.

    Like Bluesky.  But we already have Bluesky.  For now; it's dying pretty swiftly.
    Intellectual property attorney Douglas Masters says he is doubtful that Operation Bluebird’s claims will be successful. "I don’t know that the record ultimately will show that even though they [X Corp.] switched to X, that they intended to give up all of their commercial use and rights in the word Twitter," Masters tells The Verge.
    Well, yeah.  You can go to twitter.com right now and it works.



Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: And more, much more than this, I did it my way, or no way at all.

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Wednesday, December 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 December 2025

Fascism R Us Edition

Top Story

  • Australia is joining a wave of fascist dictatorships around the globe in regulating how kids spend their time online.  (The Verge)  (archive site)

    I may have changed a word or two there.
    On December 10th, most major social media platforms will boot children in the country under 16 from their services. Under the law, social platforms will also need to implement a "reasonable" age verification method there - while critics argue kids will get around it anyway.
    The critics are, of course, correct.  The age restrictions are about as robust as The Verge's paywall.

    And VPN providers are having a field day.

    Maybe they put the idiots in Canberra up to it.


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Go or go not, there is no good.

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Tuesday, December 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 December 2025

Ouchie Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Ow.

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Monday, December 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 December 2025

Do Not Edition

Top Story

  • Windows 11 25H2 is entering a broader rollout phase now that 25H2 is just about over.  (Hot Hardware)
    The broad rollout of the Windows 11 25H2 update has started, and users who want to fast-track it are being referred to the relevant update options in a new blog post on Microsoft's site.  Windows 11 25H2 comes with an assortment of additional Copilot+ related features (exclusive to those with sufficiently-powerful NPUs rated for 40+ TOPS) and improved Wi-Fi 7 support for enterprise users, among other features.
    My latest PC - which looks set to arrive tomorrow - doesn't have an NPU at all.

    How...  Unfortunate.
    Key improvements for all users include several fixes and additions made to Task Manager, Windows Search, and the Windows UI in general.  Task Manager uses fewer resources and properly reads RAM speed in MT/s instead of MHz, for example, while the Windows UI now makes it easier to shrink the size of taskbar buttons.  As Windows 11 continues to evolve into an "agentic OS", support for AI features outside of Copilot+ PCs is also being added with Windows 11 25H2, including the ability to use AI features within File Explorer.
    I don't mean to be rude, but have they tried penicillin?


  • In completely unrelated news, I just bought a copy of Windows 10 Enterprise IoT LTSC, the version that's supported through to 2032 and contains no AI features of any sort.  While the Ryzen 255 processor in this system is nominally new, it's just a rebadged Ryzen 8745H, which is just a Ryzen 7840H with a new sticker, so Windows 10 should run just fine.  It doesn't have any efficiency cores either, which are something the Windows 10 scheduler can trip over.

    Since Microsoft is strangely cold towards individuals who want to install the IoT edition, I downloaded the ISO from the Internet Archive and verified the hash on another helpful website.

    Update: What the heck.  That mini-PC has just been discounted almost back to the price I paid - just $2 more.  I'll try it out when it arrives tomorrow and give serious thought to buying another one.  Assuming this latest discount lasts that long.


Tech News

Nopert Interlude



I mentioned this discovery not long ago, and here's a physical demonstration.  Probably.

It's called a Nopert because it's the first discovered shape that does not have the "Rupert property" of being able to pass through a hollowed out version of itself at a suitable angle, with the exception of the sphere which is a degenerate case because presents the same cross-section at every orientation by definition.


Musical Interlude


The music is the opening theme for Hololive Indonesia's zombie girl Kureiji Ollie.  Fan Kabedondere added the lyrics.  Ollie herself provided the screeching.  She's calmed down since.  Just a little.



Disclaimer: DON'T TELL ME I'VE CALMED DOWN!

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Sunday, December 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 December 2025

Ionosphere Or Bust Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude



Yes, it's that music from there.





Disclaimer: Doot.

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Saturday, December 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 December 2025

SSL Mildcard Edition

Top Story

  • I bought myself a mini-PC for Christmas.  Minisforum X1-255.

    Not because I particularly need a new system, though this one is a lot better than my two existing Beelink units (twice the speed, memory*, and storage).

    Mostly because it comes with 64GB of RAM and only costs $50 more than the RAM alone.

    Looks like it's completely sold out in the US already.

    Update: Placed the order just four hours ago and it's already shipped. Should have it by Friday.

    Update Two: And the price increased by 25% overnight.  After I bought it, though.


    * The existing units only came with 8GB of RAM, so as shipped the new one has eight times as much.  But I already had RAM for those left over from upgrading my laptops, back when that was cheap to do.


  • AI gadget makers are chasing problems that don't exist, says the CEO of AI gadget maker Logitech.  (Tom's Hardware)

    That's a little unfair.  Logitech's webcams use discriminative AI to keep you centered in the frame, for example, and to mute background noise.  Other companies, though:
    Faber argued that the wave of AI-first gadgets released over the past year remains untethered from a clear purpose.  Products such as the Humane AI Pin - acquired by HP in February - and Rabbit R1 launched with the promise of replacing parts of the smartphone experience, only to draw criticism for slow performance, limited features, and subscription-driven pricing.
    The upcoming unnamed product from OpenAI looks to be another screenless phone piece of overpriced junk.
    Their reception has shaped the debate around whether a general-purpose assistant belongs in a dedicated device at all.  According to Faber, these early efforts solve little that a phone or PC cannot already handle, which is a view that has gained traction as both devices incorporate larger on-device models and tighter integrations with cloud assistants.
    As annoying as AI is, dedicated AI devices are even worse.


Tech News


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Saturday morning?

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Blog

Oops

Got a reminder yesterday that I needed to update the server's SSL certificate.

I was tired last night so I left it to the morning.

I was busy this morning so I...  Kind of just forgot.

Anyway, it's fixed now.

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Friday, December 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 December 2025

Please Not Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • Finding that random person in Nebraska.  (Stacktower)

    XKCD comic 2347 highlighted a key weakness of modern computer systems: Everything depends on "a project some random person in Nebraska has been thanklessly maintaining since 2003".

    Stacktower is a Python library that inspects your own tech stack and draws a similar diagram and highlights the individual thankless maintainers, so that you can thank them.


  • Teehee.  They said "end to end".  (Tech Crunch)
    Earlier this year, home goods maker Kohler launched a smart camera called the Dekoda that attaches to your toilet bowl, takes pictures of it, and analyzes the images to advise you on your gut health.
    I can see where this is going to end.
    The security researcher also pointed out that given Kohler can access customers' data on its servers, it's possible Kohler is using customers' bowl pictures to train AI.
    Why?
    Citing another response from the company representative, the researcher was told that Kohler's "algorithms are trained on de-identified data only."
    No.
    The Dekoda costs $599 plus a mandatory subscription of at least $6.99 per month.
    It's even cheaper if you don't buy it.


  • Russia has banned Roblox.  (CBC)
    On Wednesday, Roskomnadzor blocked access to the U.S. children's gaming platform Roblox, accusing it of distributing extremist materials and "LGBT propaganda." Roskomnadzor further said Roblox was "rife with inappropriate content that can negatively impact the spiritual and moral development of children."
    Well, yes.


  • The iPhone air has depreciated by 50% in ten weeks.  (WCCFTech)

    It's like backwards DRAM.


  • A critical flaw in React and Next.js lets hackers execute code on your servers if you're a fucking idiot.  (Bleeping Computer)

    The problem with making JavaScript run on servers is that then JavaScript programmers will run code on servers.

    The result is exactly what everyone predicted.


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: A what?

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Thursday, December 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 December 2025

Deplatformed and Backported Edition

Top Story

Tech News


Anime Update

A Wild Last Boss Appeared started out a cut above the usual reincarnated-in-the-game-world isekai slop, and continues to stand out, with two reveals in the latest episode which both offer novel twists and suggest that the author actually thought about things.  (And actually a third one, which feels like and I'll just throw this in as well while I'm at it.)

Wikipedia seems confused as to how many volumes there are of the light novels and manga, and Amazon has trashed its Japanese site for foreign visitors, so I have no idea where it goes from here.



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: You rush a miracle man, you get rotten miracles.

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