CAN I BE OF ASSISTANCE?

Saturday, August 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 August 2022

Stockholm Syndrome Anonymous Edition

Top Story

  • Right to jail, right away: How a crypto developer faked an ecosystem. (CoinDesk)

    Using eleven different names, one programmer built a multi-layered financial platform on top of the Solana blockchain. At its peak the Saber stablecoin exchange and the services built on top of it had a "total value locked" - TVL - around $7.5 billion, but that involved a lot of double counting.

    And no-one knows how much because one of those services - Cashio - got hacked and the whole thing imploded.
    Seven Saber ecosystem users told CoinDesk they felt abandoned by the Macalinao brothers. Some lost money in CASH tokens (the erstwhile stablecoin went to zero). Others say their crypto is stuck in derivative tokens issued by Sunny. One pseudonymous user, Brad_Garlic_Bread, said he lost around $300,000 across Sunny and Saber – "there's a lot of people worse off than me."

    The community assumes Ian is running the show "but no one knows for sure," Brad_Garlic_Bread said.

    He’s still trying to get Ian’s attention. On July 16, Brad asked if Ian "can pretend to be Surya [one of the fake identities] for like a day" to help Sunny Aggregator's investors recover locked tokens. Ian was answering questions in the Saber Discord; he skipped Brad’s.

    Other SUNNY token-holders asked Ian for clues about the yield aggregator's future. Saber is moving to Aptos – will Sunny do the same? They asked what became of Sunny's lead developer.

    There is a time to ask questions, and there is a time to file lawsuits and press criminal charges. If these idiots can't work out what time it is, I have little sympathy for them.

    More generally, though: If someone offers you an investment opportunity in a "stablecoin", it's a scam. If they promise 17% returns per month, as some of these ventures have done, then it's your own fault if you fall for it.


Tech News

  • More people who deserve what they got: Audiophiles are in an uproar after it turned out their precious vinyl was pressed from high-quality digital recordings rather than lower-fidelity analog master tapes. (Washington Post)

    They just forgot to mention that part. And their best customers are - unfortunately for them - crazy:
    "One of the reasons they want to excoriate MoFi is for lying," says Howarth. "The other part that bothers them is that they’ve been listening to digital all along and they’re highly invested in believing that any digital step will destroy their experience. And they’re wrong."
    If someone charges you thousands - or tens of thousands - of dollars for a hi-fi system that is audibly worse than a $500 shelf system, then it's your own fault if you fall for it.


  • Did the NSA and NIST deliberately sabotage cryptography standards? (Cr.yp.to)

    The post is rather rambling, but the upshot is they are not responding to FOIA requests and the author has filed suit to uncover what is going on with current efforts to establish quantum cryptography standards.


  • That's no moon. That's a kielbasa. (Vice)

    Actually in this case it was Proxima Centauri, or rather, not Proxima Centauri but a slice of chorizo.


  • Speaking of moons South Korea launched a lunar orbiter yesterday. (Nature)

    Using a SpaceX rocket and launching from Florida, but why keep a cow in the kitchen when you can get... I don't know where I'm going with that analogy.

    The Korean Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter will take a very leisurely trip the the Moon, arriving in orbit in December.


Disclaimer: I expect to arrive in orbit in December too.

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Friday, August 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 August 2022

Bats In My Face Edition

Top Story

  • AMD's Ryzen 7000 range looks set to go zoom.  (WCCFTech)

    The new top of the line 7950x has a base clock speed of 4.5GHz and a maximum speed of 5.7GHz.  The current 5950X has a much more sedate base speed of 3.4GHz and a top speed of 4.9GHz.

    Coupled with a 15% improvement in performance per clock that should result in some speedy chips.


Tech News

Not At All Tech News

  • How it started:




  • How it's going:




  • If you watch the video in that first one, then yes, that's who you think it is.


Disclaimer: Unless you think it's someone other than who it is, in which case it's not.

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Thursday, August 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 August 2022

So this server crashed while I was standing in line for security. Fortunately I had the audible alarm switched off and didn't have to explain why my bag was beeping.

Meanwhile:

- GitLab is planning to delete projects that are not updated for a year, which everyone agrees is insane.

- Robinhood is firing a quarter of its staff. If you have the option, take it, because the company is probably doomed anyway.

- My flight is boarding.

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Wednesday, August 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 August 2022

Short one today because I have finally lost my marbles.

Tech News



Disclaimer: It's like a regular oops, only quantum.

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Tuesday, August 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 August 2022

Coat Of Arms Edition

Top Story

  • Just on that "best small laptop" from yesterday: It's a great deal in the US ($1029) but crazy expensive in Australia ($2699).

    By comparison the Dell Inspiron 16 Plus - the top of the line model - is...  Oh.  Well, I guess they've fixed that then.  I'll wait for that to go on sale as well.  At US$1949 vs. A$3399 it's pretty close to what I'd expect (the Australian price includes sales tax) but it was A$2499 last week.


  • Congress has said the CHIPS Act is not a $50 billion cash grab for semiconductor companies.  (The Register)

    "Yeah, sure" say the semiconductor companies standing in line with their hands out.

Tech News

  • If you want a Radeon 6900XT now might be the time.  I'm seeing them cheaper than the 6800XT, 6800, 6750XT, and some models of 6700XT.  Of course there will be new cards coming along soon but pricing and availability of those is a big unknown right now.

    It's one of the cheapest cards around relative to recent prices.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Not cheap in absolute terms though.


  • Intel's Sapphire Rapids server CPUs are reportedly on their 12th revision ("respin") already and aren't even shipping yet.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's completely normal for a new chip to require a couple of hardware revisions before launch - expensive, but normal.  Twelve is unusual.


  • Is Winamp back to whip the llama's ass?  (Bleeping Computer)

    Maybe.  The project has been migrated from Visual Studio 2008 to VS 2019 so that they can actually compile it for modern operating systems, and there's a new release available to download.  Not a lot of new features yet though.


  • China's new 7nm chips aren't.  (The Register)

    All those numbers are marketing bullshit anyway, but this is a double helping.  China doesn't have access to the EUV (extreme ultraviolet) lithography equipment, or the components for that equipment, or the machines to make those components, so what they've done is applied older DUV processes and used multi-patterning to produce chips that they then slap a 7nm label on.

    Basically, what they have is Intel's 14nm+n, for some value of n that doesn't matter because increasing n doesn't change anything.


Disclaimer: I must go, my planet needs me.  Again.  Useless, the lot of them.

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Monday, August 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 August 2022

Wait What Edition

Top Story

  • The HP Pavilion Plus 14 could be the new best small laptop, taking over from the HP Pavilion Aero.  (PC Magazine)

    Fully kitted out it has 16GB of RAM (enough for most users, though I'd like a 32GB option), 1TB of SSD, a 2880x1800 90Hz OLED display, and an Intel i7-12700H with 6 Performance cores and 8 Efficiency cores.

    I/O consists of two USB-C ports (not Thunderbolt, but they support DisplayPort video and charging), two USB-A ports, HDMI, microSD, and a headphone jack.  For some reason they're all on the opposite side to my current Dell Inspiron 14 - well, except USB-A where it conveniently has one on each side.

    And it has the Four Essential Keys.

    That configuration will set you back $1029 in the US (on sale right now, normally $1229), or $2699 in Australia.

    Which...  Wow.  Shipping sure is expensive, huh?

    The reason I'd still consider it is that it's 30% faster than my current laptop single-threaded, and two and a half times as fast multi-threaded.  It's faster than my full-size Inspiron 16, and a lot lighter.


Tech News

  • Intel is planning to obsoleterate 12th generation laptops like the Pavilion Plus before the end of the year.  (Tom's Hardware)

    13th generation laptop chips were originally scheduled for early 2023, but have now reportedly been brought forward to this year.  That probably means we'll see laptops with the new chips announced by Christmas but good luck getting your hands on one before March.


  • Meanwhile Intel's Sapphire Rapids server chips, originally expected in Q3 2022, are now due in Q1 2023.  (WCCFTech)

    These are targeted at AMD's third generation Epyc server parts, but will ship months after AMD's fourth generation.


  • Nvidia's upcoming RTX 4070 will be 80% faster than the 3070 for the same price unless it won't.  (WCCFTech)

    There are three kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, and computer industry leaks.


  • Linus Torvalds is dogfooding Linux on an Arm-based Mac.  (Kernel.org)

    From the adage "eat your own dogfood", meaning use your own product to catch problems before your customers do.

    Linux has been ported to Apple's Arm-based systems with precisely zero help from Apple, who would rather it didn't exist.


  • They had to count them all: 200 holes in Luna's lithosphere.  (Live Science)

    The existence of the holes isn't the exciting part, though.  The exciting part is they're sheltered and maintain a fairly steady 17C (63F) meaning that we don't need to dig our own holes to construct a comfy Moonbase.

    Huge stockpiles of nuclear waste also entirely optional.


  • Did Anonymous follow through on their Twitter boast and actually hack Russian websites?  Apparently, yes.  (CNBC)

    An independent researcher worked with CNBC and found that 92% of Russian sites in a random survey had been compromised, and the data leaked by Anonymous seems to be legit.  

    In fact the complaint is that there is so much leaked data from Russian sites floating around that no-one has the time to even begin to analyse it all.

    Except probably China.


  • Hololive's Houshou Marine has crossed the two million subscriber mark - the first from the main Japanese branch and only the third worldwide to do so, and Omaru Polka has crossed the one million mark, becoming I think the 32nd Hololive talent with more than a million subscribers.

    Holostars EN seems to be settling in, with all passing the 100k mark in the first week.  (EN Gen 2 all achieved that as well, except thanks to YouTube they had to do it four times.)

    They don't seem to invest as much in rigging the Holostars models though.  If you compare how animated Bae's face is, for example, the Holostars generally look like bad marionettes.




Disclaimer: I'm adopted?!

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Geek

Dammit, Again

Bump the window of a WSL shell session and it stops scrolling, which means my server alarm no longer works.

I won't have time to do something about this stupid server until next weekend, I'm afraid, but I'll keep an eye on that WSL window.

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Sunday, July 31

Geek

Daily News Stuff 31 July 2022

Totally Not Edition

Top Story

Tech News

Disclaimer: I will not live in the pod.  I will not eat the bugs.  I will not be distracted by the - ooh, shiny.

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Art

Orbital Departures

So long, Astrogirl.


We know you have to leave us now
Though you might wish to stay;
The curtain falls, you take your bow,
And turn to walk away.

The cast and crew all gather round
You make your last encore
Theatre stills, there's not a sound
As you head for the door.

This time you've shared with us was brief -
So bright your star did burn.
Yet in our hearts lives this belief:
Some day you might return.

And so we'll keep watching the sky
Although it's just a maybe
And we won't say that it's "Goodbye",
But, "See you, Beeg Space Baby".

And even though you've spread your wings
And set out on your own,
No matter what the future brings
You're not alone -
We're not alone.
more...

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Saturday, July 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 July 2022

To Have And Have Not Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • If you were expecting to receive your Steam Deck early in 2023, Valve has news: Shipping dates have been moved to late 2022.  (Liliputing)

    Yes, that's two items of good news in one day.  No, I don't know what's going on either.


  • If you were looking for a small but capable Android phone the Asus Zenfone 9 might be it.  (Liliputing)

    It has a 5.9" screen, but it's almost all screen so it's almost exactly the same size as Google's 5" Pixel 2 from five years ago.


  • AMD's upcoming Ryzen 7600X beats Intel's 12900K by 22% on one obviously broken benchmark.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The number might be real, because apart from the general design improvements and increased clock speeds, Zen 4 has twice as much L2 cache as Zen 3.  Looking at just one benchmark you might find that it suddenly fits in cache and runs dramatically faster.

    Realistically, the 7600X could have about the same single-threaded performance as the 12900K, and probably a little less.  It will be much cheaper and use a fraction of the power, though; it's not intended at all to compete with Intel's high end chips.


  • Micron has announced plans to expand its US-based memory manufacturing.  (Tom's Hardware)

    I question the timing.  Well, no, I don't; they said quite openly that this is because of the CHIPS handout passed yesterday.


  • In another gift to AMD Intel is planning to raise prices by up to 20% across the board.  (WCCFTech)

    "Up to" being the operative term, they probably have a hundred people doing nothing but modelling how much they can get away with.  Intel knows that AMD can't supply the entire market, but on the other hand customers can just choose to wait, particularly with a RECESSION going on right now.


  • Gaming in a cold climate: Intel's fastest, hottest, most expensive desktop CPU mostly loses to AMD's much cheaper 5800X3D.  (AnandTech)

    The 12900KS peaks at 270W where the 5800X3D uses just 112W, so unless you also need to keep your igloo toasty warm, AMD is the better bet.

    On productivity tasks the 8+8 core 12900KS does handily beat the 8 core 5800X3D, but there you'd probably look to the 5950X on the AMD side - which is also much cheaper than the 12900KS, and also uses much less power, peaking at 142W.


Essential Minecraft Upgrade Video of the Day



Disclaimer: I saw Toasty Warm Igloos open for Siouxsie and the Banshees at the old Palladium back in '83.

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