Saturday, October 09
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Friday, October 08
Zoom Zoom Beep Beep Edition
Top Story
- Me: I need to clear my desk for these new monitors so I'll save money and choose three-day shipping, which will leave me time to-
Courier: Zoom zoom beep beep package for, uh, Pixy Misa?
Good work by Scorptec. Haven't ordered from them in a couple of years but likely will as I build out my new development lab.
- The Ampere Altra Max is the fastest server processor in the world - or kind of meh - depending on your workload. (AnandTech)
They've managed to cram 128 cores onto a single piece of silicon, where AMD's 64 core server CPUs are spread across 9 chiplets.
The downside of this design is that the entire chip is used for cores. AMD has room for 32MB of L2 cache and 256MB of L3 cache, where the Ampere chip has only 16MB total.
If your workload fits well in that cache, you get good performance. If not, it's going to suck.
With future chips built on a 5nm process, or with stacked memory similar to AMD's new designs, they might be able to produce a more balanced design that unleashes all those cores.
Tech News
- Samsung expects to be in production on their 2nm process node in 2025. (AnandTech)
3nm will be in production by the end of next year.
The company also announced a 17nm node.
This is the old reliable 28nm node updated with FinFET. That keeps a lot of the advantages (robust, cheap) while making chips smaller and reducing power.
It's not for leading-edge chips like CPUs and GPUs, but for microcontrollers, which are also in short supply.
- TSMC to USG: Bite me. (Tom's Hardware)
The US government demanded details of the types of products TSMC produces for each of its customers, inventories, lead times, and more.
TSMC told them to fuck off.
The list of questions the Commerce Department is asking is absurd, but typical of government overreach in all areas these days.
- Far Cry 6 requires 11GB of VRAM for its high resolution textures. (WCCFTech)
Nvidia's 3060 Ti, 3070, 3070 Ti, and 3080 all have less than 11GB of VRAM.
AMD's 6700 XT and up all have at least 12GB.
- Google and Apple are both being investigated by Japan over anti-competitive bullshit. (WCCFTech)
You know, the usual.
- Everything new is old again: Intel's new low power laptop CPUs will go back to two cores. (WCCFTech)
They'll call then 10 core parts, but that's eight slow cores and just two fast cores. AMD at the same power envelope has 8 fast cores
It comes down to pricing and how fast the slow cores are.
- CDNs don't contribute to copyright infringement just by the act of distributing your content. (Ars Technica)
A judge ruled in favour of Cloudflare in a case accusing them of contributory infringement.
- WSL for Windows 11 runs Linux GUI apps out of the box. (Ars Technica)
Although not Gnome, which will install, but dies on startup.
If I wanted to run Linux GUI apps this would present a reason to upgrade.
- Intel is no longer seeking a fab site in the UK after Brexit. (BBC)
Because continental Europe offers bigger bribes. CEO Pat Gelsinger was quite explicit on that point.
- Google is going all-in on censorship. Latest target is anyone not following the party line on global warming. (The Verge)
Anything mandatory is forbidden. Anything forbidden is mandatory.
- Stable coins should maybe, you know, actually be stable. (Bloomberg)
If you want to pin your cryptocurrency to real dollars, you goddam better have real dollars.
- Update: I found bamboo. And pandas. There's probably cocoa beans here somewhere. I've established a base camp and will build a panda sanctuary at some point.
- Update Two: Cocoa bean get. Operation Bean Farm commence.
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As two servers merge...
Another one opens.
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Thursday, October 07
110% DCI-P3 Edition
Top Story
- The difference between the Nazis and the Democrats is the Nazis only needed one Reichstag Fire.
The Facebook "whistleblower" is nothing of the sort. She's a paid lobbyist for government control of social media.
- Windows 11 is all about new hardware. (ZDNet)
Not about supporting new hardware. About getting you to buy new hardware.
Old system getting the job done just fine? Not anymore.
- And if you were planning to upgrade to Windows 11 on your shiny 16 core Ryzen system, you might want to hold off on that. (Tom's Hardware)
It's as much as 15% slower on Ryzen systems, particularly ones with lots of cores. There's a patch coming.
Tech News
- Linux now runs on Arm-based Macs. (Tom's Hardware)
Well, sort of. There's no installer, no networking, and video is a dumb frame buffer like this was still 1993, but if you somehow manage to get it on there it will in fact boot.
- Amazon says don't blame us, it wasn't our game that caused the smoke to come out of your $3000 video card. (Tom's Hardware)
Narrator: Yeah, it kind of was.
A stock 3090 running Amazon's New World can draw 370W just sitting at the menu.
- The PCIe 6 has reached a final draft. (Tom's Hardware)
This is four times as fast as PCIe 4 I'm not sure it's going to arrive in desktop systems any time soon, but I said that about PCI 5 and that will be shipping in about a month.
- The monitor I wanted - LG's 27UP850-W - came back in stock this morning and I ordered two. It all looks good on paper; 4K panel, 95% of DCI-P3 and 100% of sRGB. It's not calibrated for Adobe RGB but I don't do print work so that doesn't matter nearly as much.
It has USB-C power delivery so it should be able to power the smaller of my two laptops directly. The laptops each have USB-C and HDMI, so they'll both be connected to both monitors and I can switch as needed.
The plan is to retire my two current desktops entirely. The larger of my two laptops has a faster CPU and GPU, and more memory and SSD (but no internal hard disk) than either of the desktops. The smaller one is for rare occasions when I'm actually in the office; the rest of the time it's backup because I can't afford to be offline just because my main computer caught fire. And for single-threaded tasks it's also faster (by about 40%) than my current desktop systems.
Update: It seems they had at least three of them, because I can see that my order has been allocated at the warehouse and is now in dispatch, and the monitor is still in stock.
Update 2: And they've shipped. I didn't pay extra for 1-day shipping because I need to clear a space for them, but I should still get them Monday.
- Also just got a shipment of gluten-free snacks from Amazon, stuff that's not readily available from the local supermarkets. And a computer toolkit with about 100 different screwdriver heads. Also a pressure washer. I was looking at one for cleaning the back deck and they were on sale this week, so I threw it in the cart with the snacks.
- The community is a disgusting toxic cesspool said a 4chan user - referring to Twitch. (The Record)
And then leaked a 125GB file containing all of their source code.
- Now that the JP and EN servers have merged, HoloID is getting their own server as well. Doing a build relay to launch it starting at, hmm, 9PM tomorrow. I think they'll be doing the same as the EN branch, finishing the game by themselves and then linking it to the other two.
Meanwhile Mumei and Kronii from EN Gen 2 spent three hours happily lost on the JP server.
- Blockchains and deadlines don't mix.
- Me: Time for bed.
YouTube: Sora is exploring the HoloEN server.
Me: Sleep is for the weak.
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Wednesday, October 06
Everything Mandatory Is Forbidden Edition
Top Story
- Elizabeth Warren has a brilliant new solution for the growing threat of ransomware: Make it illegal to be a victim. (Bloomberg)
That's it. That's the story.
Tech News
- Do the new security features in Windows 11 slow game performance? Yes. (Tom's Hardware)
But only by around 5%. And that seems to apply equally to average frame rates and to frame consistency (99% frame rates), so it's not a serious impact.
- The Surface Pro 8 is better than the Surface Pro 7. (Tom's Hardware)
Also it has upgradable storage, so if you already have a laptop that comes with a 1TB M.2 2230 SSD like say the Dell Inspiron 16 Plus you can swap that into a low-end model instead of paying Microsoft $1000 for a $200 SSD.
- Intel is back, says Intel. (Tom's Hardware)
Intel added that its products that aren't shipping yet will close the gap with AMD's chips from last year, not that there ever was a gap, because there wasn't, but if there had been there wouldn't be.
- The simplest sorting algorithm ever. (Arxiv.org - PDF)
On the one hand, it's O(n2). On the other hand, it's just four lines of code in any reasonable programming language. On the third hand, it looks obviously incorrect. On the fourth hand it has been mathematically proven to work.
So it's the perfect answer for annoying tech job interviews.
- How IBM lost the cloud. (Protocol)
We use IBM Cloud at my day job. (And other cloud services too.)
The article is... Not wrong.
- If you are doing 50,000 Docker pulls per day and you're not Facebook or Netflix you are doing something wrong. Stop that. (Earthly)
WHAT ARE YOU IDIOTS DOING?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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This was found by the cPanel team, and though my cPanel server is running the affected release of Apache, the exploit doesn't seem to work there. Either the httpd config is secured (it only works if you are lacking other protections) or they pushed out their own patch before the vulnerability was announced and fixed upstream.
So I think I can stop panicking and go to bed. Thankfully that's the only Apache instance I have anywhere... Wait, there is another one, but it's not affected.
Also, /etc/passwd hasn't included passwords - even hashed ones - since the days of the Byzantine Empire, and /etc/shadow is not world-readable.
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Tuesday, October 05
The Fifth One Stayed Up Edition
Top Story
- Mark Zuckerberg and the terrible, horrible, no good very bad day. (Bloomberg)
All Facebook properties went down for six hours due to a BGP misconfiguration. When everything goes down at once across a giant cloud provider like that, it's usually BGP. Once you screw it up, you can lose remote access to the networking gear so you can't fix it, so a five minute solution can be stuck waiting for the right engineer to arrive on site with a serial cable.
The outage caused Facebook apps to go bananas with DNS requests which caused problems for Twitter, Google, Amazon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon...
The mee.nu server managed to crash all by itself. Actually, it's possible that it was related since I don't know why it keeps crashing. Just not probable.
- Don't trust SMS-based 2FA. (Motherboard)
Syniverse, which handles three quarters of a trillion text messages a year for 300 different mobile networks, was hacked.
Five years ago.
They discovered the breach in May and just disclosed this a week ago.
Everything sent from May 2016 to May 2021 was an open buffet for hackers.
- New South Wales has a new premier after Gladys B, the least worst of a bad lot, resigned due to an ongoing corruption investigation of her boyfriend or something. I don't know the details, it's petty stuff compared to what's happening elsewhere.
I was waiting to see how much worse the new guy would be, and... Well.
It's not the most elegant formulation of the concept of negative rights I've ever read, but to have a politician - particularly an Australian one right now - saying this is refreshing.
Tech News
- Facebook DNS lookup returning SERVFAIL. (Cloudflare)
An explanation of just how Facebook shot itself in both feet and locked its keys in the car at the same time.
- What to expect with Windows 11. (AnandTech)
The big day is here, and it's kind of meh.
- I mean, it's not actively terrible. (Tom's Hardware)
Just, y'know, kind of meh.
- Android 12 is out too. (Thurrott.com)
6 was the last version that mattered since it brought us adoptable storage - that is, you can take a 32GB device, add a 128GB microSD card, and it works as a single pool of 160GB of storage.
Of course, the major device manufacturers and carriers hated this and immediately broke support.
- What happens when Google decides to break the web. (The Register)
What happens is the web gets broken.
- RaidForums - a site where people buy and sell the personal data that is increasingly less aptly named - or not, as we'll get to in a moment - went abruptly if briefly offline after its domain name was yanked. (Bleeping Computer)
It's back up for now on another domain.
- When I said or not, this is what to which I referred.
Hey! This illegal data you sold me is fake! I want a refund!
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PRGuy17 on Twitter is a cut-price Goebbels to Dan Andrews' dime store Hitler. He claims that lockdowns in Victoria saved 120,000 lives, which would require a death rate two to ten times that of the worst-affected US states to be remotely possible, depending on exactly how his fiction is meant to be interpreted.
This thread - it's a long thread - analyses the numbers and figures that the lockdowns in effect killed 52,000 people.
New South Wales already had the least worst state government in Australia - not a high bar. Sign that it might actually get better rather than worse with the change of leadership?
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Monday, October 04
Bite Me Edition
Top Story
- New research suggest that the Wuhan Bat Flu may have come from the Wuhan Bat Market and not from the Wuhan Bat Virus Factory across the road according to a paper published by the Wuhan Bat Virus Factory. (LA Times / Yahoo News)
A second paper from France that - the article kind of slides past this - has not actually been published anywhere concurs.
The article is 90% just the LA Times sniping at CNN, but that has a certain charm in itself.
Tech News
- M1X Arm-based MacBook Pros may be arriving later this month. (WCCFTech)
The rumoured specs are inviting. Shame about the operating system, the price, the fact that it's all glued together into an unmaintainable brick, and that the company behind it basically just plain sucks.
- The chip shortage will continue until morale improves. (ZDNet)
If you're waiting for prices to come down then congratulations, you can keep right on doing that.
- Why carmakers can't just update to newer chips. (Jalopnik)
In short: Because cars are expected to work.
- Ransomware gangs are getting ripped off by rival gangs that are undercutting their prices. (ZDNet)
The free market at work.
- JMS is working on a reboot of Babylon 5. (Variety)
Look, it's his baby, and the original production was, shall we say, not untroubled. If he wants to try making it again, and he has funding, let's see how it comes out.
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Sunday, October 03
There are suddenly no live HoloEN Minecraft streams after a veritable avalanche the last couple of weeks. I think it's specifically because they're doing the server update today to link EN and JP, but it's the first time in a while that I've needed to check for content rather than just hitting my Holodex search and playing whatever was live. IRyS alone has streamed 18 hours of Minecraft this week.
I might catch up on the rest of Pekora's antics now.
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