CAN I BE OF ASSISTANCE?
Shut it!

Wednesday, July 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 July 2021

Reschedule Everything Edition

Top Story

  • Australia is getting a shiny new computer.  (Tom's Hardware)

    200,000 cores, 750 next-gen graphics cards (with 128GB of RAM each), 548TB of total RAM, 2.7PB of SSD, and over 100PB of total storage.

    It will be used for radio astronomy and Minecraft.  Well, mostly Minecraft.


  • Hololive announced their new English-branch VSinger - that is, a real human vocalist using a virtual avatar - about seven hours ago.

    Her name is IRyS - her equivalent in the Japanese branch is called AZKi, so there's something of a theme there - and she has 122,000 subscribers on YouTube so far.

    Without actually streaming anything - she won't debut until Sunday.

    100,000 subscribers used to be a lot for a vtuber.  Nijisanji's new EN branch all hit it in their first month; Hololive talents now hit it before their channels go live.

    Meanwhile, Twitter being Twitter has restricted her account.


  • And now YouTube has demonetised Pikamee.

    Pikamee.

    If they don't fix that quick smart, we riot.

    Update: They fixed it quick smart.  For once.  Riot cancelled.





Anime of the day is Jungle wa Itsumo Hale nochi Guu, a.k.a Haré+Guu, from 2001 - with two OVA sequel series in 2003 and 2004.

It's the story of Guu, the cute little pink-haired girl in the credits, who is basically Cthulhu, and Hale, a ten-year-old boy who is the only person who seems to notice that she literally eats people.

Well, not eat, exactly.  Swallow, yes.  But not eat, as such.

This one is just a tiny bit odd.

Tech News

  • Lies, damned lies, and benchmarks: Oppo is doing weird shit, and not always to their advantage.  (AnandTech)

    Apps don't always load on the fastest X1 core - I don't know of any phone CPU that has more than one of Arm's new X1 core - and don't always even run the A78 cores at full speed.  In some cases Vivaldi can run six times faster than Chrome even though they use the same rendering engine.

    It looks like an error in the power vs. performance profile of the phone, that it's trying to reduce power of apps where it should be maximising performance.  Phones have been caught cheating benchmark results before by detecting that a benchmark was running and turning everything up to max just short of melting the phone entirely.

    But this is the opposite of that.


  • JEDI has been cancelled.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The Trump Administration awarded a major contract to Microsoft to run cloud services for the DoD, as the obviously least sucky option.

    New administration, new priorities.  Since the goal now is to make everything suck as much as humanly possible, the deal has been cancelled and will now be split up into an obviously unworkable hell-brew spread across every cloud platform in existence.


  • There's a big bug in Windows printing.  (WCCFTech)

    If you have remote printing enabled, and attacker on your network can take over your computer - bad enough if you're just sharing a printer from your PC, a lot worse if it's an enterprise server.

    Patches are out now for Windows 7, 8, 10, and Server 2008 R2, 2012, and 2019.

    If you're running something older than 7, you probably still have the bug, but there's not going to be a patch.


  • An 800GB Optane P5800X costs $2044.  (Serve the Home)

    It is fast, yes.  But for that price you can get a 6.4TB Micron 9300 Max, with an 11 microsecond average write latency - barely slower than the Optane - and a 37PB total write endurance.

    The big difference is in read latency, but given the price difference it might be better to save your money and add 256GB of RAM instead.


  • WSL2 on Windows 11 vs Ubuntu.  (Phoronix)

    I use WSL - Linux on Windows - every day.  Its a big upgrade over Cygwin, since it's real Linux, and you can just download regular Linux apps and run them.

    These benchmarks show that if you're not doing a lot of I/O, it's basically indistinguishable from the real thing.

    If you are doing a lot of I/O, though...  Not so hard to distinguish.


  • The US has reserved the right to consider sending a strongly-worded letter to Russia if it keeps attacking US companies.  (Bleeping Computer)

    Maybe Joe can make another list.


Stacy's Mom's Anime Music Video of the Day



Nearly forgot about this one, which would have been a crime.



Disclaimer: Mep.

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Tuesday, July 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 July 2021

Faster Than The Bear Edition

Top Story


Anime of the day is Keroro Gunso, a.k.a Sgt. Frog, which ran for 358 episodes and five movies from 2004 to 2011.  The manga for it in fact is still running today.

It tells the story of an alien invasion that doesn't go entirely as the conquerors had planned, when the invasion force turns out to be five small frogs who are bullied into submission by a teenage girl.


Tech News



Disclaimer: Fuck Google in particular, twice.  After I secure supplies of amoxicillin.

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Monday, July 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 July 2021

All The Minecrafts Edition

Tech News

  • The Russian ransomware attack that had hit over five hundred companies a couple of days ago has now expanded to thousands of victims in 17 countries.  (AP)

    The attack vector was managed services provider Kaseya.  (Who?)

    I look on all such companies as disease vectors.  I've had to integrate with some of them to meet customer requirements but those integrations live in their own little containers with tightly controlled access.

    Coincidentally, REvil, the group behind the attack, is also a managed services provider - of ransomware.


  • Speaking of vtubers trying to kill me with Minecraft streams, today's lineup included Pomu and Elira from Nijisanji EN, Vyolfers, Mooyü, Nymroot, and Hyanna from VMN having a 4th of July fireworks party, Pina Pengin from PRISM, Ollie from Hololive Indonesia - live right now - and shortly Pikamee from VOMS.

    All in English, or at least multilingual.



Anime of the day is Hellsing from 2001 - the original TV series, not the later OVA series, which I haven't seen.

The series follows the work of the Hellsing Organisation, led by Sir Integra Hellsing - the blond woman you can see ranting in the opening credits, Japan still not quite grasping British titles - to defend Britain against the depredations of the Catholic Church, or at least rogue elements thereof.

It also features Alucard - never much of a pseudonym, that - and Seras Victoria, a policewoman-turned-vampire who carries first a .50 sniper rifle, and later, when things start to get rough, twin 30mm autocannons.

Hellsing Ultimate is supposed to be a better and more complete adaptation, but the animation in the clips I've seen drove me forcibly away.



Tech News

  • How to install Windows 11 in a virtual machine.  (Tom's Hardware)

    That's not a bad idea.  It's very tempting, in fact.

    I'm not sure how well virtualisation handles gaming these days, not that I have time to play anything more demanding than Minecraft - and the last few weeks, not that either.


  • Qualcomm might move to TSMC's 4nm node for the Snapdragon 895+.  (WCCFTech)

    The other reason the 888+ is barely faster than the 888 is that Samsung hasn't made much with its fab technology in the past year.  Qualcomm is using Samsung because - like Nvidia - they waited too long to book capacity at TSMC.

    Not that Samsung is bad; they're just a year or so behind the cutting edge.


  • Well, you can't prove it wasn't a cosmic ray.  (Google Groups)

    An SSL certificate chain got derailed by a single-bit error in one of the entries.  The hashes used to verify this have no built-in error-checking or redundancy; that's expected to be handled at lower levels.  So if a bit flip happens in a way to escape those checks, the whole thing falls over.

    Well, one copy of the whole thing.  There are also multiple copies.


  • PCIe 5.0 SSDs are on their way.  (Serve the Home)

    For servers, anyway.  Not for you just yet.

    One of the use cases is for redundant backplane links for high availability.  These drives can provide two x2 connections to different controllers, each as fast as an existing PCIe 4.0 x4 interface.


  • Windows on Arm is not great.  (ZDNet)

    Microsoft's support is half-hearted, and Qualcomm's hardware is half-assed.  And the devices are not designed to be fixed when they go wrong.

    Like Apple, only somehow worse.


  • Rent seekers gonna rent seek.  (TorrentFreak)

    "The Smart Fund is not a tax, as a tax would be paid to government.  It's good old-fashioned extortion," The Smart Fund says.


Making Bacon Pancakes Anime Music Video of the Day





Disclaimer: Part of this complete breakfast.

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Sunday, July 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 July 2021

You Know, The Thing Day Edition

Top Story

  • Happy Independence Day, everyone!


  • Windows 11 is all about security.  (PC Perspective)

    For Microsoft.  Not for you.

    It's kind of refreshing to see a blatant money grab instead of a company refusing to take your business because you once were within 400 yards of someone who expressed an unapproved opinion.

    Because when a corporation only cares about money, the problem can be solved with money.





Anime of the day is Tenshi na Konamaiki from 2002.  It's the story of Megumi - voiced by Megumi Hayashibara - who is a boy cursed by a demon and changed into a beautiful girl.

Who still acts like a boy, and punches the crap out of anyone who gets too familiar.

Megumi and her friends are trying to track down the demon to get her uncursed, not that anyone entirely believes her.  And in fact the story is a bit more complicated than she is letting on.

It's not the best quality video clip, unfortunately.  I have a number of favourites I've put off posting because there aren't good clips available of the opening credits.  Sometimes it's just the video quality of older shows that haven't had a digital re-release, but most often it's Japanese record labels deleting everything on sight.



Tech News

  • Samsung has a new small tablet - the 8.7" 2021 A7 Lite.  (Tom's Guide)

    8.7" is rather pushing the boundary of small, and this is heavier than my 2013 Nexus 7.  That's not the problem, though; it's still smaller and lighter than my 10.4" Lenovo tablet

    It uses the same CPU as the Lenovo - an 8-core A53 - so it's not super fast.  But it's adequate.  That's not the problem either.

    It's not sold in Australia, so I have to import it, which gives a budget tablet a mid-range price.  That's still not the problem.

    The problem is that it has a 1340x800 screen.  That's essentially the same as the original model of the Nexus 7 from 2012, and everyone remarked how much better the 2013 model was with its 1920x1200 screen.

    That resolution is not good enough for reading books or web pages on a screen that size.  The defects in the typography are very noticeable.  You can maybe get away with it on a 6" phone screen, but I went with the Oppo A91 specifically because it had a 1080p screen and most of the competition at that price point didn't.

    Though they did last year.  Things have gone backwards.

    Given the cost of importing this, I might as well get Lenovo's 8" tablet at less than half the price.  It also has an inadequate screen, but at least it's priced to match.


  • If you can't get a graphics card right now the Ryzen 5700G provides the fastest desktop integrated graphics around without skimping on the CPU.  (Tom's Hardware)

    You can't get the 5700G either, or not as a retail part.  It's shipping in prebuilt systems already and should be available as a retail component next month.

    Really looking forward to seeing what Rembrandt can do.  The 5700G can play current games on low settings at reasonable frame rates - but at 720p.  Rembrandt updates the graphics hardware to RDNA2 - the same as used by the current Xbox and PlayStation - and supports DDR5 RAM.  That should deliver the same frame rates as the 5700G but at 1080p.


  • What's the difference between the Snapdragon 888 Plus and the original Snapdragon 888?  (WCCFTech)

    In short, one CPU core is 5% faster.

    Yay.


  • Qualcomm is going back to custom CPU cores.  (Thurrott.com)

    They shut down their internal CPU design team after the Snapdragon 820 - which wasn't great - and have been sticking to Arm designs since then.

    Recently they bought Arm server chip startup Nuvia for $1.4 billion.  (Android Authority)  Nuvia was founded by two of the top CPU architects at Apple, and Apple's CPU designs - while not as good as the tame Apple press likes to claim - are genuinely good.

    I hope Qualcomm succeeds with this.  The quality of Apple's hardware designs is irrelevant to me because their software environment is locked down to the point where I can't use it for the work I do.  Getting something equally good out into the open market and running Linux, or even Windows, will be a big advance.

    I questioned the move at the time, but if the best they can do with a mid-cycle refresh using Arm's core designs is a 5% speed bump, you can see why it was worth over a billion bucks.


  • Intel might be bringing their next-gen Sapphire Rapids server platform to the desktop as well.  (WCCFTech)

    Right now Intel has abandoned the workstation market to AMD.  Intel's workstation parts peak at 28 cores, while AMD goes up to 64 cores.  The new chips are expected to ship in Q2 of next year and go up to 56 cores.

    Only problem is, later next year AMD is expected to release 128 core CPUs for both servers and workstations.

    This goes back to why Intel is signing up to produce CPUs at TSMC. Without that they're locked out of key markets by the delays in updating their own fabs.


  • Swedish supermarket chain Coop had to close 500 stores after the company running their cash registers got hit by that ransomware attack I mentioned yesterday.  (Bleeping Computer)

    <deep breath>

    STOP OUTSOURCING CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE!


  • Here's a handy list of Apple devices to steer clear of if you have a pacemaker.  (ZDNet)

    Yes, the list includes pretty much everything Apple makes.  But the safe distance is 6-12 inches.  So just don't go to sleep with your iThis or MacThat resting on your chest and you should be fine.


  • Out: Death panels.  In: Death algorithms.  (The Guardian)

    "Sure, we left you alone to see whether you'd starve or freeze first", said a government spokesman.  "But it wasn't us, it was the algorithm."



I Say We Take Off and Nuke the Entire Site From Orbit Where by "Site" I Mean Twitter Video of the Day





Salute to America With Shipgirls Anime Music Video of the Day


Anime: Girls und Panzer, High School Fleet, Gate, Strike Witches.

I know those aren't American insignia or uniforms or, well, anything else, but you guys also don't have flying catgirls carrying 20mm anti-materiel rifles, so please bear with it.



Disclaimer: Get with the catgirl program already.  Ask Elon Musk, I'm sure he has some.

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Saturday, July 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 July 2021

Never Go Full Stasi Edition

Top Story

  • Facebook has gone full Stasi, asking users to report anyone expressing unapproved opinions.  (The Verge)

    The Verge, it turns out, has learned to love Big Brother:
    Facebook, like other platforms, has had issues with extremism for a long time, and though it’s good that it’s trying to combat it, some of its efforts feel like they should’ve been implemented long ago.
    No, you fascist-fellating bumblefucks, what Facebook is doing is extremism.



Anime of the day is Galaxy Angel, which ran for four seasons (or six, depending on how you count) and 126 episodes from 2001 to 2004.

If you imagine Dirty Pair, with the competence dialed down and the comedy dialed up, but keeping the supportive but long-suffering boss intact, and also dial the destruction up to 12, you might have something like Galaxy Angel.

Because of that destruction factor, the continuity resets pretty frequently.  They die several times, and destroy the entire universe twice.

Each season also has an episode that plays things completely straight, often looking at a particular character's past.  Those have a very different feel to the general chaos and add needed depth to the story, but aren't kid material, when most of the series is.  (I watched some of this with my oldest nephew when he was maybe five or six.)


Tech News


The Zombie Apocalypse Might Not Be So Bad Video of the Day



World-famous zombie idol Kureiji Ollie from Hololive Indonesia is teaching calculus.  And has 4000 people watching.



This is her theme song.

Speaking of Hololive, in the past day Iofi from the Indonesian branch hit 400,000 subscribers, and Rushia and Fubuki from the main branch hit 1.25 million and 1.5 million respectively.

Coco's farewell stream had 490,000 live viewers and pulled in $300,000 in superchats.  And then she ate a tarantula.

I know I talk about Hololive a lot, but they put out more high-quality entertainment each week than Hollywood does in a year.



News From the Crapping All Over Everything Wars Video of the Day



TSR Games - the original publisher of Dungeons and Dragons - is back, with D&D co-creator Gary Gygax's son in a lead role.  Apparently Hasbro forgot to renew the trademark and Ernie Gygax managed to retrieve it.

Major gaming convention Gen Con has banned TSR for being insufficiently subservient to the wokescolds that are ruining everything.

TSR told them to get fucked.

Oh, and Gen Con was also founded by Gary Gygax.



Disclaimer: Commies.  Helicopters.  Some assembly.

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Friday, July 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 July 2021

Completed And In Testing Edition

Top Story

  • Not so humble: Humble Bundle won't let you give the full amount of a purchase to charity.  (Ars Technica)

    They don't care whether you pay anything to the content creators, but they are making damn sure they get a cut themselves.

    They previously tried removing the sliders that let you change the allocation of your payment - between the creator, the designated charity, and Humble Bundle.  That provoked enough anger that they put it back.

    Now they're just limiting the minimum amount you can give to them.

    The article notes that Humble Bundle was taken over by IGN in 2017.


Tech News




Disclaimer: I'm pretty sure the birthdays are made up, since one of them celebrated two birthdays a week apart in different personas, but anyway.

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Thursday, July 01

Geek

Dragons And Demons

So Coco went out with a bang; her parting stream had 490,000 live viewers, and might have gone higher without some YouTube glitches.



Every single Hololive member showed up; they had to pre-record it and even then ran into a scheduling conflict, but everyone was there.

And no sooner had that ended - and Miko had read the incomprehensibly adorable picture book she drew for Coco - than I checked YouTube and the last Hololive member to graduate (well, ignoring the China debacle) is streaming live right now.

And promptly hit 150,000 subscribers.  I never caught her streams first time around - I was very new to Hololive and didn't even know Gen 5 had debuted - but she seems really nice and I can totally see her fitting in with the rest of Hololive.

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Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 July 2021

Half Way Through Edition

Top Story

  • The world's fastest SSD...  Ish.  (Hot Hardware)

    Intel's Optane P5800X has a 6 microsecond access time.  That's about ten times faster than regular flash SSDs.

    On most benchmarks that doesn't matter.  Sequential access performance is the same as a PCIe 4.0 SSD, and multi-threaded I/O too.

    Where this helps is if you have a single task that requires fast access to data.  Which isn't that common; if you have a large busy database you probably have a lot of active threads.

    Optane is also good for very heavy write loads - the drive is rated for 100 drive writes per day, where an enterprise SSD might go as high as 3.




Anime of the day os Fune wo Amu, also known as The Great Passage, from 2016.  It's the story of the attempt to create an entirely new Japanese dictionary.  Only all the records for the existing dictionary are stored on little file cards in little boxes in a huge warehouse, and no-one really knows where to start.



Tech News

Disclaimer: Not that I have any experience of that.

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Wednesday, June 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 June 2021

It Was Not Very Effective Edition

Top Story

  • Microsoft apologised for the confusion caused by its botched Windows 11 announcement and then immediately made things worse.  (ZDNet)

    They have repeatedly added and then deleted details from their compatibility documents.

    And the - largely useless - compatibility checker app they provided has now been removed entirely.

    The article estimates that 40% of PCs sold as recently as 2019 can't run Windows 11, as best as anyone can work out with the horribly confused state of the requirements.  And more than 60% of all PCs currently in use can't be upgraded.

    This has been a textbook case of how not to announce a new product.


Anime of the day is Gate from 2015.  A fantasy world full of magic and dragons manages to open a portal to our world, and marches an army through - right into the middle of Tokyo.

They are merrily proceeding to slaughter the civilian population when the JSDF shows up and quickly demonstrates that orcs are not immune to gunfire, nor dragons to surface-to-air missiles.

The problem is - apart from all the dead bystanders - the gate is still there, and no-one on our side knows how to shut it down.  So the JSDF has to head through and establish a beachhead on the other side, where things...  Are not always what they seem.

Lots of politicians on both sides of the gate being greedy and stupid to a self-destructive degree, which seems pretty damn accurate.


Tech News

  • The new HP Pavilion Aero looks pretty good.  (Thurrott.com)

    Ryzen 5000U CPUs, with up to 8 Zen 3 cores, a 13.3" 16:10 display with a resolution of 2303x1440 - a bit weird, but that's 1920x1200 with a 20% bonus, at 400 nits and covering 100% of Adobe RGB; charging over USB-C or a dedicated charge port, two full-size USB-A, HDMI, headphone jack, and a microSD slot.

    And the Four Essential Keys in their proper place.

    All in a 2.1 pound package, and available in white, silver, and regular or rose gold.  Starting at $749 and available next month.

    Might even run Windows 11.


  • Yes, those Western Digital My Book Live owners got hacked.  (Bleeping Computer)

    The hack involved calling the factory reset function on devices connected to the internet.

    That's it.

    You didn't need to do anything clever because the factory reset function wasn't protected in any way whatsoever.

    I mean, they had password protection in the code, they just, um, commented it out.


  • Russia had access to the network of Denmark's central bank for months.  (Bleeping Computer)

    This is obviously government action.  Hacking a bank, sure, criminals might try that.  Hacking a central bank is pointless unless you're a rival nation.

    And this was part of the broader SolarWinds hack, meaning that was almost certainly the Russian government as well.


  • The breach that wasn't: There are stolen details of 700 million LinkedIn users for sale on the dark web.  (9to5Mac)

    All of which was posted publicly, because that's what LinkedIn is for.  If you don't want your private information out there, the first step is to not post it publicly yourself.


Min Spec Daily Video of the Day


I've linked to articles on Thurott.com a number of times.  Here's Paul Thurrott and sidekick Brad Sams putting the boot into Microsoft over the Windows 11 debacle.

The PC press is much better at this than the Apple press, who are little more than acolytes of a particularly nasty cult.


Disclaimer: Nasty and vacuous.

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Tuesday, June 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 June 2021

Endless October Edition

Tech News

  • October continues apace.  Start the day with three hours of meetings, end the day with two hours of meetings, constant interruptions between.

    On the one hand, customers are just throwing money at us.  On the other hand, it would be nice to have a few minutes each day to eat and sleep and stuff like that.


  • Will your PC run Windows 11?  (ZDNet)

    Nobody knows, including Microsoft.


  • Did Microsoft get paid by Apple to fumble this announcement?  (ZDNet)

    Only thing that makes sense.  I wouldn't even consider an Arm-based Mac until they support both Linux and BSD, but most people just want to run a handful of programs and not worry about things breaking.

    Sure, Macs break all the time and Apple complete screws you on repairs, but people aren't aware of that so they don't worry about it.


  • Microsoft successful migrated 90% of its users to a single version of their operating system.  (ZDNet)

    And then they completely fucked it up.  Hundreds of millions of users just got orphaned.

    Oh, and first-generation Ryzen, Threadripper, and Epyc CPUs (I have two of those) and 7th-generation Intel desktop and laptop parts (I have two of those as well) might be supported after all.  (Bleping Computer)

    Eventually.

    Or they might not.  Microsoft apparently didn't think about that question.

    Retards.


  • As for what Windows 11 delivers, it looks like Android, only crappy.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Seriously, no-one asked for this.


  • DDR5 modules are available right now!  (Tom's Hardware)

    Just the thing for your brand new Windows 11 system, because you can't get CPUs or motherboards that work with DDR5 yet anyway.

    Retail pricing is $311 vs. a recommended price of $400 for 32GB.  Frequency is 4800MHz which is very high for DDR4 but the new baseline for DDR5.

    Latency is 40 cycles, which is, frankly, crap.  But the first DDR4 modules were similarly slow.


  • The Fuck You pattern.  (CEdwards)

    This is a user interface designed purely to annoy anyone who tries to escape the box the want to trap you in. Generally this falls under "dark patterns", but this is a specific case of using everything in the dark pattern toolbox purely to shit on users who won't behave themselves.

    Case in point: Instagram.


  • Docker bites man.  (NewsBlur)

    The NewsBlur ransomware hack from the other day was a Docker config problem.  The attacker was able to delete the container, but couldn't actually encrypt it or exfiltrate the data, so the ransomware note was a lie.

    Fortunately they had followed Rule One of Backups: Actually try restoring from them.

    Actually a good examination of what happened and how they fixed it.


  • SafeDollar, a stablecoin on the Polygon network, wasn't.  (Cryptoslate)

    With a current valuation of $0 it proved to be neither safe nor stable.


  • YouTube TV is adding a $20 monthly fee for 4K resolutions and offline viewing.  (Tech Crunch)

    I've been watching YouTube on my new tablet - the Lenovo Somethingpad 10 FHD  Gen 2 I picked up cheap on a one day sale.  The YouTube app works infinitely better than a browser for watching livestreams with busy chat rooms.  I've seen Chrome balloon out to 11GB of RAM after a couple of hours.

    On the other hand, even when configured to prefer better video quality, it routinely resets to 144p.  There is no option to permanently fix the resolution to something sane, because fuck you that's why.


  • A Polish Bitcoin billionaire has reportedly drowned in Costa Rica.  (MarketWatch)

    My first thought was, did they recover the body?  Because they never did for the guy who reportedly died in rural India leaving the crypto exchange he ran to crash and burn because only he had the master passwords.


  • Google has a replacement for AMP, their attempt to control news articles on the web.  (The Register)

    It's called Core Web Vitals and, like AMP, its entire purpose is to hand control of your web pages to Google in return for...  In return for nothing at all.

Disclaimer: ENOWIFI.

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