It was a bad day. A lot of bad stuff happened. And I'd love to forget it all. But I don't. Not ever. Because this is what I do. Every time, every day, every second, this: On five, we're bringing down the government.

Thursday, August 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff August 28 2019

Let Dozing Bulls Lie Edition

Tech News

  • If you have an FX-series Bulldozer AMD will pay you up to $35.  (Tom's Hardware)

    This is in settlement of a suit regarding the description of these chips as "eight core" which they sort of were and sort of weren't.  The total amount of the settlement is $12.1 million which isn't going to bankrupt AMD or make anyone else rich.

  • Backpage was actively working with law enforcement to shut down sex trafficking when legislators and law enforcement went after them for promoting sex trafficking.  (TechDirt)

    Remember kids: Private business might be slimy, but prosecutors are slimy and have qualified immunity.

  • Duolingo will now teach you Latin, perfect your your trip to the 2nd century.  (Tech Crunch)

  • Google Hire?  More like Google Fire.  (ZDNet)

    Another service getting shut down with no replacement.

    Google, you're bad at this.  Let small companies build these things, then buy them, then slowly squeeze the life out of them, like Computer Associates in the old days.

  • Bedbugs need not apply.  (Esquire)

    A tale of freedom of speech that - for a change - ends happily for everyone except the bedbug.

  • My brother was in Indonesia recently and mentioned something about this: Jakarta is sinking and Indonesia is going to build a new capital. (Ars Technica)

    Nothing to do with global warming; the earth under the city is compacting for a host of reasons and the city is sinking by as much as 16 centimetres per year - and it's accelerating.


Disclaimer: Not drowning, waving.

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Tuesday, August 27

Geek

Daily News Stuff 27 August 2019

Right Light Rise Edition

Tech News


Video of the Day





Disclaimer: Raise right, lower left, and both up, clap your hands.  You are not wrong!

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Post contains 400 words, total size 5 kb.

Geek

Daily News Stuff 26 August 2019

Lazy Sunday Afternoon Edition

Tech News


Disclaimer: Komi still can't communicate.  I'm now up to chapter 150 with just 64 more to go.  Fortunately this is the anti-Berserk and the author is cranking out a new chapter a week.

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Post contains 199 words, total size 2 kb.

Monday, August 26

Geek

Daily News Stuff 25 August 2019

Communication Disorder Edition

Tech News

  • Capturing composite video with a radio receiver.

    SDR is software-defined radio - using programmable digital logic in place of the traditional analog circuits.  VHF is just another frequency, and video is just another radio signal.  With a high enough sample rate, all things are digital.

  • The Font in Yellow.  (Gizmodo)

    The story of a typeface so terrible and beautiful that some idiot tried to drown it in the Thames.

  • Thread support has landed in Crystal.  (GitHub)

    Up to now, Crystal has supported concurrency by full operating system processes, each with their own memory space, and fibers, which are co-operative and share a single execution thread.  With full thread support you can distribute fibers across threads so that spawning lightweight workers is still incredibly fast but can also take advantage of multiple CPU cores.

    Downside is that you require locks for some simple datastructures that were safe to share with fibers alone.

    This was one of the two milestones they needed to pass before declaring a 1.0 release; the other being robust Windows support.  It runs fine on WSL right now... Unless you're using memory-mapped files, in which case it freaks out and dies.  But that's not Crystal's fault and is supposed to be fixed in WSL 2.0.

  • DigitalOcean offers managed database instances for PostgreSQL, MySQL, and Redis.  (DigitalOcean)

    I understand the first two.  Setting up a SQL database cluster is fiddly at best.  But Redis?  Not only is it dead simple, but it has completely different hardware requirements to MySQL or PostgreSQL, and yet DO's configurations are identical.

    Managed PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, Elasticsearch, or RabbitMQ clusters, sure, go ahead.  But spend half an hour and learn to run Redis yourself.


Disclaimer: Komi Can't Communicate.

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Saturday, August 24

Geek

Daily News Stuff 24 August 2019

Just When You Thought It Was Safe To Go Back To The Command Line Edition

Tech News



Disclaimer: Go for the tankies, Boo!  Go for the tankies!  Raaargh!

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Friday, August 23

Geek

Daily News Stuff 23 August 2019

Big Hot Chips Edition

Tech News



Disclaimer: Nobody asked you, Patrice!

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Geek

Daily News Stuff 22 August 2019

Plugged Nickel Edition

Tech News



Disclaimer: Plugged with what, though?

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Wednesday, August 21

Geek

Daily News Stuff 21 August 2019

The Secret Of NNP Editon

Tech News

  • Ugh.  Migraine.

  • Intel just announced 6 core low-power laptop CPUs.  (AnandTech)

    With a base clock of just 1.1GHz and a boost clock of 4.7GHz, how these new 15W U-series chips perform depends far more on real-world power and thermal characteristics than paper specs.

    They also have new 4-core ultra-low-power 7W Y-series parts, with a similarly huge gap between base and boost clocks.

    Devices are expected to arrive in October, which somehow isn't far away.  When did that happen?

  • Intel also has a new AI chip that is not the size of a small pizza.  (Tom's Hardware)

    In fact the whole board fits into an M.2 slot.

    The chip, called Spring Hill, has two Ice Lake cores and twelve ICE cores (Inference Compute Engine) because that's not fucking confusing at all.

  • Intel also also has a much bigger AI chip that definitely does not fit on an M.2 card.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It doesn't seem to be the same architecture, except for the basic point that both contain a ton of low-precision multiply units.

  • Speaking of that's not how it works, Mike, there is no First Amendment right to a White House Press Pass.  (TechDirt)

  • That 400,000 core pizza-sized AI chip I mentioned yesterday uses less than 40 milliwatts of power per core.  (Tech Crunch)

    But when you multiply that by 400,000 it comes out to 15 kilowatts.  Which is more than a pizza oven.

    Also, since this would be a low voltage part, they must be feeding it with kiloamps of current.  So this is one chip that isn't going to make a quick transition to consumer products.

  • Bitbucket kills Mercurial support.  (Bitbucket)  [Link fixed]

    Bitbucket kills Mercurial support
    Bitbucket kills Mercurial support
    GitHub came and and broke our heart
    We can't undo let's rm *


  • IBM open-sources the Power architecture.  (The Next Platform)

    Twenty years too late, IBM.


Disclaimer: Ugh.

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Tuesday, August 20

Geek

Daily News Stuff 20 August 2019

Wombats Are Us Edition

Tech News

  • The Cerebras Wombat* is the latest flung poo in the AI monkey war.  (AnandTech)

    It has 400,000 cores implemented using 1.2 trillion transistors, 18GB of internal SRAM, and 9PB/second of on-chip bandwidth, packed into a compact 46,225 mm2, i.e. the size of a small pizza.

    And yes, it's a single chip.

    What does all that hardware do?  8-bit multiplications.  Lots of them.

    And it's programmable in Python.

    It's not that TSMC module with the HBM2 though.

    * They call it the WSE but that's a terrible name so I gave it a better one.

  • On the other end of the scale, UPMEM is adding an 8-core processor to each 4Gbit DRAM chip.  (AnandTech)

    So an 8GB module has 128 cores and a fully-populated 256GB server would have 4096 cores.  The cores are implemented directly on the DRAM die.  No-one does this because DRAM production is very different to CPU production, and the resulting CPU cores can only run at 500MHz.  But with 4096 of them, does that really matter?

    Well, yes.  But for certain tasks - they cite genomics - it can be 20 to 40 times faster than conventional servers.

    Definitely not that module with the HBM2.

  • IBM announced the Power 9 AIO which is an update to the existing Power 9 architecture with a 25GHz memory bus.  (Tom's Hardware)

    This kind of thing has been tried for years and has never taken off, because although it offers more memory bandwidth per socket it has never provided more memory bandwidth per dollar.  Rather the reverse.

    And dollars can buy you more sockets.

    Still not that module TSMC was showing off.

  • Gizmodo's new owners are clueless.  (TechDirt)

    Well, sure.  They bought Gizmodo.

    Lots of great one-liners in the article, such as
    The company still employs some great investigative reporters
    We're still talking about Gizmodo?  Just checking.

  • The Ruby rest-client package got compromised.  (GitHub)

    Time for capability-based programming languages.

  • Why ElementaryOS left Medium and returned to 1993.

  • Julia 1.2 is out.

    Julia is a clean and elegant language for scientific computing.  Fortran done properly.  It has one major problem (for certain users) in that it uses an optimising JIT compiler rather than static compilation.  That allows the language to provide generic functions without eldritch horrors like C++ templates, but means it's a pain to generate distributable binaries.  Not impossible, but a pain.

  • Gmail went down.  (Bleeping Computer)

    I noticed this one because it was during the day Australia time and we use Gmail for work.  And then it stopped working.  Fortunately not for very long.

  • A bug in iOS 12.4 means you can jailbreak your iPhone.  (ZDNet)

    But given the nature of the bug, so can a malicious app.

    But apps can only be downloaded from the App Store, and we all trust the App Store, right?

  • Twitter is banning state-run media organisations from buying advertising on the platform after being criticised for showing Chinese anti-democracy propaganda.  (The Next Web)

    ABC, BBC, CBC hardest hit.  Oh, and SBS.  Yeah, we have two of them.

    I give Twitter 48 hours before they completely fuck up this basically sensible decision.

  • Bill Nye the Chromebook guy vs. Best Buy.  (ZDNet)

    Key takeaway:
    "So who buys that $999 Pixelbook?" I wondered.

    "No one," he said.


Video of the Day



Bonus Video of the Day



Disclaimer: 48 hours is probably FAR too generous.

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Post contains 570 words, total size 6 kb.

Monday, August 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 August 2019

And Minecraft Makes Three Edition

Tech News


Retrocomputing Journal

That cheap source of H750s I found is no longer quite so cheap; in fact, no longer cheap at all, having increased overnight from $6.04 to $13.23.  Yech.  On the other hand it looks like DigiKey went in the opposite direction and is now under $10.

Still, if I need to use two of them due to the pin limitations, it might not hurt to look at other parts.  As long as it has at least 1MB RAM and an LCD controller that can display 960x540 - and supports ARMv7 - any experiments I run with the dev kit I have will port straight over.

The RZ/A1L starts at A$22.45 which is still more than two of the H750s, but has the advantage that it's only one chip to worry about, and has 3MB of RAM compared 1MB on the H750.  Also it has two larger siblings if I should need more memory, pins, or graphics performance.

It suffers from some of the same pin assignment craziness, so if you want to use the LCD controller you can only have a 16-bit external memory bus, but having 176 pins instead of 100 is about 76% less constrained.


Disclaimer: The drink you drink when you're not drinking a...  Wait.

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