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Saturday, November 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 November 2018

Tech News




Video of the Day


True Facts is back, now with more true facts, but still the True Facts we know and love.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 07:07 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 200 words, total size 2 kb.

Friday, November 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 November 2018

Well, that was a fun week!  Apart from the bots and spam blogs, my other server got taken offline twice by false DMCA notices.  But never mind that, on with the


Tech News

  • AMD's Radeon 590 is here.  (AnandTech)

    It's basically a Radeon 580, which is basically a Radeon 480, but it's about 15% faster, which isn't bad for something that's the same as the other thing.

    On paper it uses about 20% more power than the 580, but in practice it only works out to about 10%.  (PC Perspective)

    That's a lot more power than the GTX 1060, its closest competition from the Nvidia side, but it's faster and has 8GB of memory compared to 6GB on the 1060.

    And unlike the situation this time last year, you can actually buy it.

  • SK Hynix showed off their new DDR5 16Gb chips and modules.  (AnandTech)

    They have samples of both desktop and server DDR5 on display, clocked at 5200MHz, twice as fast as typical DDR4 modules.  These are expected to reach the market in 2020, along with DDR5 compatible CPUs and motherboards.

  • A West Australian company has unveiled the world's largest 3D printer.  (Sydney Morning Herald)

    It prints houses.  Out of bricks.

  • Windows 10 1809.5 is out but there are still a few hiccups.  (ZDNet)

    If you have an eight-year-old AMD video card (in which case, maybe time for an upgrade), run Trend Micro security software (in which case, maybe don't) or...  Have mapped network drives?  How the hell did that one get past testing?  Did Microsoft move their QA department to Broward County?

  • Humble Bundle finally has a bulk download button, for when you buy those nice collections of 15 O'Reilly books.  Chrome seems to block it, but it works in Firefox.


Social Media News

  • The EU's terrible horrible no good very bad copyright legislation keeps getting worse, with the content filters that were previously implicitly mandatory now explicitly mandatory if you don't want to be randomly fined 500% of your nation's GDP.  (TechDirt)

    There's a reason there are no internet businesses in Europe.

  • Here's a big list of naughty strings.

    You can use it to test content filters, or just email it to every member of the EU Council, whichever.

  • A federal judge has upheld the indictment of alleged Russian troll farm Concord Management, not specifically because they broke the law, but because they took legal measures to hide the fact that they were performing actions that were also legal.  Such as using VPNs to post memes to Twitter.

    This seems...  Odd.


Video of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 10:30 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 434 words, total size 4 kb.

Thursday, November 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 November 2018

Quick one today, as the time I usually spend on this got eaten up fighting back the horde of rampaging web spiders.

Tech News

  • Windows 10 October 2018 update is out.  Again.  (AnandTech)

    This version does not conjure quantum black holes indiscriminately into being, nor does it summon 5d6 small venomous snakes that immediately attack the user and his or her allies.

    Really.

  • Amazon's Corrretto is OpenJDK LTS because fuck Oracle.

  • Gravity is caused by sharks with laser beams.  (Quanta)

    I think.  I admit to having only skimmed the article.  There might be some nuance to it.

  • One in five sites infected by the Magecart malware (such as, oh, Infowars yesterday) promptly gets reinfected after being fixed.  (ZDNet)

    This is a painful problem; once hackers have burrowed their way in, it can be very hard to shut them out for good.  The solution is to not collect credit card information.  Just don't.

  • That rogue interstellar probe seems to have disappeared.  (Ars Technica)

Social Media News



Video of the Day


This is why airlines keep plane cabins cooled to below 30C.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 07:50 PM | Comments (9) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 204 words, total size 2 kb.

Geek

Sorting Things Out

I blocked two bots and deactivated about 600 sites (1% of the total) that were being used for various spam advertising campaigns, and it looks like we're running smoothly again.

CPU load on the server dropped from 90% to around 5% after the bans went into effect.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 08:25 AM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 50 words, total size 1 kb.

Wednesday, November 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 November 2018

Tech News

  • HLRS, the High Performance Computing Center at the University of Stuttgart, is building a new PC based on AMD's new 64-core "Rome" CPU.  10,000 of them.  (AnandTech)

    640,000 cores, 665TB of RAM, and 26PB of disk.  Based on an HP Badger.  Which is not a computer I am overly familiar with.

  • QUIC stands for Quick UDP Internet Connections.  (PC Perspective)

    Just reading up on this, and I'm feeling more positive.  If you live in Australia, accessing any secure site hosted in another country is s-l-o-w because it requires multiple round trips back and forth across the globe before the first useful byte actually gets sent.  QUIC solves that.  Somehow.

  • AMD's Radeon RX 590 is out.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's essentially identical to the RX 580, which is essentially identical to the RX 480.  I have two RX 580s; they're by no means bad, but it's time AMD got something new out to market.

  • Speaking of supercomputers, the Department of Energy's new Perlmutter system will be based on AMD's third generation Milan EPYC processors and Nvidia's unnamed next-generation GPUs.  Based on the Cray Shasta architecture.  (Tom's Hardware)

    No announcement of the total number of cores, which is the ENTIRE POINT of supercomputer news articles.

  • No, Zen 2 does not have 29% better IPC than Zen 1.  (NotebookCheck)

    Of course it doesn't.  That sort of increase doesn't happen unless you're starting with a specifically low-end architecture, which Zen 1 certainly is not.

  • All of GitLab's staff work remotely.  (Inc.5000)

    Disclaimer: I like GitLab.

  • A wild Rome motherboard appeared!

    It has five PCIe 4.0 slots - four x16 and one x8 - and two PCIE 3.0 slots.  The PCIe 3.0 slots are the furthest from the CPU, so this might be the best that can be done without a repeater chip.  PCIe 5.0 will have even tighter timings.

    Rome will work in existing Naples motherboards (and vice versa) but then you don't get the improved I/O performance.


Social Media News




Video of the Day

Japanese museum foils cat burglars.




Picture of the Day

http://ai.mee.nu/images/TeraByte.jpg?size=720x&q=95

The aforementioned Rome motherboard.  This one is emphatically not standard ATX size.

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Tuesday, November 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 November 2018

Tech News



Video of the Day




Linus Dunking on Intel Video of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 11:42 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 234 words, total size 3 kb.

Monday, November 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 November 2018

Tech News

  • Ian Cuttress talks to AMD CTO Mark Papermaster.  (AnandTech)

    Couple of points of interest:

    • Naples (Epyc 1) required four functional CPU dies to work.  Rome (Epyc 2) requires a functional I/O die, and any number of CPU dies from 1 to 8.

      If yields are good we're likely to see chiplet granularity in Rome's core count - and the same with Threadripper 3.  Threadripper 3 will be a beast; Intel will be dead in the single-socket workstation space.

    • Milan (Epyc 3) will have the same socket as Naples and Rome.  After that (Venice?  Genoa?  Florence?) we're looking towards DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 and "no comment" territory. 

    • Infinity Fabric on 7nm offers 100GB/s bandwidth, more than double the first generation.  This helps mitigate the smaller number of interconnects - Naples has 12 interconnects for 4 dies; Rome has 8 for 8 dies.

    • Chiplets mean you can mix and match - need an application-specific core?  FPGA?  GPU?  As long as it speaks Infinity Fabric and fits on the package, it can be done.

  • Another day, another side channel attack...  On Nvidia graphics cards?!  (Tom's Hardware)

    Ugh.

  • Epyc clouds get benchmarkeded.  (Phoronix)

    AWS vs. Packet vs. SkySilk (who?)

    STOP TRYING TO MAKE "retpoline" A WORD.  IT IS NOT A WORD.

    A SkySilk "small" node outperforms an EC2 m5a.large node.  That means less than it sounds like, though, because both are dual core 8GB nodes with similar pricing, and the naming conventions mean even less than they do at Starbucks.

  • Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1 app competes with 8.8.8.8 and 9.9.9.9.  (Bleeping Computer)

    First, this is good, because your ISP's DNS probably sucks.  Second, IP routing is fucking weird.

  • HTTP/2, based on Google's SPDY, is set to be replaced by HTTP/3, based on Google's QUIC.  (ZDNet)

    Not sure how I feel about that.  They're not even using TCP any more.  They've smushed HTTP itself, TLS, and a rewrite of TCP into a protocol that runs over UDP.

    It's dead easy to write an HTTP server if you can talk TCP, and everything can talk TCP.  This does not make things simpler.  Very much the opposite.


Video of the Day

Other Linus buys weird CPUs on Taobao so you don't have to.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 11:03 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 372 words, total size 3 kb.

Sunday, November 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 November 2018

Tech News

  • Microsoft, rumoured to be looking at acquiring another independent game studio like InXile or Obsidian, has acquired independent game studios InXile and Obsidian.  (GamesIndustry.biz)

    This means that two of few the companies still producing games I like (InXile made Torment and Wasteland 2; Obsidian most recently Tyranny and Pillars of Eternity I and II) now have solid financial backing and distribution and don't have to scrabble around on Kickstarter.

    And it's a hell of a lot better than Electronic Arts.  Or Ubisoft.  Or Activision.

Social Media News


Video of the Day



Bee and PuppyCat of the Day

This is the final episode of series one and the conclusion of a story arc.  It's great, but definitely not the place to start watching.




Map of the Day

http://ai.mee.nu/images/AustraliaInTheDark.png?size=720x&q=95


Picture of the Day

A story in three parts.

https://ai.mee.nu/images/Ketten1.jpg?size=720x&q=95
https://ai.mee.nu/images/Ketten2.jpg?size=720x&q=95
https://ai.mee.nu/images/Ketten3.jpg?size=720x&q=95

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:33 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 149 words, total size 2 kb.

Saturday, November 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 November 2018

Tech News


Social Media News



Video of the Day


What?  It's just someone in noisy shoes walking through some kind of plaza in China.

Click on the video and drag it around.

This is the camera Naomi (the young lady in the video) is using.  It doesn't look that impressive, but it contains two super wide angle - 190° field of view - cameras back to back.  Some clever software stitches the two images together and removes most of the distortion.



Disarming Ancient Practical Jokes with Toxic Heavy Metals Video of the Day




Cat Picture of the Day

https://ai.mee.nu/images/CatDoor.jpg?size=720x&q=95

I have a cat that sits by my front door as well.  I'll take a photo of it one day.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:41 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 491 words, total size 6 kb.

Friday, November 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 November 2018

Tech News
  • Sony has released the first 128GB writable Blu-Ray disks.  (AnandTech)

    These have been largely bypassed in favour of flash storage and direct downloads; the cost per byte isn't much better than SSDs and markedly worse than hard drives.  Still, that's 200x as much as a CD, which is no small feat.

  • Why Intel processors draw more power than expected.  (AnandTech)

    Intel's power numbers are lies.

  • Samsung pre-announced their upcoming 7.3" tablet.  (Wired)

    This one folds.  Not with two screens and a hinge, but it doesn't look like the whole thing is a bendy banana either.  We shall see.  This is potentially awesome but hard to pull off.

  • Brython is a dumb name but a great idea: Python for your browser.

    Currently it's a bit fiddly to use because HTML is still bound to JavaScript, but anything that hastens JavaScript's demise is welcome.

  • How does IBM's Power9 stack up against Intel and AMD?  (Phoronix)

    Meh.  Looking at the benchmarks, I thought, wow, that's pretty good for a 22 core CPU...  Dual 22 core?  Well, that's rather less inspiring then.

  • HP's Elite x2 1013 G3 is a successor to their 2017 Envy x2.  (ZDNet)

    It has the same detachable design, a slightly larger 13.3" screen still with the 3000x2000 resolution, and two Thunderbolt ports as well as a regular USB-C.  (The Envy x2  that I have does not have Thunderbolt.)

    It has a quad core 8th generation Intel CPU, a nice upgrade, but not the high-end Iris Plus or Iris Pro graphics of last year's models, because Intel don't yet have a chip that combines those two features.

    Elite is HP's high-end business line; there will likely be a consumer-oriented Envy model of this along shortly.



Video of the Day


Kitty!



Picture of the Day

https://ai.mee.nu/images/TreeFort.jpg?size=720x&q=95

Tree fort!  Click to embiggen.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 11:32 PM | Comments (8) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 306 words, total size 3 kb.

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