What are you going to do?
What I always do - stay out of trouble... Badly.
Tuesday, October 30
Tech News
- AMD has unleashed their 12 core 2920X and 24 core 2970WX (AnandTech)
The 2970WX is a niche product, but the 2920X at $649 is a solid workstation CPU that costs only a little more than Intel's 8 core mainstream i9 9900K (MSRP $499 but currently selling for closer to $600).
Running rendering tasks puts it ahead of Intel's much more expensive 12 core i9 7920X and close behind Intel's even more expensive 16 core i9 7960X.
For gaming and desktop stuff, software development, that sort of thing, just go with the Ryzen 2700X unless someone else is paying.
- The latest copyright ruling that came down on the side of "right to repair" also supports the right to play. (Tom's Hardware)
The ruling will permit breaking DRM protection to continue playing abandoned computer and video games, assuming they were legally bought in the first place.
- An Australian MP points out that copyright laws must seek a balance between creators and consumers and not simply enact increasingly draconian rules every year. (Tech Dirt)
- Apple owes Qualcomm $7 billion (A$793 quadrillion). (Bloomberg)
According to Qualcomm.
- WebAssembly in Chrome 70 has threads.
No indication on whether Chrome 70 otherwise sucks less than Chrome 69.
- Apple's APFS apparently uses global kernel locks for read operations
This sort of thing makes it easy to make an operating system reliable, but it also kills scalability. MacOS these days is basically a single-user operating system - you can run server apps on it, but no-one does - so they can get away with this in most cases. On Linux, this would cause an uproar.
- An animated bubble chart of Reddit over the past decade.
- Why would anyone use a Core i3 as a server CPU?
Some i3 models support ECC. And an 8th generation Core i3 costs just $129 and runs as fast as an older E3 Xeon. (Serve the Home)
- The OnePlus 6T is a near flagship phone at a sub-flagship price. (Android Central)
No headphone jack and horrible haptics, so I'm not the target audience. Gotta have them haptics.
- There's a new undersea cable linking Sydney and Perth. (ZDNet)
I don't want to be the one to tell them...
- AMD's second-generation Epyc server CPUs, codenamed Rome, may be leaping from 4 chips on a module to 9 smaller "chiplets", from 32 cores to 64, and from 64MB of cache to 256MB. While these are rumours, AMD have publicly stated that the chips will be sampling to customers, um, right about now, so people outside AMD actually have these chips and accurate leaks are likely. (AdoredTV)
Worth watching just for the die photomicrographs.
Picture of the Day

Video of the Day
Bonus Video of the Day
Bonus Cat Video of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:37 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 500 words, total size 5 kb.
Monday, October 29
Tech News
- IBM just bought Red Hat for around A$317 trillion. (Wired)
I'm okay with that. Except for the exchange rate, which sucks. Things are getting expensive.
This means that IBM owns or has some control over RHEL, CentOS, Fedora, CoreOS, OpenStack, OpenShift, Kubernetes, Ansible, 3scale, JBoss, Gluster, Ceph, and probably other things. (Serve the Home)
Lots of stuff both enterprisey and cloudy.
- W3C has a whole linked set of draft standards for blog and social media data representation, protocols, and APIs.
Frankly they're kind of annoying. Yeah, I'm working on the thing again.
- The Waiting Time Paradox says that when waiting for a bus that runs every ten minutes, your average waiting time is ten minutes.
Social Media News
- In an in-depth examination of the rise of anti-semitism in America Axios bravely avoids mentioning that Louis Farrakhan is still on Twitter.
- Boing Boing says fuck you and your "free speech" this your "civil rights" that.
As The Federalist noted today, conservatism is the new counter-culture and the left has grown oppressive and reactionary.
Gab posted a statement on Medium deploring the attack in Pittsburgh, and decrying violence and anti-semitism generally, and Medium banned them.
Reached for comment, George Orwell said "told you".
(Hat tip: Brickmuppet)
- Neil Gaiman on why it's important to defend icky speech.
Old and yet oddly timely.
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:32 PM
| Comments (3)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 247 words, total size 3 kb.
Sunday, October 28
We now have a 32TB ZFS backup server. 4x12TB disks in RAID-Z, less a bit for OS, less 25% for RAID, less 10% for the conversion from TB to TiB.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:02 PM
| Comments (3)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 75 words, total size 1 kb.
Tech News
- GVPE 3.1 is out. (Phoronix)
GVPE stands for GNU Virtual Private Ethernet; it lets you securely connect multiple servers over the internet on a virtual local network, without a central VPN host.
Social Media News
- PayPal and hosting provider Joyent have pulled the plug on Gab.
Joyent has given them two days to migrate to new hosting. For a complex site that's all but impossible, unless you run your own containers.
This is one reason I chose to run my own server for this latest refresh rather than migrating to cloud hosting. None of the cloud hosts make it easy to migrate away. Why would they?
- YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki wrote a blog post urging users to protest the European Union's abominable new copyright legislation which threatens to do to YouTube what YouTube routinely does to its users.
Picture of the Day
Video of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
01:47 PM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 191 words, total size 2 kb.
Saturday, October 27
Was poking through things today looking for something to watch. I know there are some good shows airing right now, but I prefer to wait until there's a full season available.
And I tripped over The Great Passage a.k.a Fune wo Amu.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:30 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 148 words, total size 1 kb.
Tech News
- Chuwi's Lapbook SE doesn't entirely suck. (ZDNet)
It has a Gemini Lake Atom CPU, so it's on the slow side, but it's much faster than earlier generation Atoms and fine for light use. (Not recommended for gaming.)
4GB of RAM and 64GB of included storage are the week points. On the positive side, it has a 13.3" 1080p IPS display, a backlit keyboard with a good layout, and a 6.5 hour battery life under actual testing.
And it costs $240.
- Western Digital announced a 15TB disk drive. (AnandTech)
This is not very exciting since they already had a 14TB hard drive. All the real activity is in SSDs right now.
- Microsoft showed off Windows running on an 896 core PC. (AnandTech)
No, you can't have one. (HP)
Social Media News
- The European Court of Human Rights has come down firmly on the side of medieval blasphemy laws. (PJMedia)
But only for one religion.
Picture of the Day
Bee and PuppyCats of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:01 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 176 words, total size 2 kb.
Friday, October 26
Tech News
- AnandTech investigates Windows process scheduling on AMD's 32-core Threadripper 2990WX.
They actually found that except for a couple of specific cases, you shouldn't mess with it manually. It might not be perfect, but it works better than manual settings.
- SSD prices look set to continue to drop through 2019. (Tom's Hardware)
I've been noticing some great deals recently. From the sound of things, 96-layer flash production is going well.
- In a remarkable bit of irony, intelligence analysts leaked reports to the New York Times that President Trump's use of mobile phones was insecure. (TechDirt)
- Xiaomi's Mi Mix 3 Palace Museum Edition is totally a thing because at this point why the hell not? (Ars Technica)
10GB RAM and 256GB storage, and a "magnetically assisted" sliding screen.
Xiaomi also offers the Black Shark Helo with similar specs. (GSMArena)
Samsung's highly anticipated Galaxy Crusher Star Fury V has yet to make an official appearance.
- In a positive sign, the Librarian of Congress and the US Copyright office have proposed new rules supporting the "right to repair". (Motherboard)
If passed, these rules would make it explicitly legal to bypass DRM and other technological restrictions for the purpose of repairing your own devices, machinery, and vehicles.
Video of the Day
Mods are asleep, inherit the Earth.
Picture of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:55 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 224 words, total size 3 kb.
Thursday, October 25
Tech News
- HP announced the Spectre 13 x360. (AnandTech)
It's a notebook. Um, 13" 1080p or 4K display, quad core CPU, up to 16GB RAM, up to 512GB SSD, built in LTE, two Thunderbolt 3 ports on the rear corners, an alleged 22.5 hour battery life. 180° hinge like all models in the x360 range. 1.3kg / 2.9lbs, starting at $1149.
- Stack Overflow has a new code of conduct. Surprisingly, it's not SJW garbage; it sticks to the point of promoting civility and answering questions.
Social Media News
- Google apparent decided that TechDirt's article on content moderation violated Google's AdSense policies and removed ads from the page, proving the point of the article. (TechDirt)
Now to see if they follow through and do the same for the article about them removing ads from the article about their content moderation policies, proving the point of the article proving the point of the article.
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at
01:24 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 169 words, total size 2 kb.
Wednesday, October 24
Got the final new server I needed to set things up exactly the way I want.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
03:01 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 77 words, total size 1 kb.
Tech News
- Qualcomm announced the mid-range Snapdragon 675. (AnandTech)
It has two fast cores and six slow cores, Adreno 612 graphics, and other usual mid-range bits, and will be fabbed by Samsung on their 11nm process.
The interesting part is those two fast cores are the brand new Arm Cortex A76, which should be a big advance over the A75 (let alone the A72 that I have). That means better, faster mid-range phones for those of us who don't want to spend A$2668 on the new iPhone.
- HP's EliteBook x360 1040 G5 is just a notebook. (AnandTech)
It doesn't do anything magical, but it does have a quad-core CPU, up to 32GB RAM and 2TB of NVMe SSD, a 14" 4K display with a 180° hinge, and dual Thunderbolt 3 ports in a 1.35kg (3lb) package.
- Oracle are offering cloud servers based on AMD Epyc at around 3¢ per core per hour. (AnandTech)
That's not bad for a top-tier dedicated core VM. You can get cheaper servers - around a quarter of that - but your dedicated CPU allowance is much less than a full core.
Oh, wait, it looks like that price is for servers, not VMs. (Serve the Home)
So it's actually $1.92 per hour for 64 cores and 512GB RAM. Which is a different proposition but still good value.
Update: It's both. VMs and bare-metal servers at 3¢ per core per hour, from 1 to 64 cores. Only the bare-metal servers are immediately available though.
- Yahoo has agreed to pay $50 million to 200 million data breach victims. (WCCFTech)
You need to claim damages; they're not just sending out cheques for 25¢. You can recover up to $375 if you can document damages or expenses incurred, and $125 otherwise.
- Jepsen has done one of their in-depth analyses of data consistency on MongoDB.
With the default settings, it can lose data written during a cluster partition. It will return that the data has been written, but when the cluster is repaired, the results can be lost.
However, if you use the recommended safe level of majority writes (which is not the default), it works as it should.
- The FCC has released bandwidth in the 3.5GHz range for 5G mobile and in the 6GHz band for WiFi in two separate decisions. (VentureBeat)
They 6GHz band spans the range from 5.925GHz to 7.125GHz, which is a ton of bandwidth.
- Sometimes squirrel burgers are unavoidable, but try not to make a habit of it.
- 400G Ethernet can really ramp your radixes. (The Next Platform)
Or... Something.
Most of the servers I look after are still stuck with 1G connections. I'm so happy when I get to do data transfers between servers that are both 10G or faster.
- Global Foundries' decision to halt development of 7nm and beyond is a potential security problem for US military contractors and aerospace companies. (SemiEngineering)
They are the only leading-edge foundry in the DoD's Trusted Foundry program. Intel presumably could join that program, but they currently aren't shipping volume parts below 14nm either. (Though Intel's 14nm process is close to other sources' 10nm.)
- Zimmer's Conjecture has been proven. (Quanta)
Unusually for this sort of thing, Zimmer is still alive; he's now president of the University of Chicago.
- Amazon may face problems if they choose to locate their second HQ in Washington DC. (Axios)
Why the hell would anyone base anything in Washington DC?
Though I'm not sure what city on the US East Coast would be better.
- The Australian government has handed the contract for real-time prescription drug monitoring to some guy named Fred. (ZDNet)
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
01:33 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 635 words, total size 6 kb.
57 queries taking 0.2639 seconds, 389 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.














