I have a right to know! I'm getting married in four hundred and thirty years!
Monday, August 27
Tech News
- Like AMD video cards but 4096 shaders just not doing it for you? The new Radeon Pro V340 has 7128 shaders and 32GB of video RAM. And I think it has a mini DisplayPort output, hard to tell. (ServeTheHome)
It's not for you, though, it's for datacenters, to deliver virtual GPUs to up to 32 virtual servers at once. I kind of need one of these, or rather, 1/32 of one.
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Sunday, August 26
Just finished watching this - only took me ten years.
Onwards and Railgunwards!
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Tech News
- Fortnite bypassed Google's play store to avoid paying the 30% fee.
Their alternative installer left your phone open to attack. (Bleeping Computer)
They've fixed it now, but expect similar flaws whenever anyone else does this. Of course, with iPhones you can't do this at all - which is not an improvement.
Social Media News
- Is Facebook deleting the pages of alt-med
quacksfraudspractitioners? (FastCompany)
I am of two minds here. If they are simply posting nonsense, that should be allowed. If they are actually engaging in commercial fraud, that should be removed, and they should face criminal charges. But I don't see that as primarily Facebook's job.
On the other other hand, the FDA and FTC haven't been properly monitoring the false claims of these quacks, and they are getting people killed.
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Saturday, August 25
Tech News
- If you missed that $249 fire sale on 12 core AMD Threadripper at Amazon the 1920X is now officially $399. That's a nice discount over the $649 2920X. (PCGamer)
Intel's 12 core i9-7920X is $999.99 on NewEgg.
- The strange case of Nickelodeon vs. the Slime Princess. (Techdirt)
- OpenBSD disabled Intel's hyperthreading by default some time ago. It's looking more and more like this should be widely adopted. Sucks for Intel. But if you're wondering why Intel has been able to deliver better performance than AMD all these years, it is clearly at least partly because they have been cutting corners on the security of their architecture. (Tom's Hardware)
- The catch with Amazon Lightsail: Sustained performance is terrible. About 1/3 of Digital Ocean if you're lucky. If your code is busy, you'll be throttled to 1/20th of a core.
So to get the sustained performance of Rally Vincent (a Ryzen 1700) would cost me $800 per month. And if I need that in one VM, well, tough.
Social Media News
Almost as good as dragon tail pic.twitter.com/lbLenaZSbH
— Arby's (@Arbys) September 20, 2017
It’s almost done
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 25, 2018
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Friday, August 24
Australian Political News
Never Fear, a new protector is here... pic.twitter.com/ttgfMbJYXS
— Clive Palmer (@CliveFPalmer) August 24, 2018
Tech News
- California is close to passing its own net neutrality legislation. Approved 9-3 by the committee [Even numbers? Idiots.] and on its way to the Assembly. (Ars Technica)
I'm sure the bill is garbage - this is California we're talking about - but voting in garbage legislation and suffering the consequences is what states are for.
- Intel tried to prevent people benchmarking microcode changes, got yelled at, immediately fixed it. (Tom's Hardware)
Dumb move, smart response.
- Steam's policy on adult-oriented games is a mess. (Techdirt)
Remarkably, Kotaku seems to be on the right side of this debacle. (Kotaku)
- Apple has booted Facebook's VPN app from their store because it's spyware. (Techdirt)
Yes, it's an official Facebook app. Yes, it's spyware. Don't use it.
- The DNC was not attacked. The story is wrong. They set up their own phishing page to see if their staff were still falling for it. (Fudzilla)
- Amazon appears to have deployed their drones to deliver good news to Twitter. (TechCrunch)
This is just weird. Amazon, what are you doing? Don't do that.
- TSMC is reportedly happy with 7nm and ramping up production - and preparing for 5nm next year. (Guru3d)
Intel expects to release 10nm parts by the end of 2019. Intel's original launch date for 10nm was 2015, so that's a pretty big step backwards. Also, unconfirmed reports are that they've had to also take a step back on the process itself, so it's both late and less technically advanced than Intel had hoped.
Intel's originally planned 10nm process was roughly in line with 7nm from everyone else (the numbers are 83.6% marketing) but now everyone else has 7nm and Intel still doesn't have 10nm, so the point is extremely moot.
AMD are getting 7nm parts from both TSMC and Global Foundries, which will give them a full year with a solid fabrication lead on Intel, as well as the advantages of the Zen design.
- By pure coincidence AMD's stock is up another 6.65% making it one of the top performers in the S&P 500. (MarketWatch)
- Netflix tells Apple to go fuck itself and its 30% cut of everything. (Engadget)
Good.
- Amazon have cut the prices for their Lightsail cloud VMs by 50% in most cases. Prices for Windows servers have been cut by about 30%, and new high-end plans added with 16GB and 32GB of RAM respectively. (ZDNet)
This is a big deal. The mid-tier cloud providers - Digital Ocean, Linode, and Vultr - cut prices last year one after another and left Amazon in the dust, even though Lightsail was much cheaper than Amazon's enterprise-oriented EC2 servers. Now Amazon is competitive again. There are differences in the exact configuration levels - at a given price point, Digital Ocean might offer more CPUs but less bandwidth, or vice-versa - but the basic price tiers all line up.
Amazon offers a much broader range of services than the mid-tier competition, but as a result their platform is painfully complicated. But $5 now gets you a virtual server on Amazon with 1GB RAM and 1 CPU (standard across all the providers), and 40GB of SSD and 2TB bandwidth. Digital Ocean offers 25GB SSD and 1TB bandwidth at $5.
Nodes in India and Australia only get half the bandwidth provided in North America, Europe, and east Asia (Japan, Korea, Singapore), but (a) that's still damn good value, and (b) Digital Ocean doesn't have a datacenter in Australia at all, nor does Linode. Vultr does, but doesn't offer virtual disks outside of their New Jersey location, so it's much less useful.
...
WAIT. I JUST BOUGHT A NEW COMPUTER SPECIFICALLY TO RUN VIRTUAL MACHINES AND NOW EVERYTHING I NEED IS AVAILABLE FOR A REASONABLE PRICE WITH 15MS PING?!
Really, though, I wanted a second one of these the moment I got the first up and running. And with Lightsail, there's always the chance of something like this:
@TheRegister Billshock for some AWS Lightsail users today. Apparently I owe $46 billion!! 😳 pic.twitter.com/K8hK4P0SbS
— Alec (@alechendry) November 7, 2017
- Portland is run by idiots.
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Thursday, August 23
Non-Tech News
- Bunch of stuff happened.
Tech News
- There's a vulnerability in OpenSSH, which is used on, basically, every server in the world and most networking equipment. (Bleeping Computer)
It lets you check if a user name exists on the server.
That's it.
It's been fixed.
- Just in case you were wondering why no-one listens to "experts" any more. (Axios)
- The return of 24 cores and I can't type an email.
Yeah. Try rendering SVG to transparent PNGs some time.
Social Media News
- Everything is stupid.
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Wednesday, August 22
Tech News
- Hot Chips! Get yer Hot Chips! Fresh from AnandTech.
- NEC's new vector processor for supercomputers is also available in a handy PCIe card.
- IBM's Power9 "scale up" edition supports up to 16 sockets and 128TB of RAM.
- Fujitsu's A64FX Arm processor is probably not coming to your phone since it kind of has 48 cores and is also aimed at supercomputers.
- Tachyum's Prodigy is a VLIW chip with 64 cores, 8 channel DDR5, 72 lanes of PCIe 5.0, and 2x400Gb Ethernet. As you might have guessed, it's all on paper right now, expected to tape out next year, delivery some time after that.
VLIW is kind of dead as a general purpose CPU architecture; Intel and HP bet big on it with Itanium and lost billions. I doubt this version will fare any better.
- Nantero are making memory out of carbon nanotubes. Many potential industrial applications of nanotubes are stalled because we can't make them long enough; this uses very, very short tubes so that's a non-issue. Interesting if it works out.
- Google's Titan is a security processor for the cloud that with any luck does not ship with 97 known zero-day exploits.
- NVIDIA have announced a new GPU architecture but that doesn't mean they're about to drop the old architecture. (PCPer)
The main benefit of the new Turing chips is the dedicated cores for AI and ray tracing; for traditional graphics processing they're not much better than the previous generation, and significantly more expensive. That goes double for the professional editions - particularly if you need double precision.
Social Media News
- An article about out-of-control DMCA takedown bots written by Julia Reda, a member of the EU Parliament got de-indexed by an out-of-control DMCA takedown bot (Techdirt)
DMCA takedown bots. I hate DMCA takedown bots.
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Tuesday, August 21
Tech News
- Paper launch day for Nvidia's RTX 2000 family. Cards will actually be available following Talk Like a Pirate Day. (I don't know why either.) (AnandTech)
Despite WCCFTech being WCCFTech, their leaks on these cards were 100% accurate. Top of the line 2080 Ti will have 4352 shaders and 11GB of 14Gbps GDDR6 memory.
More interesting (potentially) is that these are the new Turing architecture with Tensor cores for AI processing and a dedicated ray-tracing unit. When Nvidia talk about huge performance gains, they are talking about these new functions, not about the actual graphics, which look to be only 10-20% faster depending on the card.
Also, price increases across the board, so you have that to look forward to. Though to be fair, these are far cheaper than the recently announced professional versions, and I don't think you'll find the same AI or ray-tracing performance cheaper anywhere.
- The annual Hot Chips conference is on and one of the first presentations is on Samsung's M3 chip, a high-end fully custom ARM design. Samsung are working to catch up with Apple here, because Qualcomm are dragging their feet in that department. (AnandTech)
- Apple may release a new MacBook Air and a replacement for the 97-year-old Mac Mini. Or not. (Bloomberg, via Tom's Hardware)
- Shuttle announced this chunky little nugget. (WCCFTech)

No, I don't know why either.
- Template languages always end up Turing complete. The Minx template language is Turing complete, if you really want to do that. (Well, mostly. The template engine solves the Halting Problem by nuking your page if your template code issues too many instructions.)
So either plan for that, or don't implement a template language.
- There is a new vulnerability that impacts everything. Unless there isn't or it doesn't. It gave me a headache and I closed the page, and now I've lost the link. Just assume you've already been hacked and everything is gone.
Social Media News
- Turkeys of a feather flock together. Does that chart stack vertically, or overlap? Either way, it's bad. Turkey is responsible for something between 40% and 80% of the censored Twitter accounts worldwide, depending. (Techdirt)
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Monday, August 20
Tech News
- JavaScript client and server apps are vulnerable to regex attacks. (Bleeping Computer)
Well, the headline refers to JavaScript, but the real culprit is single-threaded event-driven model for server applications. We invented multitasking for a reason, you clowns. All these problems were solved in the early sixties, but nooo, you had to go and reinvent everything.
- Slow news day, busy work day. More tomorrow.
Anime News
- There's a 4K remaster of Cardcaptor Sakura. I have the remastered 1080p Blu-Ray edition of Bubblegum Crisis, and it looks great, but this is the first I've heard of an anime series going 4K. It was done on 35mm film, so the resolution is there, but the detail isn't. I don't know if they've touched up the art; they didn't do that for the El Hazard re-release, which does look great, but the resolution allows you to see all the flaws in the original hand-painted cels.
Update: Ah, it looks like they remastered it in 4K but released it in 1080p. That makes sense - there's no point in remastering it twice, there's not point in going higher than 4K, and there's no much point in releasing it at higher than 1080p right now.
Pixy is Watching
Videos of the Day
Oh, and the song is good too.
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Sunday, August 19
Tech News
- The T2 chip in the new MacBook Pro crashes randomly.
The T2 chip controls the touchbar. Oh, and also storage encryption. So if it stops working it bricks your laptop. It does automatically reboot after crashes, but it would be kind of nice if it didn't crash in the first place.The new MacBook Pros with T2 chips do indeed kernel panic randomly, as shown in the attached image. I'd hold off buying if you can; Apple has work to do. /cc @pschiller@tim_cook@Apple@AppleSupportpic.twitter.com/zKVQAtJkQB
— Bryan Jones (@bdkjones) August 16, 2018
Here's a thirty-seven page forum thread from users whose $4800 MacBooks crashed with related errors. (MacRumors)
- If you read AnandTech's Threadripperoo review before, well, they've updated it slightly. Like, another 12,000 words. (AnandTech)
- The wonderful thing about standards, is standards are wonderful things. Wait, no, that's tiggers. Meanwhile here's 13 next-generation form factors for high density NVMe SSDs. (AnandTech)
- Testing AMD's StoreMI with Intel's Optane produces terrible results. Credit to Linus for persisting and finding out why - not a fault specifically in either product, but StoreMI likes to cache everything, and a 32GB Optane drive isn't big enough to produce good results on huge game files. Giving it 256GB of SSD for the cache fixed everything.
But warning: Once you have used a drive under StoreMI you have to hard reformat it before you can use it anywhere else.
Oh, wait, now you don't need to watch the video. Oops.
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