Friday, March 15
Nearly Almost Better Edition
Tech News
- ASRock's DeskMini 310 is a barebones mini-STX system with a really ugly case. (AnandTech)
It also suffers from having fewer I/O ports than many NUCs and other custom designs, despite its larger size.
ASRock make an AMD model as well, which would be more interesting due to the far superior integrated graphics, but AnandTech only had the Intel version to test.
- Intel just patched 19 different security vulnerabilities in their graphics drivers. (PC Perspective)
Joy.
- Intel's Elkhart Lake will have Gen 11 graphics. (Tom's Hardware)
A whichwhat? Fortunately they also provide a handy tourists guide to the Lake District.
- Western Digital have updated their Blue range of M.2 SSDs from SATA to NVMe delivering about three times the read and write performance. (Tom's Hardware)
They made a similarly dramatic improvement when they introduced the second generation Black SSDs. If you intend to buy one, make sure you know exactly which model you are getting,
- Just because something is short doesn't mean it's simple. (TechDirt)
House Democrats have proposed a three-page Net Neutrality bill. I actually support clear, specific, well-designed net neutrality legislation, because the carriers are untrustworthy shitweasels.
This is not it. All this bill says is "force the FCC to treat internet providers as common carriers under Title II", without clarifying or updating the provisions in the Communications Act, which was passed in 1934. This would give the FCC massive power over the internet, not just the power to enforce net neutrality among consumer internet services.
The TechDirt article is, frankly, bullshit.
- Japan's own terrible horrible no good very bad copyright legislation has been removed from their parliamentary agenda after everyone in the entire country point out that it was complete garbage. (TechDirt)
Score one for the good guys?
- DARPA is building a $10 million open-source voting system. (Motherboard)
Both hardware and software. This I think is unequivocally good.
- There's a rumour that Nvidia may do a pre-announcement teaser of their next-gen graphics cards at its conference next week. (TweakTown)
Which is about as pointless and boring as a rumour can get.
There's a rumour that after about 39 trillion digits, Pi is encoded in hexadecimal. There. Much better.
Pi Video of the Day
Yes, okay, slightly late.
Anime Op/Ed of the Day
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Thursday, March 14
Late Final Extra Edition
Tech News
- Cookie warnings are garbage and we probably need to burn everything to the ground and start over.
- Dwarf Fortress is getting graphics and coming to Steam. (Polygon)
When they say graphics, though, what they mean is the sort of thing we had with Nethack and Larn on the Amiga circa 1988.
- No-one wants SSDs over 16TB. (AnandTech)
No worries, send your unwanted 32TB drives to me.
The article notes that people don't want to be rebuilding large RAID arrays of 8TB SATA SSDs because it can take hours and reduces server uptime. I note that people taking servers offline to rebuild RAID arrays are probably idiots and no-one should listen to them. Also, use ZFS.
- AMD's Navi GPUs may launch in August right after Zen 2 unless they don't. (WCCFTech)
Vega is apparently limited to 4096 shaders, something Navi will finally correct, unless it isn't or it doesn't.
- Intel's Comet Lake is yet another Skylake respin, now with 10 cores. (Tom's Hardware)
I speculated that this might be a HEDT part jammed into Socket 1151, but the details leaked in recent Linux kernel updates indicate that this is a new die, just as the recent 8 core parts were.
If AMD only goes to 12 cores with Ryzen 3000, this will hold the line. But AMD can go to 16 cores and stomp all over Intel any time they choose.
- Something I missed yesterday: The freshly disemvowelled Twttr prototype app removes retweet, like and comment counts. (Tech Crunch)
That will go over like an osmium balloon.
- The German government says that the EU's terrible horrible no good very bad copyright legislation does mandate upload filters just as everyone with a working brain cell has been saying all along. (TechDirt)
The EU is apparently still claiming that it does not, and refers instead to "magic fairy moonbeams".
- Google removed 2.3 billion bad ads last year. (Tech Crunch)
Charge a dollar, minimum, per ad. Problem solved.
- Facebook and Instagram had to post outage notices on Twitter. (WCCFTech)
That has gotta hurt.
- Michromesoft's new version of the Edge browser is coming, complete with an extension store. (Bleeping Computer)
I promise I won't do that again.
- Australia has banned Huawei from 5G networks and simultaneously awarded them a major contract for 4G networks in Western Australia. (ZDNet)
That's okay. I guess. You just keep on being you.
- ArangoDB, which I looked at a while back but didn't jump on because the project seemed a little unfocused at the time is still going strong and has received $10 million in Series A funding.
ArangoDB is a multi-model NESQL (not exactly SQL) database, delivering document model, key/value store, graph query, and full-text search support, with joins and a query language that is half-way between SQL and Python.
Might be time I took another look. Uses RocksDB as its storage engine, which is meh.
- VelocyPack is a serialisation format developed by the ArangoDB team that has some welcome characteristics. (GitHub)
Specifically, it is binary and randomly accessible. So if you are reading a memory-mapped database (like LMDB) and want to pull out just a handful of fields from a large record, you can do so without having to unpack the entire record as your would with JSON, BSON, or MsgPack. And it has dates, which JSON and MsgPack do not.
This is a very useful library even if you don't use ArangoDB.
Does it have a Python interface though? Apparently not.
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Wednesday, March 13
I Didn't Really Want That Steak Anyway Edition
Tech News
- AMD launched the Radeon RX 560 XT - 75% faster than the existing Radeon RX 560. (AnandTech)
This is because it's a Radeon RX 570 with four compute units disabled. Also, only available in China.
- Dammit, where did my bookmarks go?
- What are they doing all the way over there?
- GoDaddy, Google, and Apple screwed up and mis-issued an estimated two million certificates. (Ars Technica)
They used - horrors - only positive 64-bit integers to assign serial numbers rather than the full range of positive and negative values. This basically doesn't matter at all. Unfortunately the reporting was carried out by a brain-damaged budgie:The 63 bits is far off the mark of the required 64 bits and, as such, poses a theoretically unacceptable risk to the entire ecosystem. (Practically speaking, there’s almost no chance of the certificates being maliciously exploited. More about that later.) Adam Caudill, the security researcher who blogged about the mass misissuance last weekend, pointed out that it’s easy to think that a difference of 1 single bit would be largely inconsequential when considering numbers this big. In fact, he said, the difference between 263 and 264 is more than 9 quintillion.
This is complete and utter nonsense. If it were 2127 vs. 2128 the difference would be 170 undecillion, and it would be even less relevant.
The fault is actually in the spec, which requires (a) at least 64 bits of entropy and (b) that the most significant bit be 0, which means you need at least a 65 bit value, but while this problem was discussed when the spec was written no-one actually bothered to update the spec.
- ASRock's X399 Phantom Gaming 6 is an only slightly cut down Threadripper motherboard for $250. (AnandTech)
Eight DIMM slots, three full PCIe 3.0 x16 slots, 2.5GbE and 1GbE ports, three M.2 slots (all PCIe 3.0 x4).
Only real limitation is that its CPU power supply is limited to 180W and it can't run the recent 24 and 32 core Threadrippers. But those are somewhat specialised - and expensive - parts and probably not a reason to be looking at low-cost motherboards anyway.
- Firefox just released Send, an end-to-end encrypted file sharing service. (Tom's Hardware)
You can send files up to 1GB, or 2.5GB if you sign up (for free, I think). If they use Backblaze and Cloudflare it's cheap enough that they can run this at a loss until/unless it takes off.
- There is one law for left and right alike, which prevents them equally from saying "learn to code" and wearing red baseball caps. (TechDirt gets this story egregiously wrong.)
- The truth of that story about Liz Warren's anti-Facebook ads getting banned by Facebook is more nuanced. Facebook is simply run by idiots. (TechDirt)
- She's wrong about everything anyway. (Stratechery)
Unfortunately, Senator Warren’s proposal helps highlight why I have not gone further with my own: hers would create massive new problems, have significant unintended consequences, and worst of all, not even address the issues Senator Warren is concerned about (with one possible exception I will get to in a moment). Worst, it would do so by running roughshod over the idea of judicial independence, invite endless lawsuits and bureaucratic meddling around subjective definitions, and effectively punish consumers for choosing the best option for them.
But apart from that...
- Twttr got disemvoweled. (Tech Crunch)
- Toyota is building a moon rover and it looks exactly like you would want a Toyota moon rover to look. (Engadget)
- Unicode is one big semantic sewage farm.
- Charting the voracity of hyperscalers, and what it means for the future. (The NExt Platform)
- Boeing is planning a software patch for the 737 MAX. (ZDNet)
Guys... Maybe do that before?
- Google's Jigsaw division has rolled out a new Chrome extension that ensures you never learn anything. (CNet)
Dirty Pair Music Video of the Day
Picture of the Day

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Tuesday, March 12
Half Baked Apple Pie Edition
Tech News
- Adobe is discontinuing Shockwave support having fired Director in 2017. (Tom's Hardware)
I'm surprised it lasted this long. Flash is next on the list, of course. Not because it's not useful but because it's a bugridden insecure pile of crap.
- Intel announced Compute Express Link - CXL - a cache-coherent CPU interconnect over PCIe 5.0. (Tom's Hardware)
AMD hasn't signed on to this effort, since they already have Infinity Fabric and it's been shipping in volume since 2017.
- Liz Warren's plans to squish Amazon, Google, and Facebook don't rest in existing antitrust and anti-cartel regulations but in new and blatantly unconstitutional EU-style copyright legislation. (TechDirt)
Good thing she won't win - not least because this would have precisely the opposite effect - but look for other idiots to latch onto this idea.
- F5 has bought Nginx for $670 million. (TechCrunch)
Could have just used apt install, guys, but whatevs.
Not sure how they plan to make money. Nginx is solid and reliable and I've come to loathe it and have switched to Caddy. Anyway, it's not something you outsource and run as a cloud service.
- KeyDB is a multi-threaded port of Redis. (GitHub)
It's not a complete overhaul and preserves Redis's locking mechanism, so it won't scale write workloads indefinitely, but for reads it does pretty well, offering better throughput and better latency.
Redis itself is pursuing a clustered / shared nothing approach, which scales much better but is more complex to deploy.
- Amazon has released an open source version of Elasticsearch. (Amazon)
But isn't Elasticsearch already open source?
Well, yes. Sort of. Maybe.
The Amazon version also has authentication, which was previously a paid enterprise-level feature, a truly daft decision.
- China goes full Brave New World. (Bleeping Computer)
That may or may not be an improvement over 1984.
- Why is Nvidia buying Mellanox? (The Next Plaform)
Answer: Because they had $7.4 billion just sitting around and needed to do something with it.
Dirty Pair Music Video of the Day
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Monday, March 11
Wrong Kind of Quacks Edition
Tech News
- Nvidia has outbid Intel to buy Mellanox for $6.9 billion. (Tom's Hardware)
This is a good and logical fit because... Um, because... NO! THIS MAKES NO SENSE! WTF NV?
- Jealous that all the bad attention is going to Europe - and America - and China - and Japan and Australia - Thailand is proposing new legislation to make service providers criminally liable for their end users' acts of lèse-majesté. (TechDirt)
Also, if you google lèse-majesté, all the top hits relate to Thailand. That country has a serious bee up its butt.
- Reinstall your Linux server over SSH.
Yes, that involves reinstalling the SSH daemon, so this is just a tiny bit tricky.
- CSS is studying trigonometry. (ZDNet)
It looks like this is mostly to generate waveforms to control animation functions. Currently you need to use JavaScript for that.
- MikroTik has more switches where that $270 10GbE model came from. (Serve the Home)
The CRS312-4C+8XG is 12-port 10Gbase-T managed switch with SFP+ support as well on four ports. That makes it an easy drop in to an existing network, unlike pure SFP+ switches.
No pricing just yet.
- Linux 5.1 may support Optane modules as system RAM. (Phoronix)
I'd be interested to see OS-level generalised NVM support, but this is a useful step.
Kei Has Shoulders Like a Linebacker Music Video of the Day
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Sunday, March 10
I Can Almost Get Out Of Bed Without Screaming Edition
Tech News
- A die photo of Samsung's Exynos 9820 SOC. (AnandTech)
This is interesting because the chip has Samsung's own M4 cores, Arm's previous generation A75 performance cores, and Arm's low-power A55 cores. The size difference is striking.
- The Dutch Data Protection Agency says that sites that require you to allow tracking cookies to access content violate the GDPR. (Tom's Hardware)
Sites aren't going to stop doing this, of course; they're going to hide it under ever increasing layers of bullshit.
- Why does Google return invalid JSON data? (Stack Overflow)
Because everything is garbage.
- Citrix got hacked. (The Register)
This isn't good. Citrix believes that this only involved corporate data and not customer records, but this isn't certain yet.
- Want to write your own programming language? You're probably crazy but here's a list of helpful tools and information for you anyway. (GitHub)
Dirty Pair Music Video of the Day
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Saturday, March 09
Ow Fuck Ow Edition
Tech News
- In the market for a compact server that looks like an old-school CB rig? Cincoze has you covered. (AnandTech)
Up to a 6 core Xeon and 32GB (maybe 64GB) RAM, two 2.5" bays, up to 8 USB ports, 6 gigabit Ethernet ports, and 6 serial ports, plus DVI, DisplayPort, and HDMI.


- If you have Windows 10 Pro or Enterprise, and don't want the 1903 update dumped on you without further warning act now to avoid disappointment. (ZDNet)
If you have Windows 10 Home, the best option I know of is to have a cheap laptop with 32GB of eMMC storage and the rest of your data on an SD card. This will make the Windows updater crap out with 100% reliability.
- A 1TB NVMe drive for $105? What's the catch? (Tech Report)
Catch is it's a QLC drive. But it's fast for reads, and usually fast for writes. If you don't run it 100% full, so it has room for a pseudo-SLC cache, it should do fine.
Link also points to a 10TB external drive at Best Buy for $160.
Dirty Pair Music Video of the Day
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So I blew out my back, apparently during the strenuous exercise of washing the dishes. I can't currently sit at my desk at all, so I'm giving kneeling a try. Not looking promising so far.
Daily News Stuff will likely appear in abridged form for a few days...
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Friday, March 08
Double-plus Ow Edition
Tech News
- I'm sure there's some.
Social Media News
- The EU Parliament paid the press to create propaganda supporting the terrible horrible no good very bad new copyright legislation. (TechDirt)
Impeach the fucking lot of them.
- Meanwhile in the US, the Supreme Court says that yes, you have to register copyright before you can sue, as stated clearly in the Copyright Act.
Copyright Trolls and Hollywood, Inc are unimpressed with Cyborg Ruth "Vader" Ginsburg, who wrote the decision. (TechDirt)
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Thursday, March 07
Tech News
- Surprising exactly no-one, AMD will be releasing a third-generation Threadripper CPU this year. (AnandTech)
No specs yet, but it will be using the new chiplet and I/O die design shown off at CES, which means it could go as high as 64 cores.
Intel are stuck at 28 cores for now, so it will be an interesting year for the high-end desktop.
- A leak by Fujitsu confirmed earlier leaks of Intel's 9th generation family. (Fanless Tech)
This includes a 35W 8 core i9-9900T and 8 core Xeon E2200 parts, which will arrive just in time to get stomped by AMD.
- GPU prices are down and likely to stay down and cards are actually in stock for a change. (PC Perspective)
Yay, I guess. I'm good for at least a couple of years though.
- But someone forgot to tell Colorful. (Tom's Hardware)
- Windows 7 goes into extended support on April 1. Support plans will start at $25 per system per year which sounds fine. (WCCFTech)
But the price doubles every year, meaning that after just 100 years we'll all probably be dead and won't care anyway.
- Supermicro's M11SDV-4CT-LN4F is another embedded mini-ITX server board. (Serve the Home)
Only four SATA ports on this one though so meh.
- Consciousness is one of the few scientific fields of studies where people can earn PhDs and spend decades working on theories and gathering data and end up knowing less about the subject than a dead turtle does about magnetic containment fusion reactors. (Quanta)
Panpsychism? Yeah, sure, and phlogiston and luminiferous aether and the inheritance of acquired characteristics you goddamn frauds.
Update: Why can a random layperson on Twitter not only grasp but eloquently convey what these boneheads cannot?
It's the brain contemplating itself, the ultimate Escher sketch.
— dicentra ن (@dicentra33) March 7, 2019
Social Media News
- The American mainstream news media has an aggregate IQ of 3. (TechDirt)
In this case taking "America" fairly broadly.
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