Tuesday, February 05
Tech News
- Liquid cooling isn't just for overclockers anymore and never was. (Ars Technica)
It's a weird article, desperately trying to credit a fringe activity among hardware enthusiasts for a technology that existed before any of them were born.
- How long will a 64-bit PostgreSQL transaction ID last?
292,000 years. Oops, spoilers.
- Slack files for IPO, says don't tell anyone. (Bloomberg)
- The developers of the Electron app framework are hard at work ensuring that no-one, anywhere, will ever have any free memory ever again.
- Firefox 66 will block auto-play audio and video.
It will probably get blocked by injunction from a Hawaiian judge though.
They are also working on blocking cryptomining and fingerprinting. (Bleeping Computer)
Fingerprinting allows web sites to match your computer across different browsers. (Bleeping Computer)
Turns out browsers are, by default, more chatty than they need to be. They don't leak private information, but they do leak unique information that can be cross-referenced against a sufficiently large dataset - the sort of dataset we would find in the hands of the usual suspects.
- Do you really miss the Windows 3.0 file manager? Me neither. But it's available on GitHub anyway. (ZDNet)
- The Australian copyright protection racket (APRA) is now going after sites that allow you to download videos from YouTube. (ZDNet)
Note: YouTube allows you to download videos from YouTube.
- Russia has put similar rules into place. How did that work out for them? (TechDirt)
In 2017, the number of torrent sites offering content to the Russian market sat at around 1,300. However, last year – in the face of overwhelming blocking measures – that number grew to around 2,000.
Oh.
Anime Op/Ed of the Day
Picture of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:03 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 318 words, total size 4 kb.
Monday, February 04
Tech News
- The iPhone XR maybe isn't not a hit? (Tom's Guide)
Also, Apple made it clear that it got the pricing right on the new models, no matter what the actual sales figures might say, and any future adjustments you might see are entirely due tosolar eclipsesforeign currency fluctuations.
- When does AWS break through $100 billion? (The Next Platform)
When they get a dashboard that doesn't look like the new intern hacked it together over the weekend.
- New Zealand is trialling 10Gbps consumer and small business broadband. (ZDNet)
Meanwhile in Australia I am STILL waiting on 100Mbps, ten years in, and six months after I was told it would be connected.
- It's all on the website. (ZDNet)
- The Linux 5.0 production release is fast approaching. (Phoronix)
I'm still maintaining a bunch of servers on 2.6.
Social Media News
- YouTube is going to mess with the dislike button after creating the worst video in the platform's storied history of utter garbage. (One Angry Gamer)
It's widely speculated that they have already been doing so, and just not admitting to it. However, large-scale social media platforms often don't have the direct granularity users expect - counters are often cached and don't necessarily update in real time - so it may just be that the software doesn't work.
Video of the Day
Other Linus discovers that you can't drop software.
Picture of the Day

Tiny footsteps.

I'm ready for my close-up, Mr DeMille.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:42 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 268 words, total size 3 kb.
Sunday, February 03
Tech News
- Intel's Xeon W-3175X has shown up in retail. (Tom's Hardware)
$2979 for the CPU and $1800 for the Asus motherboard. You'll also need a 500W water cooler. Dual power supplies and external 1hp chiller are optional. (Yes, the motherboard really supports dual power supplies.)
- RustPython is a Python interpreter written in Rust.
Or as I like to call it, Rupy.
Social Media News
- Snopes and AP are out at Facebook's fact checking program. (Tech Crunch)
Given the clear alignment of political biases among these entities, it's not entirely obvious what led to this breakup.
- YouTube's terrible community guidelines system is being used in a Mafia-style protection racket. (BleepingComputer)
Nice channel you have here. Shame if anything happened to it.
- The Covington story: What really happened. Sort of. (The Atlantic)
The article is a terrible pile of garbage and at the same time some of the best reporting I've seen on the event.
Picture of the Day

— Heisenblep's Unfurtainty Principle
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
03:13 PM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 255 words, total size 3 kb.
Saturday, February 02
Tech News
- Samsung Vietnam (which apparently is a thing that exists) accidentally leaked a sneak peek of the Galaxy F which may or may not be an upcoming foldable phoneblet. (AnandTech)
Other leaks have suggested it will be making its debut in March - at a price of US$1770. (ZDNet)
Or you can just buy a phone and a tablet.
Meanwhile, the Galaxy S10 is expected to drop February 20. (ZDNet)
- Even Google's diversity hires can see that Google is falling apart. (Bloomberg)
Of course, they blame everyone but themselves for the problems they are creating.
- Engadget seems to think that porn has disappeared from the internet.
I... No, pretty sure it's still there. Wait let me check - ugh - yep, still there, and now I need to Bleach Bit my brain.
- Google's Play Store now accepts progressive web apps.
Cue the rapid decline of custom app development, and good riddance.
- Researchers have demonstrated a working 3d printer using the light-activated resin polymer technique. (Nature)
But, you ask, when will this become a real product that can be purchased and put to practical use?
Already done.
I'm not entirely sure what the point of the Nature article is.
- That law in India regulating online stores has resulted in Amazon and Flipkart pulling an estimated 30 trillion products off the shelves. (Tech Crunch)
Well, 400,000 in the case of Amazon, and one quarter of all products sold by Flipkart, which is approximately 30 trillion.
- My calculator may need new batteries.
- A security vulnerability affecting 3G, 4G, and 5G mobile networks should be fixed by the end of... End of the year?! (ZDNet)
I ragged on Apple for their FaceTime spy bug, but once they realised what was going on they took immediate action - they shut off the problematic service the same day.
The traditional carriers are struggling to fix bugs the same year.
Picture of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:04 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 499 words, total size 5 kb.
Friday, February 01
Tech News
- Intel has discontinued Itanium. (AnandTech)
So if you were planning on buying one, get your order in before the middle of 2021.
- Humble has some book bundles for you:
Programming Cookbooks - 15 O'Reilly cookbook titles for $15.
Fantasy Manga - 89 volumes of manga for $20, including Battle Angel Alita 1-3, Re:Slime 1-4, Mushishi 1-10, Cells at Work 1-4, and Flying Witch 1-4.
Numenera - 28 volumes of games rules, campaign settings, and adventures for $15. Numenera is the game system used for the Planescape: Torment sequel Torment: Tides of Numenera. It's set on Earth, but a billion years in the future, where technology has changed to the point that few people even recognise it as technology any more.
Also Computer Music - 16 titles on computer sound and music for $15.
- If a $3000 chip on a $1700 motherboard is a wee bit pricy for you, you might want to consider a $250 to $500 on a $400 motherboard. (AnandTech)
The board in question is the Supermicro AlphabetSoup - sorry, C9Z390-PGW - and it's a regular socket 1151 Z390 motherboard but with a PLX chip (a PCIe switch) for extra PCIe lanes and built-in 10G Ethernet. Also WiFi 5 (802.11ac), two M.2 slots, two U.2 ports, five USB 3.1 ports, two DisplayPort ports, one HDMI port port, and the usual audio port ports.
- Fuck Oracle. (Forbes)
They are doing licensing compliance audits on companies using Java for development. Everyone knew this was coming when they bought Sun, and now it's here.
- The Raspberry Pi 4 is not coming in 2019. (Tom's Hardware)
It's a slow news day. They wrote it, I linked it. Sue us. Wait, don't do that. See disclaimer. We have trebuchets.
Social Media News
- Fixing Facebook needs a trust score. (ZDNet)
I'd prescribe a shovel, but you do you ZDNet.
- Facebook and Google got whacked and then unwhacked by Apple. (Thurrott.com)
Reporting is unclear, but this may have been Apple revoking their enterprise certificates and then issuing new ones, to force-kill the offending apps immediately.
- Larry Correia issues an antipology. (Monster Hunter Nation)
Video of the Day
Anime Op/Ed of the Day
YouTube: NO.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
08:51 PM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 520 words, total size 6 kb.
Thursday, January 31
Tech News
- Intel closes out January with a bang by launching their 28 core Xeon W-3175X for $2999. (AnandTech)
Which is a lot of money - and a lot more than the competing 32 core Threadripper 2990WX at $1799 - but a lot less than expected. After all, it's the same chip as the Xeon 8180, which runs around $10,000, just with some interconnects disabled. (Other Linus dropped one of those and busted it.)
This is also the one Intel showed off last year overclocked to 5GHz with an external 1hp water chiller. The version they are actually shipping is slightly more restrained: 3.1GHz base and 4.5GHz max boost frequency, and a 255W TDP.
About that TDP... While it's basically the same on paper as the 2990WX, AMD stick firmly to that limit, while the Intel part draws 380W at stock under full load. Overclocking naturally does nothing to help this.
On Final Fantasy XV, the W-3175X is 2% faster than a Ryzen 2700X, so the latter is probably still our recommended configuration.
More realistically, if you're rendering in Corona it's 20% faster than the Threadripper 2990WX, but is slightly slower in Blender and dead even in POV-Ray. So even if money is no object, you still need to check out the benchmarks for your specific application.
Also, since this is clearly the fastest part Intel can produce, it gives AMD a nice big target to shoot at when they roll out Threadripper 3 towards the middle of the year. Well, there is that dual-chip 48 core part they're planning, but that is basically two of those $10k parts on a module with a few cores disabled. I don't think Intel wants to sell that into the desktop market.
Oh, and there are exactly two motherboards available that support this CPU, only one of which is available in retail, and they cost around $1700.
- AMD had a great year. (PC Perspective)
Revenue up, margins up, expenses up - well, that's not ideal all else being equal, but revenue climbed $1.2b compared to expenses climbing by just $280m. And a healthy profit at the end.
And that's before the server sales really start to kick in, which should start this year with Zen 2 and Rome.
- Speaking of which, if the Xeon W-3175X is too rich for your blood but you like the idea of more than four memory channels, Gigabyte has an EPYC workstation motherboard in standard ATX size. (Serve the Home)
Only one DIMM per channel, but there are 8 channels, and they literally could not fit any more.

Three 1G (including the dedicated BMC) and two 10G Ethernet (the 10G is SPF, though), 16 SATA ports, four full PCIe 3.0 x16 slots and one x8, one M.2 slot, and two USB 3.0. No USB 3.1 or audio; it's really a server board in a workstation format.
- Apple is facing a lawsuit over that FaceTime bug because we can't have nice things. (Tom's Hardware)
- Build your own Linux distro in 10 minutes! (Phoronix)
Because why not?
- Is Intel courting high-speed networky favourite Mellanox? (The Next Platform)
Signs point to yes.
Social Media News
- Upset that Facebook are getting all the publicity lately, Google turns out to also have a privacy-busting iOS app that paid teens to spy on them. (Tech Crunch)
Remember how I said that some VPNs are actually worse than no VPN? Well, that includes Facebook and Google.
Google were at least up-front about exactly what their dodgy app was doing, but that doesn't make it less dodgy.
- Apple has yanked Facebook's Enterprise Certificate over this nonsense, and may do the same to Google.
Remember, Google controls the competing platform to iOS.
- Some Android camera apps are also up to no good but at least they're not official apps from Google. (Bleeping Computer)
- The EU is still at it, forging ahead with legislation that would require anyone (literally anyone) to take down content judged to be supportive of terrorism within one hour of notification by any law enforcement organisation anywhere in Europe. (TechDirt)
Fortunately, if things go to plan this shortly will not include the Online Limerick Control Directorate at Humberside Police. (The Telegraph)
1. Got a call from Director, saying cops wanting to speak to me. He’d had sense not to give out my number, but said he’d pass on details. I rang.
— Harry The Owl - Limerick Criminal (@HarryTheOwl) January 23, 2019
- Google+ is shutting down on April 2. (Tech Crunch)
This has already started biting us at my day job. We accept OAuth logins via Google (and others) and that API is being very rapidly deprecated.
- Say what you like about Ursula K. Le Guin, she didn't didn't use a shrinkwrap contract to sign her readers up to self-flagellation classes. (Shoplifiting in the Marketplace of Ideas)
Picture of the Day

Video of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:15 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 851 words, total size 8 kb.
I might start putting videos below the fold. The main page is getting really slow to load.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:15 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 72 words, total size 1 kb.
Wednesday, January 30
Tech News
- Huawei's Matebook 13 is a conventional laptop with a 3:2 screen. (Tom's Hardware)
Apart from the 3:2 2160x1440 screen, it has a quad core i7-8565U, 8GB RAM, 512GB NVMe SSD, and two USB type C ports for doing everything (charging, video out, USB stuff).
CPU performance is excellent - it leaves the new Macbook Air absolutely in the dust. I/O performance is fair, though the Macbook is much faster there, perhaps because of the MacOS filesystem.
It also has a dedicated GPU - a low end MX150, but it's there - so it leaves laptops relying on the integrated Intel GPU in the dust as well. Perhaps because of that, battery life is just 6 hours, which isn't awful but falls well short of all-day use.
- Game developer Ammobox file a valid DMCA complaint against Steam for their own game and everyone lived happily ever after. (TechDirt)
Almost everyone.
- Samsung, not to be outdone by rival Toshiba, has announced a 1TB eUFS storage chip for smartphones and... Other smartphones. (WCCFTech)
Though larger than Toshiba's 512GB device it is slower at "only" 1GB per second.
- Podcasts to program by.
Social Media News
- Facebook has been paying teenagers so it could spy on them. (Tech Crunch)
Over 18, that's one thing. If an adult says "You pay me, I let you see my data", that's a valid transaction. Under 18, go directly to jail. Do not pass Go.
Tech Crunch has all the details - they've done some great work on this story - and it looks like Facebook seriously fucked up here.
Anime Op/Ed of the Day
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day

Posted by: Pixy Misa at
08:07 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 323 words, total size 3 kb.
Tuesday, January 29
Tech News
- Humble Bundle has cookbooks.
Whether you want to make anteater stew, turtle soup, whatever the heck that thing is pie... Okay, yeah, they're O'Reilly. Programming cookbooks for Python, SQL, JavaScript, Raspberry Pi and Arduino, Docker, R, Scala and more.
- HP's 10th generation ProLiant MicroServer gets a look-at. (Serve the Home)
I have an old one of these - third generation or something like that, using an AMD Bobcat family CPU. The starting price is actually very cheap. I'd like to see a 2.5" version though.
- Apple's FaceTime had a tiny little bug that lets anyone spy on anyone else. (Bleeping Computer) [Updated]
Basically you could trick the other end into thinking the user had answered the call. Nice work, guys. We figured this out in the 19th century, but nooo.
The hack worked via a new group call service; Apple have switched that service off until the bug has been fixed and the service has been tested seventeen hundred different ways.
- Which online storage is right for you? (ZDNet)
I have both Dropbox and Google Drive - the latter mostly because I ran out of space for my email. The problem with Dropbox is you can only get more than 1TB by upgrading to their business plans, which require a minimum of three users.
- Apple death watch, India edition: iPhone sales in India plummeted almost 50% from 2017 to 2018. (ZDnet)
Apple sold 1.7 million units in India in 2018 - out of 150 million total smartphone purchases. The OnePlus 6 sold 1 million units there in 22 days.
- Star Control: Origins returns to GOG. (One Angry Gamer)
I picked it up at half price from the Stardock store during the DMCA takedown, but haven't had a chance to play it yet. Probably in March or April. 2023.
The article also shows a list of the claims behind the DMCA takedown notice, which include obviously uncopyrightable items such as hyperspace, radar, and autopilot.
- The headline reads "Uber partner Bell unveils flying taxi". (Tech Crunch)
Bell? Wait, that Bell? Yes, you guessed it, the "flying taxi" is a helicopter.
Okay, it's a four seat autonomous electric quadcopter, so it is something new. And the fact that Bell is building it suggests that it might actually be real, given that they've been building helicopters since the 1940s.
- Nvidia issued guidance that they weren't going to meet their revised revenue forecasts and their stock price went splut. (WCCFTech)
They went all-in on AI and ray tracing with the RTX range, and bumped up prices because those new features make the chips large and expensive to manufacture.
Only problem is, pretty much nothing exists to use those features yet, and they probably won't see truly mainstream support for another two or three years.
Plus Nvidia had a lot of old cards left in the channel after the crypto mining bubble burst. AMD managed that event better in that respect, but on the other hand, during the bubble AMD cards were simply unobtainable.
I think what Nvidia is doing will pay off big in the long run, particularly looking at the specs of TSMC's 5nm node. It's just going to take a while.
- Speaking of Nvidia, here's their Titan RTX in case you just discovered a bunch of early Apple stock certificates in your grandparents' attic. (Tom's Hardware)
- And speaking of TSMC, a chemical contamination at one of their plants may have ruined as many as 10,000 wafers. (Tom's Hardware)
This is in a plant that produces 16nm an 12nm chips, not the latest 7nm, but it could affect Xbox and PlayStation shipments, mid-range phones, and... Nvidia graphics cards. It's not a huge shortfall but there's a long lead time in wafer production so it's bound to cause scheduling problems.
Social Media News
- While I snark at Tech Crunch, they are snarking at Instagram.
Both the app and the website went down, refusing all requests, for nearly an hour.
Then they got fixed.
Yeah, that's the whole story. Next!
- Pushback on the California privacy legislation from... Basically, everyone. (TechDirt)
We're not saying "train wreck", but choo choo CRASH.
- Many VPNs turn out to be worse than no VPN. (TechDirt)
If you're not paying for it, they're stealing your data. If you are paying for it, they might still be stealing your data.
- Discussions of false DMCA takedown notices have been targeted by false DMCA takedown notices. (TechDirt)
Fortunately, Google got wise to this and aren't playing along.
- Facebook is now blocking tools that track Facebook's user trackers. (ProPublica)
The obvious next step is a tool to block Facebook's blocking tool that blocks tools that track Facebook's user trackers.
Of course, this being ProPublica, the shocking ad they use as an illustration is an NRA membership drive.
- Is Twitter banning users for posting #LearnToCode at
smug idiotsjournalists? (Reason)
Yes.
Picture of the Day
Bonus Picture of the Day
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
04:15 PM
| Comments (5)
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 860 words, total size 9 kb.
Monday, January 28
Tech News
- Julia turns 1.1!
Wait, when did it turn 1.0? And do they have an option for static compilation yet? (I know that means specialisation doesn't work, but still...)
Update: There is a static compiler!
- Huawei has launched the View 20, which I mentioned previously... Sometime. (AnandTech)
This has a 48MP main camera, and the latest Kirin 980 with Cortex A76. A 6.4" 1080x2340 display, a big 4000mAh battery, 6/128GB or 8/256GB, a 25MP front camera (why?) and a headphone jack.
That might be a suitable replacement for my old Xperia Z Ultra if I had any money to spare. (My Z Ultra still works, but it overheated at some point and the battery swelled by half a millimetre or so and the back popped off. So I'm a wee bit cautious about continuing to use it.)
- Raspberry Pi's CM3+ is a Raspberry Pi 3B+, minus all the I/O ports, on a DDR2 SO-DIMM module. (Tom's Hardware)
Nothing to do with memory, it's just a cheap, standard connector that's the right size and has the right number of pins, so you can build a board with all the I/O and then pop the CPU and its attached RAM and flash straight into it.
- How to outperform anything with anything else.
The answer is: Cheat. The example shows Python outrunning carefully optimised C++ code, but it does that by cheating.
90% of programming is knowing how to cheat.
- SK Hynix says DDR5 will be here next year and DDR6 is already in development. (Guru3D)
Their initial DDR5 chips run at 5.2GHz, with plans to hit 6.4GHz by 2022.
- Steam aren't the only company randomly censoring games. Sony are at it too. (One Angry Gamer)


Thanks Sony! Where would we be without you to save us from the terrifying outline of already-censored cartoon boobs?
- Samsung is ditching plastic packaging. (Tech Crunch)
Prepare for more day one dings and scratches on your future appliance purchases.
Social Media News
- The dark night of fascism is always descending in the United States and yet lands only in Europe.
Or in this case, Cameroon. (TechDirt)
The Cameroonian military is jailing journalists for publishing fake news. Much as I'd like to see the mainstream media dropped into a supermassive black hole, I don't want to see them in jail.
- More GDPR bad news may be on the way for Google. (Tech Crunch)
Hmm.
Anime Op/Ed of the Day
Speaking of anime, Re:Slime is pretty good, but the ops and eds are not. They needed Megumi Hayashibara.
Video of the Day
Bonus Video of the Day
Other Linus has been trying to build a six-user video editing workstation for months, not because it is in any way remotely practical or cost-effective, but because videos of computers failing in interesting ways get a lot of hits. Also, he has a habit of dropping fragile $7000 components, so these things can turn without warning into the IT crowd equivalent of a slasher film.
Does he succeed this time? It's worth a look, because this rig resembles Doc Brown's workshop more than it does the usual neat RGB-lit builds that feature on YouTube tech channels.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:35 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 597 words, total size 6 kb.
55 queries taking 0.2761 seconds, 388 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.












