What happened?
Twelve years!
You hit me with a cricket bat!
Ha! Twelve years!

Sunday, April 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 April 2026

Nova Terra Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • Which is the best $200 CPU right now - AMD's 9600X or Intel's new Core Ultra 250K?  (Tom's Hardware)

    Ignoring the platform expiry elephant in the room for the moment, the 250K is a clear winner.  For gaming it's a very close match, and while the 250K can use almost twice as much power in multi-threaded tasks, it is also almost twice as fast in multi-threaded tasks, so that's honestly a win too.

    The problem comes if you plan to upgrade your system in the future.  AMD plans at least one and probably two new generations of processors in the AM5 socket, while Intel's Socket 1851 disappears later this year with the introduction of Nova Lake and its Socket 1954.


  • China's CXMT is rescuing LPDDR4 customers abandoned by Samsung.  (WCCFTech)

    CXMT, like Taiwan's Nanya, mostly still produces DDR4 memory, which Samsung is dropping as it shifts capacity to higher-margin chips like HBM for AI.

    But LPDDR4 is very widely used in products from lower-cost phones and tables, to SSDs, to embedded cards like the Raspberry Pi.


  • Memory prices rose 110% and SSD prices 147% in Q1.  (WCCFTech)

    Despite that computer sales actually rose slightly, as customers panic-bought everything in sight.  Not that you would catch me doing that.  Not since I ran out of money, anyway.


Musical Interlude


Huh.  Postmodern Jukebox is performing at the Sydney Opera House in July.  Almost enough to get me to make the trip.




Disclaimer: The fire extinguisher on the piano shows they were practising safe sax.

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Saturday, April 18

Geek

Daily News Stuff 18 April 2026

Bloopfish Edition

Top Story

  • Intel's new Core Series 3 is its answer to the MacBook Neo.  (PC World)

    The A18 CPU used in the MacBook Neo uses 6W maximum, and typically throttles down to 4W since the laptop is passively cooled.

    All models in the Core Series 3 range use 35W maximum and a base of 15W, which is rather more than that.  So while it may be Intel's answer, it is not necessarily a good answer.

    The first laptop announced with the Core Series 3 is Honor's Magicbook 14.  That costs around $1000, but on the other hand it comes with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of SSD, which is more than is even possible in the MacBook Neo.


  • Meanwhile AMD's legendary 5800X3D may be making a return.  (Tom's Hardware)

    AMD has officially made non-committal noises about this.  The chip was taken off the market allegedly because it was too competitive with the newer 7800X3D.  But with DDR5 prices in cislunar orbit, and the slower 5700X3D and 5600X3D also retired from the market, it would be a very welcome sign.

    But it's allegedly a 10th anniversary special edition, and Ryzen's 10th anniversary is in December, counting from the announcement, or next March counting from retail availability.  Hope we're not going to have to wait that long.

    I mean, it's not like I have 384GB of DDR4 RAM lying around, but if I did I might be interested.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Off with their heads!

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Friday, April 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 April 2026

Obscurity By Design Edition

Top Story

  • Scheduling service Cal.com has gone closed source in part due to AI security threats.  (Cal.com)

    Cal.diy will remain as an open-source self-hosted solution for individual users.  It has most of the same features except for support for teams and enterprise authentication methods.


  • Here's why that won't work.  (Twitter)

    If your code is out there - even as a binary - AI tools can decompile it efficiently.

    If your API is out there, AI tools can and will scan it.

    It's an understandable move to avoid short-term risks, but the best approach is to use the same AI tools to scan for security issues yourself.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Blub.

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Thursday, April 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 April 2026

Refinery Fire Edition

Top Story




Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Mary counts the walls.

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Wednesday, April 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 April 2026

Busy People Edition

Top Story

  • China's leading flash memory producer, YTMC, is constructing two new factories in addition to the one already in progress.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Each factory will produce 100,000 wafers per month - equal to 50% of the company's current production - once it reaches full capacity, but that will take a while.  The first of the new facilities will come online this year but will take another year to reach 50% of planned capacity.

    In an interesting twist, half the capacity of the first of these factories will be assigned to DRAM rather than NAND, which is what YTMC normally produces.

    It won't be enough to fill the current shortage but every bit helps.

Tech News



Anime Stuffs

Witch Hat Atelier: Seems to be getting the quality adaptation it deserves.

An Observation Log of My Fiancée Who Calls Herself a Villainess: Oh, its Bertia!  This could be fun.  I honestly forgot what the manga (and the light novel that preceded it) was called.  It's a good companion to Bakarina, wherein the heroine tries desperately to avoid the Bad End her reincarnation has in store.  Bertia glories in it...  Badly.


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: No hablo...  Anything.

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Tuesday, April 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 April 2026

Greasy Spork Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Musical Interlude






Disclaimer: Tell 'em Reggie sent you.

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Monday, April 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 April 2026

Fresh Spoo Edition

Top Story

  • DC.  Suicide Squad is a DC property, not Marvel.


  • The peril of laziness lost.  (Dtrace)

    AI makes it easy to generate millions of lines of code.

    What it doesn't make it is a good idea.

    It used to be that laziness by itself placed a brake on the wheel of code churn.  Now you also need to know what you are doing.  And that is hard work to begin with.


Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: More pfft.

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Sunday, April 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 April 2026

Is It Real Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Musical Interlude


Anime is Suicide Squad Isekai, the recent anime adaptation of Marvel's Suicide Squad.  Song is Go Getters by Hololive's own Grim Rapper, Mori Calliope.

Not an AMV, exactly.  The studio hired Calli to perform the ending theme for the show.



Disclaimer: Pfft.

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Saturday, April 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 April 2026

Crazy Eddie Edition

Top Story

Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: We have every type of memory here at Crazy Micro Center!

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Friday, April 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 April 2026

Peterbyte Edition

Top Story

  • A hacker has reportedly broken into the National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, China, and made off with...  Carry the twelve...  Ten petabytes of data.  (CNN)

    That's the equivalent of 70 billion Apple II floppy disks, or the total data in all the DNA strands of six and a half dromedaries.*
    CNN cannot verify the origins of the alleged dataset and the claims made by FlamingChina, but spoke with multiple experts whose initial assessment of the leak indicated it was genuine.

    The alleged sample data appeared to include documents marked "secret” in Chinese, along with technical files, animated simulations and renderings of defense equipment including bombs and missiles.
    Oops.
    Hofer, who reviewed the sample of the leak, said he was able to contact on Telegram a person who claimed they had carried out the hack.  The attacker claimed to have gained access to the Tianjin supercomputer through a compromised VPN domain.

    Once inside, the attacker told Hofer they deployed a "botnet" - a network of automated programs that were able enter the NSCC's system and then extract, download and store the data.  The extraction of 10 petabytes of data took around six months.
    One question arises: Where did the hacker get 70 billion Apple II floppies?**

    * Content may settle in shipping.
    ** Or six and a half dromedaries, for that matter.


Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Fish cakes.

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