What is that?
It's a duck pond.
Why aren't there any ducks?
I don't know. There's never any ducks.
Then how do you know it's a duck pond?

Wednesday, August 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 August 2023

At Least Be Entertaining Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • Remember that amazing new room-temperature superconductor announcement?  It might not be rubbish after all.  (In the Pipeline)

    Yes, the experimental data is imperfect, but the details provided are sufficient for both empirical testing and theoretical analysis.

    There's an unconfirmed report of an independent replication demonstrating the Meissner effect in a small sample of the material, and the video doesn't look like any cooling is involved at all.

    Separately, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory took a look at the structural data on the material - called LK-99 - and said:
    I present the calculated spin-polarized electronic structure in Fig. 3. Remarkably, I find an isolated set of flat bands crossing the Fermi level, with a maximum bandwidth of ∼130 meV (see Fig.4) that is separated from the rest of the valence manifold by 160 meV. Such a narrow bandwidth is particularly indicative of strongly correlated bands. . .unlike other correlated-d band superconductors, in this system the Cu-d bands are particularly flat – there is minimal band broadening from neighboring oxygen ions. If previous assumptions about band flatness driving superconductivity are correct, then this result would suggest a much more robust (higher temperature) superconducting phase exists in this system, even compared to well-established high-TC systems.
    Which is saying that on a purely theoretical basis this looks just like what we'd expect from a high-temperature superconductor.

    Lowe (the author of In the Pipeline) concludes:
    I am guardedly optimistic at this point. The Shenyang and Lawrence Berkeley calculations are very positive developments, and take this well out of the cold-fusion "we can offer no explanation" territory. ... This is by far the most believable shot at room-temperature-and-pressure superconductivity the world has seen so far, and the coming days and weeks are going to be extremely damned interesting.


  • Testing graph databases and reporting the results as seventy pages of text and a handful of illegible microscopic scatter plots.  (Mihai)

    Well, that was a waste of time.


  • Nim 2.0 is out.  (Nim)

    If you want a statically compiled, statically typed Python, this is your best bet.


  • Nvidia's new AI image generate fits on a floppy disk and takes 4 minutes to train.  (Decrypt)

    And not one of those fancy 1.44MB floppies either, we're talking about an Apple II single-sided single-density jobbie.


  • Facebook's ban on Canadian government propaganda - laughingly referred to as "news" - takes effect today.  (Engadget)

    Okay.


  • Twitter is suing "hate speech researchers" - which is to say fascists - for scaring off advertisers - which is to say mostly also fascists. (Ars Technica)
    Lawsuit comes as Musk and Yaccarino seize control of X's trust and safety team.
    Now? Only now you are doing this?

    Day one you should have fired them all. Every single one.


  • Speaking of Twitter, they've made changes to the ads to get around AdBlockPlus.

    It sucks. And that's with supposedly reduced ads on a paid account.


  • Apple asked users why they were turning off the "conversation awareness" feature on their AirPods.  (9to5Mac)

    Users: Because it sucks.


  • Anker's new USB-C power adapter can fast-charge a 16" MacBook Pro.  (The Verge)

    It can put out 140W on one port for a large laptop while still having 100W left over to charge your phone and tablet.

    USB-C itself now supports charging at up to 240W - 48V at 5A - though I haven't seen anything using that full power yet.  The Framework Laptop 16 comes with a 180W USB-C charger, which is getting there, and hopefully dedicated chargers will soon disappear even for gaming laptops.


  • The Galaxy Z Fold 5 is here, which is odd because it seems the Z Fold 4 only came out a week ago.  (Tech Crunch)

    As before, it's expensive and awkward, too narrow when folded up and too wide when unfolded.  You'd be better off in almost every way with a regular phone and a regular small tablet EXCEPT THERE ARE NO GOOD SMALL TABLETS SAMSUNG I'M LOOKING AT YOU.


Panko Explains It All Video of the Day




Disclaimer: Going to try replacing the charge port on my M8 FHD.  Worst case I kill it, and since it can't charge already that won't make a huge difference.

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Post contains 796 words, total size 8 kb.

Tuesday, August 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 August 2023

Idiots In Cars Passing Legislation Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • Dell is all-in on generative AI.  (The Verge)

    Oh, they're not planning to use it.  It's crap.

    But if you want to deploy your own crap generative AI, they are happy to sell you very expensive servers to run it on.


  • Basic computer games has been translated.  (GitHub)

    The 1978 classic book Basic Computer Games has been translated into a dozen other languages.  Not French or Spanish, though, but C and Java and Python.

    Why?  I don't know why.  But there it is.


  • Samsung is losing billions of dollars on DRAM and flash production.  (AnandTech)

    The company still managed to eke out a small profit thanks to its other divisions, but while cheap memory is great for consumers, it's not so great for memory companies.  

    Of which there are only about three left in the world because the last time this happened the rest of them went bankrupt.


Disclaimer: Full speed ahead, and damn the Jesuit photon torpedoes.

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Post contains 308 words, total size 3 kb.

Monday, July 31

Geek

Daily News Stuff 31 July 2023

Sam The Many-Coloured Edition

Top Story

  • Sam Altman-Fried, CEO of OpenAI (corporate motto: In a world of Saurons, be a Saruman), has run into a snag with his new venture, Worldcoin: It is a transparent totalitarian takeover and existing governments don't appreciate anyone muscling in on their turf. (Tech Crunch)
    Worldcoin, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s bid to sew up the market for verifying humanness by convincing enough mobile meatsacks to have their eyeballs scanned in exchanged for crypto tokens (yes, really), only started its official global rollout this week but it’s already landed on the radar of European data protection authorities.

    Why should anyone feel the need to prove their humanness on the Internet? Well one reason is that by unleashing free power tools like ChatGPT Altman’s generative AI company is leading the charge to make it harder to distinguish between bot-generated and human digital activity. But don’t worry, he’s got an eyeball-scanning orb-plus-crypto-token to sell humanity on for that!
    Tech Crunch is sounding almost appropriately cynical here.

    The idea behind Worldcoin is they will pay their victims - I mean, their early adopters, a small amount of cryptocurrency to have their retinas scanned and recorded.

    A cryptocurrency they just made up.

    And of which they have reserved a huge chunk for themselves.

    And trust them, they would never permit all that critical biometric data to be misused in any way.

    It's basically a credit card fraud ring combined with a massive Ponzi scheme, only with venture capital funding.


Tech News

Disclaimer: At least have a lair in a dormant volcano or something. Have some fricking pride on your work.

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Post contains 453 words, total size 4 kb.

Sunday, July 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 July 2023

Global Pomufication Edition

Top Story

  • So, that new room-temperature superconductor announcement?  Maybe not, say other scientists.  (Science)

    And one of the tests supposed to illustrate its superconducting properties might just be demonstrating Lenz's law.  Superconductors respond in interesting ways to static magnetic fields, but regular conductors can respond in similar ways to changing magnetic fields, so the actually demonstrate superconductivity you have to keep your field static, which they kind of completely failed to do, at least in one particular video.

    It's not fraud or anything, since the paper describes exactly how to create the alleged miracle material, just possible bad research.


Tech News


Disclaimer: Docker sucks.

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Post contains 391 words, total size 4 kb.

Saturday, July 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 July 2023

Thread On The Wind Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Disclaimer: Then maybe you could move on to not intentionally killing them either.

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Post contains 242 words, total size 3 kb.

Friday, July 28

Geek

Daily News Stuff 28 July 2023

Do Not Meddle In The Affairs Of Lizards Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Not Tech News

Season two of Good Omens is streaming on Amazon Prime now.

Is it any good?

Yes. It is. But it is also missing Terry Pratchett's deft touch of saying things without having to say them.



Area Rabbit Conspiracy Video of the Day



In which area rabbit Pipkin Pippa explains that the lizards running the secret world government are covering up the fact that UFOs aren't real to keep us all distracted from the war with the mole people.

And then the Phase Connect girls get their CEO on the line and ask him to explain circumcision, because it's that sort of company.


Disclaimer: Do not taunt happy fun rabbit.

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Post contains 554 words, total size 5 kb.

Thursday, July 27

Geek

Daily News Stuff 27 July 2023

Worse Is Better Edition

Top Story

  • You can't compete with free.  (The Verge)

    Neeva was a search engine startup founded by ex-Google engineers - back when Google still had engineers - to build a better search engine.

    The founders noted a fundamental problem with Google.  Being funded by advertising, and having a limited number of ads per page, there was a deep incentive not to push the best search results to the top.

    So Neeeva built their own search engine focusing on paying customers - and went broke, because people didn't want to pay for a better solution when the bad solution was free.

    How do we get out of this bind?

    I see two possible avenues, both generally applicable:

    One, an organisation that benefits from good search tools internally and is in competition with Google in other areas open-sources their work because first this gets lots of developers to contribute free work, and second it blows a hole in the competition's revenue stream.  Facebook has done this with its AI research, clearly aiming at wrecking OpenAI and accidentally doing some good in the process.

    Two, collaborative effort.  One company can't afford $10 billion to develop a better search engine, but millions of developers pooling their resources?  It's not Facebook's own AI research that has doomed OpenAI to extinction, but hobbyists frantically iterating on incomprehensibly sophisticated algorithms at 3AM so they can produce funny videos.


Tech News


Disclaimer: Oh no!  I think I've just been outwitted by a toaster.

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Post contains 486 words, total size 5 kb.

Wednesday, July 26

Geek

Daily News Stuff 26 July 2023

Nuts To You Edition

Top Story

  • Conservatives died more than liberals after the COVID vaccine rollout. (Ars Technica)
    The study is just the latest to find a connection between political party affiliation and deaths during the pandemic. But, it takes the connection a step further, going beyond county-level political leanings and looking at how party affiliation linked to deaths at the individual level. The authors—all researchers at Yale University—focused on Ohio and Florida because those were the only two states with readily available public data on voter registration.

    The study involved death data on 538,159 people in Ohio and Florida, age 25 and older, and their linked voter registration files. The researchers did not have complete data—the linked data didn't contain a cause of death or vaccination status. But, they could evaluate excess weekly deaths by age, state, county, and party affiliation. They found that the gap in excess deaths was larger in counties with lower vaccination rates, suggesting that lack of vaccination among Republican voters may partly explain the higher death rates.
    So they didn't have the cause of death or vaccination status, and if you read the study to the end (which they desperately hope you won't) they only had voter registration information for 57% of the people in the study.

    And they didn't control for any confounding factors at all, because the consumers of fascist fear porn don't give a shit.


  • Indeed, all the studies so far trying to prove such a correlation have been complete garbage. (Marginally Compelling)

    A good blog about the mathematics of the pandemic (and other things) and how everyone has a vested interest in lying to you.

Tech News



Disclaimer: Nuts to you, or possibly back to the post office.

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Post contains 631 words, total size 6 kb.

Tuesday, July 25

Anime

Wanted, Alive Preferably

Putting this here because YouTube is dumb.


HoloAdvent.  Five new Hololive members, four channels, because the twins share a channel.

more...

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Post contains 46 words, total size 1 kb.

Geek

Daily News Stuff 25 July 2023

Unsightly Activities Undertaken At Reasonable Prices Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Disclaimer: Because we can't have nice things.

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Post contains 539 words, total size 5 kb.

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