WOULD YOU CARE FOR SOME TEA?

Wednesday, April 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 April 2023

Three Rusks for Elon Musk Edition

Top Story

  • Carcinisation is the process whereby everything that isn't already a crab, gradually becomes a crab. (Wikipedia)

    King crabs are not crabs. Nor are porcelain crabs, or hermit crabs, or coconut crabs, or hairy stone crabs. They are all the result of carcinisation, where various other decapod crustaceans evolved exactly the same outward characteristics as true crabs, to the point that you can't really tell them apart.

    This also happens to social networks.

    Yes, they turn into crabs.


  • Not my analogy either: This article by Ellis Hamburger (really) formerly of Snap - the company behind Snapchat - makes the point that all social networks start out as butterflies and evolve into crabs. (The Verge)

    It's well-written and has the insights expected of someone who spent years on the inside of one of these companies watching naive promises gradually wither in the face of commercial reality and the fact that people in large groups basically suck.

    The author doesn't have a solution to this and doesn't pretend to offer one:
    Users seem doomed to be unhappy in this overquantified world of "social." And businesses seem doomed to expect more from the social services they create. Perhaps this was just a blip in the journey of tech, born of a time when oversharing was novel and fun. Indeed, I remember the joy of posting hundreds of photos to Facebook the day after a party, excited to relive those memories with friends. At the time, it felt like a new form of connection.

    Now, I just text them.

    A big part of the reason here is that the financial incentives of the social media companies are horribly skewed:
    However, the promise of ads may simply be too good to turn down. Advertisers are simply willing to pay more for the product than its actual users. In Facebook’s case, the company makes something like $200 per year of ad revenue on each American user, but how many of those users would pay $15 / month to use Facebook? According to one study, not many.
    If you're more valuable as a product than as a customer, that's how you can expect to be treated.

    The thing is, the ads really aren't worth anything. I've seen one ad in all my years on social media that inspired me to buy something, and I didn't, and now I've forgotten what it was for.


Tech News

  • Cory Doctorow, writing about TikTok, called this process "enshittification". (Pluarlistic)

    They're editing the likes of Agatha Christie, P. G. Wodehouse, and Roald Dahl to avoid offending modern sensibilities - of illiterates - but at least we have a new generation of wordsmiths like Doctorow to fill in the gap.

    Bitter sarcasm aside, Doctorow has been observing the tech industry for a long time, and when he is reporting fact rather than his personal opinions he can provide some useful insights.

    He's a lefty - worse, a left-libertarian - so his preferred solution to every problem is to leave everything in the hands of private companies but regulate bad outcomes out of existence, which works about as well as holding your breath until you turn blue and requires about the same level of intellectual effort.

    He is at least partly right: Twitter has crippled its APIs for exactly the same reason that Amazon murdered its Smile program where you could direct a tiny percentage of the value of your purchases to a charity of your choice: You're already on the platform, and the competition is already dead, so they don't give a fuck anymore. You're just crabs in the bucket with them, and they're the big crab.


  • And finally just by way of comparison here's the same argument made by a doctrinaire lefty who is just so stuffed full of love that she'll beat your brains out with a claw hammer if you so much as blink in the middle of her five-and-a-half thousand word temper tantrum. (Substack)

    Five and a half thousand words of blaming every bad thing that has ever happened on "the right", from Twitter being taken over by fascists like Vijaya Gadde to her favourite shade of eyeshadow (moonbat grey) being withdrawn because of lethal levels of cadmium compounds.

    Even she recognises that all social networks turn to shit.

    She just doesn't recognise her own role in that process.


  • Minisforum has a cheap Ryzen 7735HS based mini PC wait is that the ASRock industrial SBC I spy? (AnandTech)

    Looks like it, with the two HDMI ports on the back and the two USB-C ports at the front. I'll have to do a close check.


  • Broader price cuts might be coming to the RTX 4070. (Tom's Hardware)

    Nvidia's 3000 series cards all sold out immediately at launch. The 4000 series cards have never been difficult to find - because people just aren't buying them.


  • Nvidia doesn't care much because their growth market isn't $600 cards for gamers, it's $30,000 cards for AI startups. (Tom's Hardware)

    Elon Musk reportedly just bought thousands of such cards for his new venture, X.AI.

    The AI boom is the new blockchain boom, only worse for everyone.


  • Twitter meanwhile will no longer suspend your account for the vile crime of (checks notes) correctly identifying someone's name of gender. (Tech Crunch)

    The previous regime at Bird Central treated this as worse than murder. The usual suspects are up in arms that the corporate stormtroopers are no longer willing to enforce their delusions.


  • Firefly can compile BEAM applications to WASM. (GitHub)

    Which sounds like a complete fucking nightmare to me, but it can also compile BEAM applications to native code, which could be great.

    BEAM is the runtime environment for Erlang, the language invented by Ericsson to run large-scale telephone switches. The idea behind Erlang is that if a system is large enough, some part of it is guaranteed to be broken at any time. You can't predict failures, but you can predict with certainty that failures will happen.

    Erlang is designed to handle this and automatically pick up whichever part of the system has died and get it running again on whichever parts of the system are still working. It's robust and powerful and at least reasonably efficient, but running Erlang applications means first installing a complex and unfamiliar environment. Like Java written by aliens.

    Firefly should make it possible to deploy Erlang applications just like you would anything else. And to run them in the browser too, though nobody in their right mind would try that.


  • Reddit will begin charging for its API. (Tech Crunch)

    Remains to be seen if the plans they offer are as stupid as Twitter's.


  • Next-gen Python tooling, written in Rust. (Astral)

    The secret to making Python run fast is not to use Python.

    I suppose slow corporate suicide is better than fast.


  • The FTC is planning to target AI that violates civil rights (what?) or is deceptive. (Reuters)

    Not sure how AI could violate civil rights, even in law, let alone in practice.

    But given that LLMs like ChatGPT are trained explicitly to lie, the industry is fucked if the FTC actually follows through here.


  • An open letter to epic fantasy readers. (Monster Hunter Nation)

    Basically a slap in the face to Patrick Rothfuss and George R. R. Martin:
    I’ve written something like 25 novels, 50 short stories, 6 novellas, edited 4 anthologies, and even wrote a non-fiction book about gun rights since George Martin’s last Game of Thrones novel came out
    My italics.

    I read the first Game of Thrones book. It was certainly well-written, but all the characters were awful. I never read further, and never watched the TV show.

    I read half of the first volume of Patrick Rothfuss' series, whatever it is called. The character introduced at the beginning is interesting. He has a past; he has depth, and damage, and is still standing and trying to do the right thing. So the book immediately ditches him for a literally interminable flashback to his past as a whiny kid who never fails at anything and deserves only to be served up as dragon bait.

    It don't know why those two series took up so much mindshare when there's so much else on offer - old and new - but it's probably to do with crabs.


Never Fear Music Video of the Day



Disclaimer: You can't always get what you want, because crabs.

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Tuesday, April 18

Geek

Daily News Stuff 18 April 2023

Cheep And Chearful Edition

Top Story


Tech News



Disclaimer: If we could burn stupid for heat we could melt the glaciers tomorrow with the power of a single tech journalist.

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Monday, April 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 April 2023

Missed It By That Much Edition

Top Story

  • I noted last week that the RTX 4070 was overpriced in Australia, needing to be under $1000 if it were to have any chance of success.

    Today - just days after the launch - some cards have already been reduced to $999.

    Still fat and ugly - the nicer two-slot models have not seen price cuts - but at least slightly less horribly expensive.


  • The Gigabyte Aero 16 is also overpriced in Australia.

    Just saying.


Tech News



Hidden Delights Music Video of the Day



So I was hunting around Crunchyroll for something worth watching and I tripped over Ningen Fushin.  The story was different enough to give it a try, the characters aren't too aggravating, and it has an animation budget of at least 500 yen.

Seriously, the fight scenes are barely animated at all.

This ending, though, is wonderful.  I'm going to watch the whole season just so I get to see this ending eleven times.


Disclaimer: Would have bought two if I'd known.

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Sunday, April 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 April 2023

Almost Nearly Edition

Top Story

  • Future ChatGPT versions could replace a majority of work people do today says Ben Goertzel, an idiot.  (ZDNet)
    "You don't need to be incredibly creative and innovative or make big leaps to do most people's jobs, as it turns out," said Goertzel.
    Perhaps not, but if you're a pathological liar, people tend to notice.

    And that's what ChatGPT is.  It's inherent in the design, because it's a language model, not a fact model.
    "Tools like Grammarly decrease the need for human copy editors," Goertzel said. "They don't entirely eliminate [the job] but they decrease that need. Automatic tools [can be used for] writing journalistic articles. They've been writing ... sports score summaries and weather reports for a long time."
    Seeing some of the crap that passes for journalism, you could replace the whole lot with a short Perl script and get better results.

Tech News



Disclaimer: Aargh.

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Saturday, April 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 April 2023

Zero Alarm Fire Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Disclaimer: And not the entertaining kind.

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Friday, April 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 April 2023

Slightly Less Worse Edition

Top Story

  • The project at work that has been eating all my time lately is winding down now, leaving me only 200% busy instead of 500%.


  • The hackers who hit Western Digital got away with 10TB of data.  (Tech Crunch)

    Which is smaller than my Steam library, so it rather depends on what's in there.

    They're asking for at least $10 million in ransom not to release it to the public.  I doubt they're going to get a penny.


Tech News

  • A suspect has been arrested in the San Francisco murder of Cash App founder Bob Lee.  (Mission Local)

    Nima Momeni is apparently another tech executive and knew Lee, and they were seen together on the night of the killing.

    Much has been made about this murder and San Francisco's descent into chaos under the policies of communist nutcases, and now that a suspect has been arrested the media are trying to pretend that this means that San Francisco is somehow not descending into chaos.

    Hey, we arrested one guy for one crime.  That means that everything is okay.


  • Nvidia's RTX 4070 is here, and at least in Australia they killed it on pricing.

    That is, the pricing killed it.  Between A$1100 and A$1250, when it needed to be under A$1000.

    At the high end it's only $100 cheaper than a 4070 Ti, and just $50 cheaper than the currently discounted models of AMD's Radeon 7900 XT, a much more capable card.

    The 4070 is a compact and well-designed two-slot card - if you can get the Nvidia Founder's Edition, which we can't here.  Almost all the available cards are much larger cards and hideously ugly.  The hold-out in that trend is Inno3D, not a leading brand, but they've come up with some reasonably nice two-slot designs, and a choice of black/silver and white/silver if you want to match your case.  They have a two-slot 4070 Ti in the same black/silver design as well.

    Still undecided which way to go here.  The 20GB 7900 XT is very competitive against anything Nvidia has right now unless you specifically want to play games with ray tracing, or run code that uses the Cuda compute API.   On the other hand, I'd probably be just fine with a 6700 at one third the price.


  • The Radeon 6800 and 6800 XT have received price cuts to compete with the 4070 if you can find them which I can't.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The Radeon 6800, 6800 XT, and 6900 XT have ceased to exist in Australia.  I can get a not entirely terrible deal on a 6800 if I want to bother importing it from the US which I don't.

    Again the 6700 sings its siren song, before that too disappears.


  • On the other hand, the dirt-cheap pricing on the 4TB Team MP34 has reached these shores, so I can buy it from a local retailer (that is, within a day's travel of New House City) instead of importing from the US.

    I plan on getting at least five of these for my new PCs; it's less than half the price of equivalent drives from only a year ago, and it's a proper TLC model with DRAM cache, not a DRAMless QLC model like the Crucial P3, the only competition it has in its price range.


Disclaimer: It doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of sardines in this crazy world.

-- An earlier, unused script for Casablanca.

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Thursday, April 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 April 2023

Thursday the 13th Part 2 Edition

Top Story

  • Nvidia's RTX 4070 is here and it's not terrible.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's as fast as the previous generation's RTX 3080 while being $100 cheaper and using 40% less power, or to put it another way, 20% more expensive and 30% faster than the RTX 3070.

    It has 12GB of VRAM as standard which is enough in most cases, but I wouldn't buy an 8GB card for a system I wanted to use for gaming.  (A cheap 8GB card for light gaming is a different matter.)

    It's a regular two-slot card rather than the monstrous three-slot models that Nvidia and its partners have been shipping lately, and though Nvidia recommends a 650W power supply and it includes a 300W-rated 12-pin power connector, it should run in pretty much any system built in recent memory.

    Paired with a Ryzen 7900 (65W based power, around 90W peak) it should provide a almost reasonably priced and very capable system for serious work and what was high end gaming just a few months ago while running happily on a 450W power supply.


Tech News

Disclaimer: Rofl, perchance to copter.

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Wednesday, April 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 April 2023

Don't Say Lazy Edition

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  • The best new lightweight laptop may be an old lightweight laptop.  (Ars Technica)

    If you're looking for a new lightweight Windows laptop and don't want to wait until eventually AMD models show up, you might be better off buying a model from last year while they're clearing out old stock.

    Intel's mainstream 13th generation laptop chips are barely better than 12th generation, and there are some good sales going on, particularly with sales down 30% year-on-year.

Tech News

Disclaimer: Same.

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Tuesday, April 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 April 2023

End of the Beginning of the End Edition

Top Story

  • We'll make our own Twitter API!  With blackjack, and hookers!  (PyPI)

    Twitter recently cancelled the existing free API plan and replaced it with a free API plan which is useless and a paid API plan which is absurd.

    If you know what an API is, you might wonder how the Twitter website works, and the answer is that it uses an API.

    A free one.

    So now there's software that lets you use that instead of paying $100 per month for 50 API requests, which would last you nearly 11 seconds of active use.


Tech News

Disclaimer: If you noticed this notice you would have noticed this notice noticing you.  Something something abyss something.

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Monday, April 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 April 2023

Too True To Be Good Edition

Top Story

  • You can't buy a Flipper Zero o Amazon anymore.  (Bleeping Computer)

    This is a device for testing short-range communications protocols like RFID, NFC, and Bluetooth, and finding security vulnerabilities.  Which is very important given the number of vulnerabilities out there in the wild needing to be fixed. but a bit of a worry in the hands of the wrong people, like, for example, Apple, Samsung, or Kia.


Tech News

  • AMD's 9474F is faster than AMD's 5995WX.  (Notebook Check)

    The 5995WX was the world's fastest CPU for some time, with 64 Zen 3 cores and high clock speeds, since it's a workstation CPU and not a thermally-constrained server chip.

    The 9474F is a thermally-constrained server chip, and only has 48 cores. and runs at a lower clock speed.  But with Zen 4 cores and 5nm vs. 7nm production, it's just plain more efficient.

    The fastest Intel CPUs on Passmark now start at #28 on the chart, with AMD Zen 4, Zen 3, and even Zen 2 chips occupying the top 27 slots.

    There are no scores yet for Intel's Sapphire Rapids server or workstation chips, but since anyone can submit a score, that just means there aren't chips around for people to benchmark.  I'm not seeing the new W-2400 desktop chips on sale anywhere, or even being reviewed, and they were due last month.


  • Intel's second-generation graphics cards, codenamed Battlemage, are expected next year - and probably won't suck.  (TechSpot)

    In fact, following driver updates and price cuts, Intel's first generation cards don't suck.  The A750 for example is pretty comparable to AMD's 6700, and cheaper.

    When first released they were bad on older game titles (particularly running DirectX 9) but that has largely been resolved, and early driver bugs are reportedly pretty much resolved.

    If Intel remains on track for two more generations - expected in 2024 and 2026 - they may end up with something genuinely good.  And given Nvidia's 4000-series pricing, more competition is very welcome.


Disclaimer: Like potato salad at a picnic.

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