Friday, December 12
Brown And Out In Beverley Hills Edition
Top Story
- Reddit is suing Australia to have itself removed from the under-16 banlist. (The Register)
Reddit is a screaming dumpster fire, but so is our government, and I can simply ignore Reddit if I choose. So I'm solidly on their side.
Tech News
- Want a high-resolution monitor but still need fast refresh rates for games? Asus' new XG27JG has you covered. (Tom's Hardware)
It's a 5k model which is good enough for almost anything, and runs at 180Hz which is also good enough for almost anything. But if you drop the resolution to 2560x1440 you can boost the refresh rate to 330Hz, which is more than enough.
HDR 600 and 97% of DCI-P3 colour. One small catch: It doesn't work at its full resolution and refresh rate on an Nvidia 4000-series card, because those only support an older version of DisplayPort. Previous generation Radeon 7000 series cards do work, as do all current-generation cards.
Around $835.
- Buying 1152GB of Frakenram for $8000. (Tom's Hardware)
The user put an offer in on a second-hand custom Nvidia AI system that originally cost around $80,000 and managed to get it working.
- Over 10,000 Docker Hub images have been found leaking credentials. (Bleeping Computer)
It's over 10,000!
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Thursday, December 11
Elimination Of Process Edition
Top Story
- Had a thunderstorm roll through last night and some of the lightning strikes came pretty close, but it passed without event. Or so I thought.
When I went to turn off the lights in the kitchen, it got very dark and very quiet. The only light remaining was the clock on the oven; everything else had lost power. And when I went downstairs to reset the breaker, it wasn't having it.
Put the fridge on an extension cord overnight - the rest of the house had power - and left it for the morning.
This morning I unplugged absolutely everything, reset the breaker - which now accepted its fate - and plugged things in again one at a time, waiting for it all to go phut.
Got down to the bar fridge and the dishwasher, which are on the same plug somehow. Took a deep breath, and plugged them in.
They work. Everything works.
I dunno.
- Operation Bluebird wants to steal Twitter's trademark from Twitter. (The Verge) (archive site)
We have built a social platform that will look familiar to those that used legacy Twitter, but with new tools that provide a safer experience and empower the user to decide what types of content they engage in.
It's a hugbox for crazies.
Like Bluesky. But we already have Bluesky. For now; it's dying pretty swiftly.Intellectual property attorney Douglas Masters says he is doubtful that Operation Bluebird’s claims will be successful. "I don’t know that the record ultimately will show that even though they [X Corp.] switched to X, that they intended to give up all of their commercial use and rights in the word Twitter," Masters tells The Verge.
Well, yeah. You can go to twitter.com right now and it works.
Tech News
- Is it a bubble? (Oaktree Capital)
A whole lot of words to say "yes".
- Cryptographers have proved that AI security will always have holes. (Quanta)
In a recent paper, researchers found one of the more delightful ways to bypass artificial intelligence security systems: Rephrase your nefarious prompt as a poem.
It's a bit like saying colanders will always have holes. Yes. We know.
- Amazon has changed the way DRM is applied to self-published ebooks... For the better. (Tech Crunch)
If you choose not to apply DRM, Amazon now allows the author to select open formats like EPUB and PDF
- Meet the world's smallest AI supercomputer. (WCCFTech)
It's pocket-sized - or at least coat pocket sized - and has a custom 12 core ARM processor, an NPU capable of 190 trillion operations per second, and 80GB of RAM.
It will be shown off at CES. No pricing yet, but 80GB of RAM suddenly costs a fair bit of money.
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Wednesday, December 10
Fascism R Us Edition
Top Story
- Australia is joining a wave of fascist dictatorships around the globe in regulating how kids spend their time online. (The Verge) (archive site)
I may have changed a word or two there.On December 10th, most major social media platforms will boot children in the country under 16 from their services. Under the law, social platforms will also need to implement a "reasonable" age verification method there - while critics argue kids will get around it anyway.
The critics are, of course, correct. The age restrictions are about as robust as The Verge's paywall.
And VPN providers are having a field day.
Maybe they put the idiots in Canberra up to it.
Tech News
- RAM is ruining everything. (The Verge) (archive site)
Useful tidbit: SK Hynix - one of the big three memory makers - is investing $500 billion dollars in new factories, with the first set to go into operation in 2027.
Half a trillion dollars. That's a lot of money. Whether it will be enough is an open question, but I'm not sure we can criticise them for not expanding faster.
- Microsoft's Patch Tuesday is here for December and fuck me that's a lot of security holes. (Bleeping Computer)
Ugh.
- AMD has announced its new Epyc 2005 processor range for embedded servers. (Serve the Home)
They're Ryzen 9000 desktop chips, just packaged differently and with lower power budgets.
- Boom Supersonic - which demonstrated a supersonic jet back in January - has found funding and customers, but not for its supersonic jet. (Tech Crunch)
It's selling a derivative of its jet turbine engine for power generation for datacenters.
- The war on disinformation is a losing battle. (The Verge)
Which is good, because The Verge is squarely on the side of disinformation. They only get through two paragraphs here before they start actively lying.
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Tuesday, December 09
Ouchie Edition
Top Story
- Grab a 32GB DDR5 memory kit from Crucial for just $273.99. (Tom's Hardware)
In March, I paid less than that for a Crucial 128GB kit.
- Samsung is switching production from high-margin HBM3E memory used on AI accelerator cards to regular DDR5 used on everything else. (WCCFTech)
You still can't have any.
Also, Samsung a 75% gross margin on server memory. So at least someone is making hay from all that AI investor money.
Tech News
- Hyper-scalers - that is, companies running millions of servers like Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Facebook - are turning to their huge stockpile of DDR4 RAM to weather the crunch. (Serve the Home)
The Marvell Structera X 2404 lets system builders connect twelve DDR4 DIMMs - up to 1.5TB of RAM - to a PCIe 5.0 slot.
What this means is that the usually reliable stream of used memory from retired servers is going to dry up too.
- This Nvidia-powered single-board computer makes the Raspberry Pi 5 look cheap. (Notebook Check)
Literally. With 8GB of RAM on board it's priced at $499.
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Monday, December 08
Do Not Edition
Top Story
- Windows 11 25H2 is entering a broader rollout phase now that 25H2 is just about over. (Hot Hardware)
The broad rollout of the Windows 11 25H2 update has started, and users who want to fast-track it are being referred to the relevant update options in a new blog post on Microsoft's site. Windows 11 25H2 comes with an assortment of additional Copilot+ related features (exclusive to those with sufficiently-powerful NPUs rated for 40+ TOPS) and improved Wi-Fi 7 support for enterprise users, among other features.
My latest PC - which looks set to arrive tomorrow - doesn't have an NPU at all.
How... Unfortunate.Key improvements for all users include several fixes and additions made to Task Manager, Windows Search, and the Windows UI in general. Task Manager uses fewer resources and properly reads RAM speed in MT/s instead of MHz, for example, while the Windows UI now makes it easier to shrink the size of taskbar buttons. As Windows 11 continues to evolve into an "agentic OS", support for AI features outside of Copilot+ PCs is also being added with Windows 11 25H2, including the ability to use AI features within File Explorer.
I don't mean to be rude, but have they tried penicillin?
- In completely unrelated news, I just bought a copy of Windows 10 Enterprise IoT LTSC, the version that's supported through to 2032 and contains no AI features of any sort. While the Ryzen 255 processor in this system is nominally new, it's just a rebadged Ryzen 8745H, which is just a Ryzen 7840H with a new sticker, so Windows 10 should run just fine. It doesn't have any efficiency cores either, which are something the Windows 10 scheduler can trip over.
Since Microsoft is strangely cold towards individuals who want to install the IoT edition, I downloaded the ISO from the Internet Archive and verified the hash on another helpful website.
Update: What the heck. That mini-PC has just been discounted almost back to the price I paid - just $2 more. I'll try it out when it arrives tomorrow and give serious thought to buying another one. Assuming this latest discount lasts that long.
Tech News
- Tiny Core Linux has grown by 1MB. (Tom's Hardware)
It's now 23MB.
Or 17MB if you don't need a GUI.
- Critical flaws found in AI development tools have been dubbed an "IDEsaster". (Tom's Hardware)
Cute.
Which development tools, you ask?The findings, described in the IDEsaster research report, show how AI agents embedded in IDEs such as Visual Studio Code, JetBrains products, Zed, and numerous commercial assistants can be manipulated into leaking sensitive information or executing attacker-controlled code.
So Vi is still safe?
I mean, not that it ever has been.According to the research, 100% of tested AI IDEs and coding assistants were vulnerable. Products affected include GitHub Copilot, Cursor, Windsurf, Kiro.dev, Zed.dev, Roo Code, Junie, Cline, Gemini CLI, and Claude Code, with at least twenty-four assigned CVEs and additional advisories from AWS.
Hooray.
- Why meetings can harm employee well-being. (Phys.org)
Well, they're meeting. That's what they're for.
- The Youyeetoo Nestdesk (the what?) is a tiny NAS that holds four M.2 SSDs and costs $200. (Liliputing)
It has two 2.5Gb Ethernet ports, two HDMI ports, four USB ports, and a headphone jack.
Lilputing notes that it's almost identical in functionality to the GMKtec NucBox G9, which had a nasty habit of overheating. The Beelink Me Mini is physically larger but has a big fan which keeps things cool without producing a lot of noise.
Also, M.2 SSDs are starting to get expensive as well.
- The accelerator is on the floor for autonomous vehicles. (Tech Crunch)
Yes. Most other vehicles too. Not planes, though.
Nopert Interlude
I mentioned this discovery not long ago, and here's a physical demonstration. Probably.
It's called a Nopert because it's the first discovered shape that does not have the "Rupert property" of being able to pass through a hollowed out version of itself at a suitable angle, with the exception of the sphere which is a degenerate case because presents the same cross-section at every orientation by definition.
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Sunday, December 07
Ionosphere Or Bust Edition
Top Story
- That mini-PC I just bought increased in price by 25% the next day. In fact, the 32GB model now costs more than I paid for the 64GB model.
Which is not a huge surprise - it was markedly cheaper in Australia than on the British Minisforum store, and a key reason I bought it in the first place was because the price was so low compared to the current cost of RAM.
I'll post a quick review once I get it - or at least, next weekend once I have a chance to set it up. But if you're impatient Notebook Check just covered it in detail.
Update: Bought Windows 10 Enterprise IoT LTSC, the version that's supported through to 2032. While the Ryzen 255 processor in this system is nominally new, it's just a rebadged Ryzen 8745H, which is just a Ryzen 7745HX with a new sticker, so Windows 10 should run just fine. It doesn't have any efficiency cores either, which are something the Windows scheduler 10 can trip over.
Update Two: Since Microsoft is utterly antagonistic towards individuals who want to install the IoT edition, I downloaded it from the Internet Archive and verified the hash on another helpful website.
- Speaking of which are the Chinas set to rescue the world from its folly?
Taiwanese memory maker Nanya has seen revenues soar 300% in the past year - and 30% in just the past month - as it scrambles to fill the gap left open by the Big Three.* (Taipei Times)
Nanya mostly produces older DDR4 memory but about 10% of their sales are already DDR5, and they've had an opportunity handed to them gift-wrapped.
Meanwhile West Taiwan's leading memory maker CXMT has entered mass production of DDR5 and LPDDR5X chips itself. (Trendforce)
CXMT was previously accused of dumping DDR4 RAM on the market at lower prices than even second-hand products. (Tom's Hardware)
Oh, how the turns have tabled. CXMT can only produce 16Gb chips, not the latest 32Gb models - so 32GB modules and 64GB dual-channel kits - but 64GB of memory you can buy is a lot better than 128GB you can't.
There may only be three big memory manufacturers, but that doesn't mean there aren't little ones looking to get big.
* Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix, formerly Hyundai Semiconductor.
Tech News
- You can't buy the memory to run them, but you can pick up a 9800X3D (hands down the fastest CPU for gaming) for $439 right now, down from $479, or the previous generation 7800X3D for $365. (WCCFTech)
And use them as paperweights while the market corrects itself one way or another.
- You can also pick up an AMD Radeon 9070 (the slower non-XT model) for $509 instead of $549 (or $569+ with the recently announced price increases), or an Nvidia RTX 5050 for just $209. (WCCFTech)
The 5050 is the low-end card in the lineup and largely gets ignored, but priced closer to $200 than $250 it starts to look like a bargain.
- The radiation shielding at Chernobyl has stopped working because Russia blew it up. (Politico)
The shielding, not Chernobyl. Though that too, come to think of it.
- Now this might strike some viewers as harsh, but I believe that everyone involved in this story should die. (Yahoo)
In a fire.
- Phones, like everything else, look set to become more expensive next year. (CNN)
Panic-buy now and avoid the rush.
- Indie horror game Horses deserves to be played, even if it's not very good. (The Verge) (archive site)
Counterpoint: No it doesn't, because it isn't.
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Saturday, December 06
SSL Mildcard Edition
Top Story
- I bought myself a mini-PC for Christmas. Minisforum X1-255.
Not because I particularly need a new system, though this one is a lot better than my two existing Beelink units (twice the speed, memory*, and storage).
Mostly because it comes with 64GB of RAM and only costs $50 more than the RAM alone.
Looks like it's completely sold out in the US already.
Update: Placed the order just four hours ago and it's already shipped. Should have it by Friday.
Update Two: And the price increased by 25% overnight. After I bought it, though.
* The existing units only came with 8GB of RAM, so as shipped the new one has eight times as much. But I already had RAM for those left over from upgrading my laptops, back when that was cheap to do.
- AI gadget makers are chasing problems that don't exist, says the CEO of AI gadget maker Logitech. (Tom's Hardware)
That's a little unfair. Logitech's webcams use discriminative AI to keep you centered in the frame, for example, and to mute background noise. Other companies, though:Faber argued that the wave of AI-first gadgets released over the past year remains untethered from a clear purpose. Products such as the Humane AI Pin - acquired by HP in February - and Rabbit R1 launched with the promise of replacing parts of the smartphone experience, only to draw criticism for slow performance, limited features, and subscription-driven pricing.
The upcoming unnamed product from OpenAI looks to be another screenless phone piece of overpriced junk.Their reception has shaped the debate around whether a general-purpose assistant belongs in a dedicated device at all. According to Faber, these early efforts solve little that a phone or PC cannot already handle, which is a view that has gained traction as both devices incorporate larger on-device models and tighter integrations with cloud assistants.
As annoying as AI is, dedicated AI devices are even worse.
Tech News
- AMD's upcoming "Gorgon" family Ryzen 470 CPU is basically just a Ryzen 370. (WCCFTech)
I was comparing specs earlier. The Ryzen 370 has 12 CPU cores and 16 GPU cores, where the Ryzen 255 I just bought has 8 CPU cores and 12 GPU cores.
But the 370 is just 20% faster than the 255 while the relevant Minisforum model is 60% more expensive.
- Intel chips could power iPhones in 2028. (WCCFTech)
That's Intel as a manufacturer, not Intel as a designer. They'll still be "Apple Silicon", but Apple has booked space on Intel's 18A production line to start fabricating chips now that TSMC is 100% sold out.
- Meanwhile TSMC is scrambling to build an advanced packaging facility in the US because it is, well, 100% sold out. (WCCFTech)
This of for chips like modern AMD and Intel CPUs, where multiple small dies are packaged together on a larger silicon substrate.
- Nimony is a compiler from the Nim team. (Nim-lang)
It will become Nim 3.0 in time, but it is already a useful compiler if you're interested in high-performance code with built-in memory management.
- Two government contractors who were sentenced to prison in 2015 after being caught hacking government computers have been indicted for hacking government computers again after being rehired after their prison sentences ended. (Bleeping Computer)
According to court documents, Muneeb Akhter deleted roughly 96 databases containing U.S. government information in February 2025, including Freedom of Information Act records and sensitive investigative documents from multiple federal agencies.
Fill the cell in with cement. Then go after whoever hired these people.
One minute after deleting a Department of Homeland Security database, Muneeb Akhter also allegedly asked an artificial intelligence tool for instructions on clearing system logs after deleting a database.
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Got a reminder yesterday that I needed to update the server's SSL certificate.
I was tired last night so I left it to the morning.
I was busy this morning so I... Kind of just forgot.
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Friday, December 05
Please Not Edition
Top Story
- As expected, AMD has announced price increases for its Radeon graphics cards. Starting today, the cost to board partners of the parts (GPU chip and GDDR6 RAM) will increased by $10. (Tom's Hardware)
For 8GB cards. For 16GB cards the cost rises by $20.
Given the craziness going on right now, that is not a lot.
There may be more increases coming, but for now at least, no reason to panic.
Tech News
- Finding that random person in Nebraska. (Stacktower)
XKCD comic 2347 highlighted a key weakness of modern computer systems: Everything depends on "a project some random person in Nebraska has been thanklessly maintaining since 2003".
Stacktower is a Python library that inspects your own tech stack and draws a similar diagram and highlights the individual thankless maintainers, so that you can thank them.
- Teehee. They said "end to end". (Tech Crunch)
Earlier this year, home goods maker Kohler launched a smart camera called the Dekoda that attaches to your toilet bowl, takes pictures of it, and analyzes the images to advise you on your gut health.
I can see where this is going to end.The security researcher also pointed out that given Kohler can access customers' data on its servers, it's possible Kohler is using customers' bowl pictures to train AI.
Why?Citing another response from the company representative, the researcher was told that Kohler's "algorithms are trained on de-identified data only."
No.The Dekoda costs $599 plus a mandatory subscription of at least $6.99 per month.
It's even cheaper if you don't buy it.
- Russia has banned Roblox. (CBC)
On Wednesday, Roskomnadzor blocked access to the U.S. children's gaming platform Roblox, accusing it of distributing extremist materials and "LGBT propaganda." Roskomnadzor further said Roblox was "rife with inappropriate content that can negatively impact the spiritual and moral development of children."
Well, yes.
-
A critical flaw in React and Next.js lets hackers execute code on your servers if you're a fucking idiot. (Bleeping Computer)
The problem with making JavaScript run on servers is that then JavaScript programmers will run code on servers.
The result is exactly what everyone predicted.
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Thursday, December 04
Deplatformed and Backported Edition
Top Story
- Memory and storage company Crucial is throwing in the towel after thirty years in the business. Sort of. (Tom's Hardware)
They're not going to stop producing stuff. They're a division of Micron.
They're just going to stop producing stuff that you can buy because they can make more money out of the AI bubble.
Tech News
- It was India. (AppleInsider)
Who rusted first, that is.
India insisted that Apple pre-install its state-sponsored spyware on all new iPhones sold in the country.
Apple said not just no, but fuck no.
India said yeah, okay.
- The CEO of IBM says that spending in the AI boom is obviously unsustainable. (Tom's Hardware)
Current buildout plans would require industry profits of $800 billion per year just to make payment on the interest.
Current industry profits are less than zero. Significantly less.
- An AI tool for lawyers produced by a billion dollar company had no security. (Alex Schapiro)
As in, literally none. Anyone could access any document.
We're all going to die, aren't we?
- Microsoft is lowering its AI sales targets because nobody is buying. (Reuters) (archive site)
It's hard to sell what you can't even give away for free.
- Case in point: Programming language Zig is leaving GitHub because Microsoft's obsession with AI is tanking the site's reliability. (The Register)
Jeremy Howard, co-founder of Answer.AI and Fast.AI, said in a series of social media posts that users' claims about GitHub Actions being in a poor state of repair appear to be justified.
A fix for the bug was proposed by a user."The bug," he wrote, "was implemented in a way that, very obviously to nearly anyone at first glance, uses 100 percent CPU all the time, and will run forever unless the task happens to check the time during the correct second."
The fix was correct.
The fix was ignored, and the comment thread was closed by AI.
-
Windows 11 is barely ahead of Windows 10 in install base, despite Microsoft stabbing Windows 10 in the back, the front, the sides, and from several other directions. (The Register)
It's hard to sell what you can't even give away for free.
Anime Update
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