The ravens are looking a bit sluggish. Tell Malcolm they need new batteries.

Sunday, August 21

Geek

Daily News Stuff 20 August 2022

99.44% Done With This Shit Edition

Top Story

  • I am now a full-time resident of New House City.  Thanks to my brother for his help with the infinite number of "last few items" that needed to be moved.

    Schedules should slowly return to normal as I begin fixing the many things that have been broken for months while I ran around like a crack-addled squirrel with its tail on fire.


  • Samsung is building a $15 billion chip R&D facility.  (AnandTech)

    That's in addition to the $200 billion they're spending on new and expanded factories.  I think they might be serious about this stuff.


Tech News

  • The entire history of human ingenuity was leading to this point:



    The computer inside that Lego brick is an Arm Cortex M0 with 16k of flash and 4k of RAM.  That's a low-end microcontroller but plenty to liven up your next Lego spaceship build.

    More here.  (The Verge)


  • Lego?



    I assumed at first that this was a 3D render but it's real.


  • And speaking of low-end microcontrollers the Pi Pico isn't the only Pi Pico in the sea.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Raspberry Pi sells the chip they developed - called the RP2040 - directly to other manufacturers who are now selling a variety of compatible boards.


  • Alleged specs of Intel's 13th generation Raptor Lake lineup.  (Tom's Hardware)

    At the high end this is stuff we pretty much knew already, but further down the list the i5-13500 and 13600 both include 8 E-cores - where their 12th gen counterparts had none.  That will make those mid-range chips about 60% faster on multi-threaded tasks.


  • A roundup of upcoming AMD motherboards.  (WCCFTech)

    10Gb Ethernet is still thin on the ground, but every board listed here has at least 2.5Gb.


Disclaimer: I think I left my vacuum cleaner in the living room.  Oh, and my toaster in the bathtub.

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Friday, August 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 August 2022

Everything Is Going Swimmingly Edition

Top Story

  • Almost.


  • Ow.


  • Samsung will be launching 32Gb DDR5 memory in early 2023, with modules to follow in late 2023.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Not sure exactly why there's such a lead time between the chips and the modules, but it's pretty consistent with past launches.

    This will mean 64GB DIMMs for desktops and laptops, so desktops (and servers based on desktop systems) will be able to go up to 256GB of RAM and laptops that use modules rather than soldered-in RAM will go to 128GB.

    That assumes that the memory controllers in existing CPUs properly support the new capacity.  They should - the DDR5 spec list chip sizes up to 64Gb - but it's a bit hard to test until the chips are actually out.

Tech News



Disclaimer: You bastards!

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Thursday, August 18

Geek

Daily News Stuff 18 August 2022

What The What Edition

Top Story

Tech News

I Think People Figured It Out Video of the Day


In which a certain former vtuber slowly goes insane and also gets 8000 simultaneous viewers.


Disclaimer: I love pink cat.

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Wednesday, August 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 August 2022

Announcement Announcement Edition 

Top Story

  • AMD has announced a launch event for Ryzen 7000 on August 29.  (Tom's Hardware)

    With hardware presumably shipping a few weeks later during September.

    I'll keep an eye on the event and post the details here, but I think everything about Ryzen 7000 has already either been officially announced or leaked.

Tech News



Unrelated Music Video of the Day




Disclaimer: On second thought, let's not go there.  It is a silly place.

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Tuesday, August 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 August 2022

Uh Edition

Top Story

  • Android 13 is here, bringing with it uh.  (Thurrott.com)

    Apparently you can stream certain things from a thing to another thing, and it has spatial audio support for headphones - it makes the sound feel like you're walking around in a room.

    Okay.

    I think the last Android release which was really a must-have was version 6 with adoptable storage.  Of course, most of the major manufacturers - particularly Samsung and Sony - immediately broke adoptable storage and leave it broken to this day, and Google's own hardware can't support adoptable storage because it has no storage to adopt.

Tech News



Disclaimer: A communist clock is still right once a day.

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Monday, August 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 August 2022

Worst Of Both Worlds Edition

Top Story


Tech News


Disclaimer: Tenchi, El Hazard, Ranma, Urusei Yatsura, the original Oh My Goddess AMV, and at least one Sailor Moon cel with the background painting.

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Geek

Things Found

Something I've been looking for all throughout the move - a folder of original anime cels - finally showed up while I was cleaning out the garage at the old place.  Slightly the worse for wear, but only slightly.  

And given what happened to the sofa, that's a relief.

And I ordered this:


The case is a Hyte Y60, which Gamers Nexus reviewed and thought was actually good:


Though not without its quirks.  You would not want to try building a server in this case.

It originally wasn't available in Australia, but PC Casegear - who I've used for years - has picked it up for pre-order.

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Sunday, August 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 August 2022

No News Is No News Edition

Top Story

  • Running Android without Google.  (Tom's Guide)

    Okay, so the hardware in the two tests reported here is sold by google - the Pixel 4a and Pixel 5 - but the software is two versions of Android - /e/OS and GrapheneOS - stripped of all the Google-specific software and tracking.

    You can still install the Play Store and install all your usual apps, and they will (mostly) work the same as before.  The one thing highlighted here is that you will lose Google's custom camera app - and this results in a marked drop in photo quality because the software is doing most of the magic there.

    But if you want out of the Google trap without losing compatibility entirely, either of these might be a viable option.

Tech News

  • What's coming up in AMD motherboards.  (PC Magazine)

    AMD launches Ryzen 7000 and the matching Socket AM5 motherboards on September 15, and the motherboard makers have gone beyond leaks to official previews of the hardware.

    The new boards will bring a few new features: PCIe 5 for double the I/O bandwidth, DDR5 for about 60% more memory bandwidth, and USB 4 for double the bandwidth there if and when 40Gbps USB devices show up.

    10Gb Ethernet also seems to be more common than on the last generation, which is welcome given the paucity of PCIe slots these days.


  • AMD is also releasing a new range of video cards this year.  (Tom's Hardware)

    These will offer a lot more compute power than the current generation - two to three times at the high end, but it remains to be seen what that translates to in terms of graphics performance and power consumption.  I suspect you'll get something like a 50% improvement at the same MSRP and TDP, with the high-end cards being way out there on both numbers.


  • Does the Dog Die is a cute idea driven into the ground and then nuked from orbit.  (Does the Dog Die)

    There's a Twitter account CanYouPetTheDog which simply documents what video gams let you pet a dog.  That's fun.

    Does the Dog Die tries to catalog every potential trigger for the most hyper-neurotic people in existence.  That's not fun at all.

Disclaimer: You can pet the dog in Holocure.  You'll probably get killed by the swarms of enemies if you try, but you can do it.

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Saturday, August 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 August 2022

Working In The Coal Mine Edition

Top Story

Tech News




Disclaimer: The live studio audience was behind the painting.

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Friday, August 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 August 2022

Dunkin' Dromedaries Edition

Top Story

  • $15 well spent I'd say.  (Towards AI)

    For $15 the author got, well, see for yourself.

    Most of the $15 was spent figuring out how to ask for what he wanted, but that's kind of the deal in any artistic endeavour.

Tech News

  • The ThinkPad Carbon X1 Gen 10 is another thin-and-light laptop with the goods.  (Thurrott.com)

    12th gen Intel CPU, up to 32GB of RAM and 2TB of SSD**, choice of displays up to a 3840x2400 touchscreen, dual Thunderbolt ports, dual USB-A, HDMI, and headphone jack.  No microSD slot but at least with USB-A you can plug in a little adaptor.

    Base model is more reasonably priced in Australia than the HP Pavilion Plus - the ThinkPad is currently on sale - but neither the 32GB nor 2TB options are available here.


  • Redis explained.  (Architecture Notes)

    Redis is not a database server, it's a data structure server.  I wouldn't recommend it for permanent data storage (though you can do that, and I have), but for manipulating data before writing it to your primary database it is unrivalled.


  • The CDC says forget all that stuff we told you about COVID; we give up.  (Ars Technica)

    Thanks guys.


  • Intel has dumped an estimated $3.5 billion into its GPU division so far.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's my estimation that it will take the company five years to come up with a truly competitive product, which would likely mean spending another $3.5 billion.  Industry analysts are 50/50 on whether the company is willing to commit to that.

    Most of the benefit would be in the datacenter - accelerator cards for things like the dunking llama in the first item sell for far higher prices than desktop graphics cards.  Do they need the volume side of the business to keep the effort afloat?  I don't know.  Should you buy a first-generation Arc graphics card?  Absolutely not.

Disclaimer: There's no knives or forks either.  Someone's nicked the entire bleedin' cutlery set.

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