Yes.
Everything's going to be fine.
Friday, April 01
Not Making This Up Edition
Top Story
- I have my agent checking the contract on my first alternate now. Assuming there's no major issues and no-one has already grabbed it (and there's no indication of that so far), I'm prepared to go over asking price if needed, because this one has the right combination of being ready to move right in and have the potential for improvement - because you could park a freight train in the garage.
Speaking of which, the craziest damn house popped up in my tracker just now. Seven bedrooms, three bathrooms, four living rooms, two kitchens, two laundries, nine car spaces, five minute easy walk through the park to the shops, and in my price range.
Except (a) it's for auction at at the end of the month so who knows what the final price will be, and (b) it was built in 1957 and could grace the cover of a James Lileks book with the word "regrettable" in the title.
- CNN+, the new pre-failed streaming service from the former news network, is planning to sell NFTs of its first half hour of content. (Ace of Spades)
If this doesn't kill NFTs I think they might be immortal.
What are NFTs, you ask?
Well, think of a baseball card. It doesn't have any special intrinsic value - it's just a piece of cardboard. It doesn't give you any influence over the player, of course, or let you attend a game. It's just a piece of cardboard.
Now, imagine a digital baseball card - it's just a file on a computer somewhere.
An NFT is like a digital version of a photocopy of a 3x5" index card that lists the address of the locker at the bus station containing the baseball card, so that if you remember the locker combination you can take it out and, um, put it into another locker, with the added bonus that eight billion people with hacksaws and power drills have easy 24x7 access to the bus station, and even so, there are people willing to spend six figures on these damn things.
I can only sleep at night by telling myself that it's probably mostly money laundering and what these people really do for a living is something relatively wholesome like smuggling heroin or land mines or endangered monkeys or maybe all three each nested inside the other like so many addictive explosive hyperactive Russian dolls.
Because, yes, my job is mostly NFTs these days.
Which is why I can afford a seven bedroom house - albeit in a country town; this thing would be eight figures easy if it was in an upmarket suburb in Sydney - but I'd almost sooner live in a cardboard van by a cardboard river.
Tech News
- Quis scamodiet ipsos custodes? (Lupinia)
In which a scam prevention expert gets scammed - partly because she expects customer service from her bank to be incompetent, and it takes a while for the scammer to raise sufficient red flags.
She is an expert and she manages to keep the scammer on the line while she calls the real customer service line of her bank so that they can watch in as the scammer tries to steal her money, but it's a valid if rare example of how you can be too cynical for your own good.
- Not with NFTs though.
- In case you've missed this one it's fortunate that it's harder to block Chesapeake Bay than the Suez Canal. (gCaptain)
Same shipping line, different ship.
- Ubuntu 22.04 is in beta. (Phoronix)
I'm looking forward to this; 20.04 had a surprisingly smooth launch; I think I first deployed it at the beginning of May that year and have had very little trouble with it. (That's on servers. I run lots of servers on Ubuntu, but I've had less experience with it on the desktop.)
- Google is bringing a new advertising API to Chrome. (Ars Technica)
If you don't like it, you can simply opt out.
Of Chrome.
Because you sure can't turn the new Topics API off.
- Samsung will sell parts and tools needed to repair the Galaxy S20 and S21 and Tab S7+. (Fast Company)
And provide detailed repair guides in partnership with iFixit.
But Pixy, you say, aren't those all prior year models?
Why yes. Yes they are.
- Russia's Great Firewall isn't working and could be headed for collapse. (Torrent Freak)
Oh no.
Anyway...
- The Hubble Space Telescope has spotted Earendel. (CNN)
I wondered where he'd gotten to.
The star (because that's what Hubble spots, after all) is 28 billion light years away, which means since the Universe is only 14 billion years old that light effectively travelled at twice the speed of light in order to reach us.
Because space is not only really big, but very weird.
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There are four of these nice older houses listed in the town I'm looking to move to. One is in a bad location, one is in a perfect location but overpriced, and the other two have buyers and/or jerk agents and/or contract conditions I'm not willing to accept.
I've activated my first alternate, which is the house with a garage the size of a small house and a house the size of two small houses. It's not perfect but it certainly has its advantages - the two older houses I was going to make offers on don't have garages at all, but this one makes up for both of them. And it has great views - it's situated higher than any of the surrounding houses and you can see for miles.
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Thursday, March 31
Dust Biters Anonymous Edition
Top Story
- Repeat after me: We have a hot prospect expecting to close today but if you act right away...
Actually, this time I believe them, because (a) they provided details that were not to their advantage and cooled me down on this property, and (b) they didn't claim a hot prospect so much as a room temperature one.
Either way, bleah. I'll have my agent check out my top two alternates but I'm getting ready to activate Plan B.
- I'm not sure there is a top story today. Well, the Washington Post says that some of the cryptographic signatures on the Laptop from Hell check out proving that the emails are from who they say they are and did in fact say what they say when they were sent, but we knew that 18 months ago.
Tech News
- YouTube has added 100 free TV shows and over 1000 free movies. (Mashable)
Where are they? What are they? No-one knows. You can't browse the list; you can't search for them; and if I click the link to see even a sample of the TV shows I get a purple monkey error.
"It's personalised" says YouTube, which apparently translates to "fuck you".
Also, the small number of free movies I could find that are actually viewable in Australia are crap. But then so is Netflix.
- Canada will ban sales of combustion engine cars by 2035. (Engadget)
Has Canada ever seen Canada? There is no country in the world that would benefit more from global warming or that is less suited to electric vehicles.
- Phenylephrine is useless. (In the Pipeline)
On the one hand, it's not a precursor to meth. On the other hand, it does nothing. And there are many cheaper substances that fit both those roles.
- QNAP again. (Bleeping Computer)
Seriously?
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Wednesday, March 30
Polished Timber Everything Edition
Top Story
- Agent for the other house on my shortlist is not playing games. Sent the contract right over, only one thing in there that raises an eyebrow, and certainly no deal breakers. Getting my agent to do a walkthrough and then will take it from there.
What I also found while clicking around is a rather nice five bedroom house on 16 acres on the edge of town - with a spare two bedroom house just in case, I don't know, the main house has a puncture. At the extreme upper end of my price range but actually still cheaper than my current place, which is about the size of the spare house there.
The problem is, it's on wireless internet, and wireless internet in Australia sucks. A major reason I selected this particular town is the fibre internet, and this house don't got it. I can do my job remotely, but I still need to be able to do my job.
What price 1km of Cat 5?
- Axie Infinity's Ronin network bridge got hacked. Just a little bit. (Bleeping Computer)
For $620 million.
And they didn't notice for a week.
(Yes, this is crypto stuff.)
(breathe in)
WHAT ARE YOU IDIOTS DOING?
(breathe out)
Tech News
- Nvidia's GeForce RTX 3090 Ti is officially officially here for officially $1999. (Tom's Hardware)
But actually a whole lot more than that.
And there are no reviews, because Nvidia didn't send out review samples.
It runs at 450W and should be about 35% faster than the RTX 3080 at three times the price.
- Meanwhile the Ryzen 5800X looks kind of dead. (Tom's Hardware)
If you want speed you'll go for the 5800X3D or the 12-core 5900X; if you're price-sensitive you'll want the new 5700X which substantially cheaper, uses much less power, and is only 5% slower in single and multi-threaded benchmarks.
- HP's new FX900 Pro SSD is, um, pretty good actually. (Tweaktown)
It's not the fastest SSD in existence, but it's cheaper than anything faster and faster than anything cheaper. 7.4GB/s read and 6.7GB/s write, with 43 µs read latency and 14 µs writes.
- Paging Barbra Streisand. Will Ms. Streisand please come to the Law of Unintended Consequences phone.
Farewell, Ubiquiti, you assholes.
- Sydney is acquiring... Sandworms. They're sandworms. (ZDNet)
The sandworms will be used to extend the new Metro system in western Sydney, burrowing through 200 metres of sandstone and shale per week. (Not a lot of granite around here.)
- What happened to that 40 mile long Russian invasion convoy. (The Guradian*)
Or one version of events, anyway. But something sure happened to that convoy and it wasn't good.
* Stet.
- This professor stopped grading her students' papers. How did it go? (The Conversation)
She has no idea because she stopped grading her students' papers.
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Tuesday, March 29
And Then There Was One (And A Dozen Alternates) Edition
Top Story
- I'm pretty sure the real estate agent for the house I talked about yesterday is playing games with me - I can see the Internet Archive, I know how long this place has been on the market, sure you have a hot prospect right this minute and are expecting to exchange contracts shortly, I believe you, millions wouldn't - but I don't have time so you're off the list.
Which leaves me with something that's cheaper and doesn't appear to need any work. Still with the old-school high ceilings, and 50% larger than my current place while being 60% cheaper. Maybe not my dream home but a huge improvement and the mortgage payments on a 10-year loan will beless thannot much more than my current rent.
- The ECASH bill in the US House of Representatives aims to introduce a government-controlled non-blockchain anonymous digital currency. (CoinDesk)
What?
It would be legal tender, support peer-to-peer transactions, and would not have either a centralised or distributed ledger. Like cash, the ledger would be after the fact, not part of the currency.
I'm going to have to read up on this because this sounds (a) like a good idea and (b) impossible.
Tech News
- The Asus ProART B660 Creator D4 is a pretty good and not overly expensive Alder Lake motherboard. (Guru3d)
It's the cheaper B660 chipset so not overflowing with slots and I/O, but all the essentials are there including four DIMM slots (DDR4, still much cheaper than DDR5), a PCIe 5 x16 slot ready for next-generation graphics cards, three M.2 slots for storage, and two 2.5Gb Ethernet ports.
- Shorter MIT: We suspended SAT requirements and half our freshman class are morons. (MIT Admissions)
So you admit it, do you?
Hacker News thread says no shit, Sherlock. Also that college mostly sucks.
- The car dealership did it. (EFF)
Sorry to spoil the punch line.
Party Like We're Underwater Video of the Day
Had to get up during the night because rain was coming down sideways and my front hall was flooded.
Had to pause writing this post because rain was coming down sideways and my front hall was flooded again.
Gotta get out of the flood zone.
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Monday, March 28
House Of Minus Seven Doors Edition
Top Story
- I mentioned in a separate item that I've narrowed my house search down to two - though of course this morning a brand new four bedroom house popped up right in the centre of my price range - and I have someone checking on one of the properties for me because I have... Questions.
There's at least seven doors and one flight of stairs that aren't indicated on the floorplan, the main bathroom apparently occupies four separate rooms, there's a window that opens out onto the patio which is in turn entirely inside the house, and I think I might need to replace the carpet...
Well, turns out you can find anything if you poke around long enough, including the last time this house was on the market back in 2015, and the photos and the floor plan from then.
Yes, there are exactly seven doors missing from the current floorplan - and one missing from the old floorplan, which shows not only a solid wall in that place but the kitchen sink on the other side.
The stairs are in the front hall, which is not what I expected. I thought they were at the back of the adjacent living room. That makes the front hall narrower of course but it adds light from above, and this plan shows that the loft area is larger than I had thought.
The main bathroom really is split into four separate rooms which, well, okay; overall it's 15'x12' so even with separate rooms for the bath and the shower it's not exactly camped. Honestly, the bath room by itself is bigger than my entire bathroom.
And I probably will need to replace the carpet.
On the upside, someone with some interior design sense has been in there in the past seven years and replaced the old custard yellow paint in the dining room and kitchen with eggshell and white respectively, and probably added $50,000 to the valuation in one shot.
The 2015 photos don't make it look nearly as nice as the newer ones, and specifically the newer photos leave out the hallway and the stairs. But if they've just gotten rid of the custard yellow plague there as well, that should look much better than it did. And if not, painting is the one home maintenance task I have real experience at.
- The Australian Stock Exchange expects more delays to its blockchain based trade records system. (ZDNet)
Originally expected to go live in April - last year - it's now set for April next year, but they've already advised that they're likely to miss that date as well.
I'll give them credit for that: If you know that your project is going to miss its deadline a year in advance, that means that someone is paying attention. I've seen - and rescued in some cases - projects that sailed straight into their deadline with no warning and no working code.
Tech News
- Existing geothermal plants around the Salton Sea could be updated to extract $5 billion worth of lithium per year in addition to the 432 megawatts of power they produce. (Fast Company)
This seems like a good idea. Geothermal - unlike wind and solar - is a viable baseload power source, where it is available. (It's available everywhere if you're prepared to dig deep enough, but that's expensive.) And 20,000 tons a year of free lithium might be enough to start curing California.
- The plain text internet is coming. (The Protocol)
I'm so old I remember when the internet was plain text.
...
Yeah, that's actually old.
- When slower is faster: The rise of Python in scientific computing. (The Coop Blog)
This presents an interesting case where converting a program from Fortran to Python made it 100x faster. Python itself is 100x slower than Fortran - or more - but it has a ton of easy-to-use, highly optimised libraries for scientific computing. And straightforward Fortran code you write yourself can't compete with libraries refined over decades by thousands of programmers around the world.
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Sunday, March 27
I've narrowed the house hunt down to two - with a dozen alternates in case those fall through. One comfortably within my price range and very nice, one stupid cheap by big city standards and still quite nice. There's a big price gap but the more expensive one is about 50% bigger and on twice as much land, so that's understandable.
I was a bit concerned about possible street noise with that larger one, but then I took a closer look at the layout (built in 1908, it's been through multiple renovations and extensions and the interior arrangements are now not merely complicated but non-Euclidean) and realised that the bedrooms are at the back. The house now faces sideways; I suspect it originally took up a large corner lot but the street frontage on one side was subdivided and sold off decades ago.
Okay, fine. Sideways is fine. Does explain why there's no facade.
There's at least seven doors and one flight of stairs that aren't indicated on the floorplan, the main bathroom apparently occupies four separate rooms, there's a window that opens out onto the patio which is in turn entirely inside the house, and I think I might need to replace the carpet, but it's twice the size of my current place (three times by volume thanks to the 13' ceilings) at 60% of the price.
On the not-necessarily-negative side, there were overnight lows below freezing every month from April through September last year, something that simply doesn't happen in Sydney. By the time I move up there in May I'll be facing the coldest weather I've experienced in years - and it won't even be winter.
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Top Story
- Microsoft has been accused of handing out bribes in Africa and the Middle East in order to secure new business deals. (The Register)
Compared to the totalitarian insanity we generally get from Big Tech, this sort of traditional petty corruption feels almost comforting. It's like you come home from a day fighting off laser-equipped robot dogs and your own dog just wants to bite you.
Answers and Questions
- From Chi-Town Jerry:
I want to upgrade my PC -
Here's a CPU benchmark comparison between those two chips.
Currently:
AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics 3.50 GHz
8 GB RAM
Not enough to run MS Flight Simulator which my kids bought me..
Will a new MoBo with an AMD Ryzen 5 5600G (w/onboard graphics) be enough to run that and Windows 11?
The price of graphics cards is insane here!
The 5600G is miles faster on that front.
On the graphics side that site doesn't have the 2200G listed, but the older chip has 8 graphic cores at 1.1GHz, and the newer one has 7 cores at 1.9GHz. So about 50% faster.
However, the recommended minimum graphics card for the game is the RX 570, which is about three times faster again. So that hardware will certainly run better, but I don't know if it will be better enough to make the game enjoyable.
- From Caiwyn:
I am still skeptical of crypto simply by default, but what exactly are the downsides other than current volatility?
For the most part, crypto really does run as a combination MLM / Ponzi / pump-and-dump scam. The thing is, under all the bullshit it is actually useful. The other thing is, there's so much bullshit that the utility is being destroyed.
I work in the crypto space - over the last few years it's gone from being 10% of my job to 90%.
I hate it.
As the technical lead at our small company I'd be a natural to send to a conference for a talk or panel discussion, but the CEO knows I'd stand up, look out at the expectant audience, and say LEARN TO CODE.
- From OSUsux:
Hey, Pixy. After a recent harddrive crash I'm looking for a home RAID solution mostly for storing photos, media, etc. I'm tech adjacent, but I haven't ever done anything with RAID. So I'm looking for something that is easy to setup AND rebuild when an HDD goes bad.
A low-end Synology box with two drive bays like the DS-220k would probably work fine, or one of Western Digital's dual-bay devices that come pre-populated with disks. Those come pre-configured with RAID-1 (mirroring) so you just need to plug it in and hook up your computer - and swap the failed drive if and when it starts blinking red. With those capacities you probably don't need anything bigger, just something that will save your bacon automatically when a drive fails.
I probably don't need a ton of space - I have less than 1 TB of stuff now, would probably want at least 2, maybe 4 TB of space for room to grow. I would anticipate this being a long term (10+ years) storage solution. Also trying not to break the bank on this.
Any suggestions?
Just don't connect it to the internet.
- From J. Random Dude:
NASs. I've thought about getting a QNAP or something similar but with their software updates occasionally being corrupted by virii, am I better off just rolling my own, ie adding more drives and such to the Windows box I'll be using to run Blue Iris surveillance camera software?
QNAP is probably fine as long as you don't connect it directly to the internet. Same with the recent problems that have hit Asus, Western Digital, and Synology devices - though QNAP has had the worst run this past year.
For a single application though you're probably fine just adding drives directly to your PC. Certainly cheaper that way.
- From Thing From Snowy Mountain: Dandolo Did Nothing Wrong:
Late Question For Pixy: If I want to share some videos what's a good alternative to youtube?
Rumble, probably. Seems to be getting more traction than the other startups right now.
- From Rodent:
Pixy any comments on protecting corporate systems? Seeing a lot of cyber attacks and ransomware on municipal systems, food manufacturers, and others. Latest was H.P. Hood dairy based in Boston. Meat plants and cream cheese makers come to mind for past events. Apologies if you're posted on that previously and I missed it.
My comments in this area are mostly along the lines of STOP THAT YOU IDIOTS! WERE YOU RAISED IN A BARN?
Which while well-deserved are not really actionable advice.
- From m0lr4k:
I am tired of hardware devices that dictate when their usefulness ends for me. I have had a co-branded Google / Asus router for a number of years. Well now Google has said it won't work past the end of the year, because Google.
I'm not sure what exact model to recommend, but what you are looking for is OpenWRT. They maintain a huge list of supported devices and matching software versions. Might be worth checking your current hardware if you haven't already.
Any recommendations for a home router for a medium-sized home, preferably one that allows FOSS firmware to be flashed on it? I've looked at a few (and even the option of using a Raspberry Pi Compute Module as a router), but I don't see a clear leader like the old Linksys 54g (or whatever model) was 15 years ago. Extra options like support for mesh networks and home automation would be cool, but I'm now in the camp of rolling it myself if I add much to those sorts of things.
- From AshevilleRobert:
Question. Is it possible to build a PC with none of the major components coming from china (Processor, memory, motherboard, case, power supply and video card)? I understand that discrete components will be, just wanting to avoid the finished items being so.
Maybe. The chips for CPUs are made in the US and Taiwain, GPUs in Taiwan and South Korea. RAM chips and flash have major factories in the US and South Korea. The leading motherboard and graphics card manufacturers are based in Taiwan - but they all operate some of their production in mainland China so it would be tricky proposition to make sure nothing comes from there.
- From Squints:
I'd love some elaboration on this from last week:
This one is in relation to DuckDuckGo search.
>>enter ! and one or more letters at the end of your search query and it will use a different search index - and there are thousands supported
Not for all thousands, of course, but a couple of examples. Thanks muchly.
The simplest one is that by adding !g to the end of your search, you get results from Google. Similarly, !a searches Amazon and !w searches Wikipedia. !/. searches Slashdot - and so does !./ in case you fumble it. There are currently 13,565 of these "bangs" available.
- From Braenyard:
Question - I need a portable HD that is independent of the internet. I bought a Seagate 1T and the first thing it wanted to do was connect, in fact, I could go no further unless I connected. The opposite of what I want.
Format that sucker. Show it who's boss. While a new external hard drive might want you to connect to the internet, once you format it it will become raw storage and won't demand anything.
I have a WD Word Book 3T and would like a portable to use all the time and back it up to the WD Word Book. Reviews don't cover my connectivity concern.
Any recommendation, please?
Tech News
- PCIe 5 SSDs will require active cooling. (Tom's Hardware)
As in, a fan, right on your disk drive.
Although the actual quote is slightly different:But for sure, the SSDs are going to be hotter, in the same way that CPU and GPU got hotter in the 1990s. As we move to Gen5 and Gen6, we may need to consider active cooling.
(My italics.)
Still, there's a reason I went for PCIe 3 SSDs for my laptop upgrades. (Also price.)
- Baldur's Gate 3 Will Be the Benchmark Incarnation of D&D 5th Edition in a Game, Says Larian
This is going to suck, isn't it?
(Checks Steam Early Access.)
44,000 scores averaging Very Positive, despite being a full-price title in Early Access for three years.
Maybe... Not?
- Ubuntu Finally Switches to Rolling Releases. (Slashdot)
Oh no-
- Ubuntu becomes a rolling release with Rolling Rhino. (Neowin)
Wait, R? The upcoming release is Jammy Jellyfish. We won't loop back around to R until 2026.
- Rolling Rhino Remix is an un-official Ubuntu flavour. (GitHub)
So... Nothing.
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Saturday, March 26
Hump Day Edition
Top Story
- It seems we have somehow made it through another week and that means it's Question and Answer time. Fling your answers into the comments using the provided working miniature trebuchet (some assembly required) and tomorrow I will fart in your general direction attempt to answer them.
- The Latecomer's Guide to Crypto. (New York Times Paywall)
I literally can't read this.
- The Annotated Latecomer's Guide to Crypto. (Molly White)
Fifteen crypto skeptics, computer scientists, and researchers take the New York Times apart and then - because I know some of these people are dedicated lefties - immediately relapse into Gell-Mann Amnesia Syndrome.
Tech News
- The EU is bringing in new regulations that will force Big Tech to support open APIs and interoperability. (Ars Technica)
The initial focus is on messaging platforms but it seems to extend well beyond that, and the fines go as high as 20% of gross annual revenue.
Apple and Google are objecting strenuously, but I don't much care because at this point they are even more thoroughly infiltrated by communists than Europe itself.
The rules only apply to very large companies - with a market cap of $75 billion or revenues of $7.5 billion - so it leaves the field open for new competitors.
- Following the Willie Horton rule, a group of filmmakers sued hosting provider Quadranet for providing services to some of the endpoints to some of the VPN providers used by some of the people who downloaded pirated copies of their films.
Quadranet said this was bullshit and filed a motion to dismiss, and last December a Florida judge agreed and tossed the case.
The plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that they had new evidence that would sustain the case and now the judge has ruled that it is still bullshit and tossed that too. (TorrentFreak)
Sometimes to good guys win.
- Don't make your Redis servers publicly accessible. (Bleeping Computer)
Problem solved.
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Friday, March 25
The Catch Is Out There Edition
Top Story
- Yesterday word got out that a British teen was believed to be the leader of the Lapsus$ hacking group. Today London police arrested seven people aged 16 to 21 in relation to, well, exactly this. (BBC News)
Apparently they got doxxed by rival hackers.
Technical skills: 9/10.
Opsec: 0/10.
Lapsus$ announced they are taking a break until March 30. (Bleeping Computer)
Tech News
- Meanwhile anonymous, who have been quiet lately, claimed to have hacked Nestle and leaked 10GB of proprietary data.
Nestle denies this happened for a rather unique reason: they accidentally leaked that data themselves months ago. (Gizmodo)
- Google still thinks Android tablets are a thing. (The Verge)
Guys, you haven't updated the Nexus 7 range since 2013.
- Nvidia GPU prices are down by about 40% here in Australia, but AMD prices are moving much more slowly... At least at the mid range. At the high end, they're also down sharply. Which has led to an absurd compaction of price brackets:

Just $40 separates the 6800 from the 6900 XT.
- Which makes the 6900 XT relatively good value but it's probably not time to buy one. (Hot Hardware)
The next generation's mid-range cards, due later this year, could beat current top-of-the-line cards while being much cheaper and more efficient.
Not At All Tech News
- Hololive Indonesia Gen 3 was announced today, to debut, well, today. I think they've figured out that if they launch the same day it doesn't give YouTube time to ruin things.
All of the Hololive Indonesia girls speak fluent English, something I wasn't originally aware of, though now that Hololive English is larger they spend more time speaking Bahasa for their local audience.
Holostars Gen 4 debuts right after that - Holostars is the male branch of the all-female Hololive.
Local Rabbit Goes House Hunting Video of the Day
The adventure into Darkest Zillow starts around the 24 minute mark. It was interesting to see the difference in pricing between Australia and the US. Here, every city of significant size anywhere in the country is expensive. Also every country town in New South Wales except Broken Hill, which is further from Sydney than is Melbourne and right on the outer edge of civilisation.
Disclaimer: Not saying which side of that edge.
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