Oh, lovely, you're a cheery one aren't you?
Wednesday, February 16
Down Is The New Up Edition
Top Story
- Not naming any names, but if your blockchain can go down - not just congested with high gas prices but entirely offline - then you're blockchaining wrong.
- AMD's market cap now exceeds Intel's. (Tom's Hardware)
This is a far cry indeed from the dark days of 2015 when their share price was in the toilet and it was looking like someone was about to flush.
To be fair, Intel is likely undervalued here, based not on sales figures but on a decade of underwhelming R&D effort. AMD's revenues have been soaring but are still only 20% of Intels.
And for whatever reason, Nvidia is currently valued at more than Intel and AMD combined.
Tech News
- Akamai has bought cloud server provider Linode for $900 million.
For once, genuinely not a bubble. There's a story I could link, but 95% of it is statutory investor warnings.
- Google is dying. (DKB)
Google earned its early success by doing something hard, well: Indexing the entire damn internet in a way that was actually useful.
In doing that they unleashed the plague that is comment spam that persists unto this day, but their search was still useful. Now it's becoming useless, not because search has changed, but because the internet is absolutely flooded with shit.
The article notes that Reddit is much better at handling this, not because Reddit isn't flooded with shit, but because Reddit is divided into tens of thousands of small communities and if you search for a Hololive-related question in /r/hololive you know you are going to get a Hololive-related answer.
- Writing a Minecraft server from scratch in Bash. (sdomi)
If you know what that means, you know what it means.
If you don't, well, it's like constructing your own fully functional fire engine entirely by hand - out of cheese.
- Google is bringing Chrome OS to computers. (Thurrott.com)
Actually not a bad way for the average user to revive an old PC or Mac with low-end specs. 4GB of RAM is not a fun experience on Windows or MacOS but works relatively well on ChromeOS.
- The Australian Electoral Commission is fighting conspiracy theories online by seeking out spreaders of misinformation and turning them into toads. (ZDNet)
Reports are that the toads are either used in vaccine research or forced to assist in the branch-stacking efforts of the Victorian ALP.
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Tuesday, February 15
Spare Laptop Edition
Top Story
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Long day at work - and it isn't over yet - so short one today.
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The UK tax department has seized NFTs worth a total of $1.8 million as part of a broader tax fraud investigation. (Tom's Hardware)
Which makes me wonder if I can pay my taxes in NFTs.
Tech News
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Intel's Core i3-12100 is a pretty good CPU for $120. (Tom's Hardware)
No low-power cores to to complicate things, reasonable clock speeds (4.3GHz), modest power requirements (60W base, 89W turbo), good single-threaded performance, and decent multi-threaded performance. With "only" four cores it's not a 3D rendering powerhouse, but for the average user it should cope quite well. It's slower on multi-threaded tasks than my spare new laptop, which has a 15W 6-core AMD Ryzen 5600U, but only by about 10%, and it's 15% faster single-threaded.
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As in, you can run complete standalone Linux and Windows instances on your phone. Right now just the Pixel 6, but in the future all up-to-date mobile devices. Why you would want to do this is another question, but my A$300 phone came with 8GB of RAM, so if there's a use for it there's no reason not to do it.
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Disclaimer: I hate sausage rolls, put another pie in the oven baby.
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Monday, February 14
Hadda Bought Two Edition
Top Story
- Not up on the news sites yet but GiveSendGo was briefly taken offline by a redirection attack that sent visitors to GiveSendGone.
Also GiveSendGo information apparently sourced from a misconfigured S3 bucket - or not, I'll get to that in a moment - with details of campaigns and contributions is circulating on the internet. Supposedly 200GB of data was leaked. 99% of that is going to be videos and images from campaigns. If they had 200GB of payment data they'd have enough money from their processing fees to buy Nova Scotia.
- Anyway, that misconfigured S3 bucket. First, almost all S3 buckets are misconfigured because the S3 bucket configuration panel in AWS is a screaming toxic dumpster fire. Absolutely unbelievable how bad it is. IBM has an S3 compatible storage service and even they do it better.
And the data I've seen circulating... Was public on the website in the first place. So it might not have been misconfigured at all, just open to public view because it was public data.
Not seeing any email addresses, phone numbers, or home addresses, but I haven't gone and downloaded the file myself, and don't plan to.
Update: Apparently the leaked data includes ID of campaign organisers, but not of contributors.
- In slightly brighter news, that 4TB SSD that suddenly got an massive unexplained discount right when I was looking for a 4TB SSD - and went up by 50% right after I bought it - suddenly got a massive unexplained discount when I was back on Amazon checking my order statuses. (Everything has been delivered except some gravy. Long story.)
It's A$1500 if I buy it through Amazon US; that seems to be the MSRP. I don't know what Amazon's pricing algorithm is playing at; yesterday on Amazon AU it was A$1307, this morning it was A$873, and after I bought one, it went straight up to A$1147.
Anyway, where I said I shoulda bought two, now I didda bought two. Also I'm $200 over budget for my lab buildout, but I think I'll cope.
Tech News
- Intel's Sapphire Rapids vs. AMD's Milan-X server CPU. (WCCFTech)
The benchmarks aren't of huge interest to me personally because they are all floating-point workloads, but there's an interesting chart on cache and memory latencies. AMD does surprisingly well here, getting 17.3ns latency to 1.5GB of total L3 cache. Intel has 28.4ns latency to - I think - 180MB of total L3 cache.
Which is not what the chart says but the chart is wrong.
- Why we at $FAMOUS_COMPANY Switched to $HYPED_TECHNOLOGY. (Saagar Jha)
If you spend much time reading tech company blogs, you've seen this post hundreds of times. About 10% of them have some true insight, the rest are just overpaid hamsters spinning in their wheels.
- I'm in the wrong business. Or in the wrong branch of the right business. A white hat hacker was awarded $2 million for pointing out a critical bug in the Optimism layer-2 blockchain. (Crypto Adventure)
"Hey, did you know you can create infinite ETH tokens on your site?"
"Thanks, fixed, here's two million bucks."
Not a bubble.
- France is planning to build up to 14 new nuclear reactors. (The Guardian)
At least 6, and as many as 14.
Germany meanwhile apparently plans to starve in the dark.
- This is actually not stupid: Tech startup Giga runs a mobile bitcoin mining operation. (CNBC)
When oil exploration hits natural gas instead, the gas is often burned off (which is safer and better for the environment than letting it escape).
So what Giga decided to do is build a gas-powered mobile Bitcoin mining facility that can be towed out the oil field and tapped into the gas on the spot. Mining Bitcoin is immensely wasteful, but that gas was considered waste in the first place, so any purposeful use is a win.
- No shit, Sherlock: YouTube's Olympics highlights are riddled with propaganda. (Wired)
That's the entire reason China wanted to host the games in the first place.
- NFT marketplace Cent has suspended most transactions because NFTs are mostly garbage. (Reuters)
I mean, yes, this is true, but you might be in the wrong business if you're planning to just come right out and admit it.
- Copyright holders want the United States to invade Iraq again. Or something. (TorrentFreak)
Sure guys. Whatever. We'll get right on that.
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So, that high-end 4TB NVMe drive that I managed to grab on Amazon at somewhere between 30% and 40% below retail price? (Around A$860 on Amazon Australia; ordering it through Amazon US works out to A$1500.)
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Sunday, February 13
You Shall Not Pass Edition
Top Story
- One final* purchase, a 2TB NVMe drive from Amazon for the new spare laptop. Specifically the Samsung 970 EVO Plus, which is what I recommend to people who need a good M.2 drive and are wondering what to get.
It's "only" PCIe 3 and "only" does about 3.5GB per second and 620,000 IOPS, with a read latency around 50 microseconds, an only costs about 20% than garbage like the Kingston NV1. The reason I didn't get it for my larger laptops is it "only" goes up to 2TB.
And the reason for the purchase is that HP Australia doesn't do build-to-order; there's exactly two models available of the Aero 13, and since the 512GB model is on sale and the 1TB model is not, buying my own SSD and installing it saves me about A$550 - and gives me twice the storage capacity.
My old spare laptop has a 5500U processor; this new one has a 5600U. It's six times faster.
* Update: Oops I bought it again...
- So the IRS cancelled their plans to force people to audition for a movie role before they could file their taxes online only after seven million people had handed over all their details to a private contractor. (Washington Post / MSN)
So, what happens to all your private data now? According the IRS, the answer is that individual users can log in and delete their data... Maybe.
Tech News
- Binance has invested $200 million in trash-tier blogging platform Forbes. (CNBC)
It's not a bubble.
- Sony has a new model of High Resolution Walkman out. (Liliputing)
$3600. Not a bubble.
- Did I fall asleep and miss something, or was there somehow not a massive blockchain debacle in the past week?
- The big list of bad bots. (Badbot)
These either ignore the robots.txt files that control how web crawlers crawl the web, or, well, still ignore them but in a different way.
Seekport and SEMRush are two I have had to block, along with Baidu, because they will point multiple indexing servers at a single host at once and just trash the place.
Party Like It's 1980-ish Vide of the Day
Disclaimer: Time to explode the wall ferrets.
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Saturday, February 12
Return Of The Revenge Edition
Top Story
- I had it in my cart, again.
This time it was an Orico 5-bay USB-C RAID storage box. I just got one, noticed they were getting scarce, and added a second one to an order I was placing with a different online store.
As soon as I placed my order the lead time went from 2 days to 2 months.
Went back to the store where I got the first one, added it to my cart, didn't get time to check out, and when I looked the next morning it was gone.
Not so much of a drama this time because (a) I was buying a second one just in case it went out of stock and I needed one, and (b) I got an 8-bay non-RAID model for the same price. Hoping to set up software RAID on that.
- Also grabbed an HP Pavilion Aero 13 as a spare laptop, since the two big ones are going to be cabled in to monitors and storage and networks and not readily lappable.
A$1199 with Windows 11. Exact same specs with Windows 10, A$1049. Not exactly a difficult decision.
- Twitter fell over. (Bleeping Computer)
The site was still up but gave not-very-reassuring errors any time you tried to do anything.
I felt a great disturbance in the force, as if millions of users wondered if they'd suddenly been banned.
Tech News
- Learn what metaverse is and how you can profit from it with this $20 course. (ZDNet Academy)
The headline does rather give the game away.
(ZDNet Academy is not news, but advertising for the worst tech products that ever existed.)
- Cisco has made a $20 billion cash bid to buy Splunk. (Reuters)
It's not a bubble.
- Early benchmarks of Intel's Raptor Lake have leaked, confirming a 24-core (8+16) design. (Tom's Hardware)
Bleh.
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Friday, February 11
Feed The Bird Beans Edition
Top Story
- Russia has sentenced three teenagers - one to five years in a penal colony - over a plot to blow up an FSB building. (Moscow Times)
In Minecraft.
No, literally. There's a virtual copy of the building on a Minecraft server and they planned to Pekorise it.
They also made fireworks.
- Meanwhile back in the USA same old, same old. (Washington Post)
Yes, the CIA is still illegally spying on American citizens."CIA recognizes and takes very seriously our obligation to respect the privacy and civil liberties of U.S. persons in the conduct of our vital national security mission,†Kristi Scott, the agency’s privacy and civil liberties officer, said in a statement. "CIA is committed to transparency consistent with our obligation to protect intelligence sources and methods. LOL.â€
Tech News
- France has found that Google Analytics breaches the GDPR. (Tech Crunch)
Also, the original link to that article was https://techcrunch.com/2022/02/10/cnil-google-analytics-gdpr-breach/?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cucmVkZGl0LmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAADOr6euOPAb-NTYK9eKpVKFO8xDY-n_4uo3vAZOYBY_qQjQFgxnVyBTUz6vju3_M7dI0e_8MR-Sjr4V2VFo6zjyBdHzr2eDY4V6nGipk63MuUGua3S1XMO7lQKv19P9HTFtY3dhz-tgrpxoxffP4fmJr_k4UgmBGnDmYchN4Je3w
It's GDPR violations all the way down.
- SpaceX is planning to launch a million tons of cargo into orbit per year. (WCCFTech)
To put that into perspective, there's currently about 15,000 tons of artificial stuff in orbit right now.
The goal is to get a million tons of equipment to the surface of Mars to create a self-sustaining colony, and there's about a ten-to-one ration between mass launched to orbit and mass landed safely on Mars.
- Ryzen 7000 could be announced at Computex in May for a July launch. (WCCFTech)
Or not.
- Alder Lake N is on its way too. (Tom's Hardware)
This is the flip side: No performance cores, only efficiency cores, for ultra-low-power products. But with up to 8 cores that don't completely suck, these will blow older Atom chips out of he water.
- AMD's acquisition of Xilinx has regulatory approval, and is expected to close on Monday. (AnandTech)
Intel bought Xilinx's main competitor, Altera, back in 2015.
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Thursday, February 10
Hick Quits Edition
Top Story
- SpaceX lost 40 newly launched satellites due to a geomagnetic storm. (The Register)
Have they checked down the back of the sofa? Last time I looked I found a fully armed and operational battlestation.
- Western Digital and Kioxia (Toshiba) lost at least 6.5 exabytes of flash memory due to contamination. (Tom's Hardware)
Have they checked down the back of the sofa? Last time I looked I found the Dead Sea scrolls. Or possibly a whole bunch of unpaid parking tickets; hard to tell once they pass the thousand year mark.
Tech News
- Cloud lock-in vs the multi-vendor approach. (Tim Bray)
Here’s an example: Last year, AWS dramatically reduced data egress charges, under pressure from CloudFlare, Oracle, and of course their customers.
Yeah we've covered that story here.
They didn't. They didn't reduce data egress charges at all, let alone dramatically.
- How we optimised Python API code 100x. (Towards Data Science)
They rewrote it in C.
- A review of the Asus USB-C2500 2.5Gb USB Ethernet adaptor. (Serve the Home)
They pronounce it good, which is nice because I bought three of them last month.
- Samsung's Galaxy Tab S8 range is here. (ZDNet)
If you were waiting for a small, reasonably priced Android tablet with solid overall specs... You can keep right on waiting.
These do have good overall specs but are a little lacking in the small and reasonably priced categories.
- 4TB SSD just showed up.
- Hulu has order 20 new episodes of Futurama. (Variety)
I have concerns. I love Futurama and it ended about as well as any western cartoon series has ever ended - back in 2013, before the Great Woke Cloud had destroyed everything.
- There are now a thousand startups with a market valuation over a billion dollars. (Bloomberg)
Totally not a bubble.
Begun, the Fast Food Wars Have Video of the Day
It's the official CupZ / Kiara collab we didn't know we needed. Apparently the first in a series.
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Wednesday, February 09
I Had It In My Cart Edition
Top Story
- I've mentioned that my new desktop setup is a pair of laptops - two Dell Inspiron 16 Pluses. They're pretty capable systems, with 8 core 11th gen Intel CPUs, 32GB of RAM (now upgrade to 64GB), Nvidia RTX 3060 GPUs, and 1TB of SSD.
The SSD they ship with is a tiny 2230 model, and there's room for another full-size 2280 model. In the first one I've added a 4TB Corsair MP400, and I was set to buy another one today. I even had it in my cart.
Loaded up the site this morning and it disappeared from the cart. Out of stock.
Okay, there's another store that has it, just at a somewhat higher price. Out of stock.
Check Amazon. Out of stock.
Check Amazon for any 4TB M.2 drive that's available to ship, and up pops the Corsair MP510, a much better model, for basically the same price.
Add to cart, check out, get confirmation that it will be delivered tomorrow.
And then the price goes up by more than $400. Which is why I didn't buy that model in the first place. Don't know why it was so cheap right when I needed it, but I'm not going to complain.
- The circle has finally been squared. (Quanta)
This ancient problem asked if it was possible to construct a square with the same area as a given circle using just a compass and straight-edge. We now know that the answer is no.
What has now been shown is that it is possible with a compass, a straight edge, and a very, very sharp knife.
Tech News
- Two people have been arrested and $3.6 billion in Bitcoin seized in the largest crypto theft bust to date. (Washington Post)
Except... They only stole $71 million; the rest is inflation. I wonder what will actually get returned to the victims, if anything.
- RAID-Z expansion is now available in the latest FreeBSD kernel. (FreeBSD Foundation)
Speaking of which, I also bought 40TB of disk to go with the 4TB SSD. That's just going in a RAID-5 USB box, not anything fancy.
- The Netherlands has fined Apple another 5 million euros over their bullshittery with payments. (Reuters)
And intends to keep fining them five million every week until they stop bullshitting.
Which is nice work if you can get it.
- Everything we know about this year's Zen 4 desktop CPUs. (WCCFTech)
Grain of salt time though because the diagram shows PCIe 4 but the table lists PCIe 5.
Anyway, the new chips have an extra 4 PCIe lanes, but those are likely to be dedicated to delivering USB4 (which can run PCIe over a cable) so you won't have any more than current models for slots and drives.
But if the chipset connection is upgraded to PCIe 5 that means double the bandwidth for drives on the chipset - if you weren't satisfied with the current 7GB per second.
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So, I have two new laptops, or rather, two new beeg laptops, Sana and Pomu.*
Both came with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of SSD, and I upgraded them to 64GB and added a 4TB secondary SSD to Sana.
I was about to order the same SSD for Pomu - I put it in my cart yesterday - and when I went to check out this morning it was gone. Other supplier? Out of stock. Amazon? Out of stock.
Well, what 4TB drives can I buy?
How about a better model, cheaper**, from the same manufacturer? TLC rather than QLC?
...
Yeah, okay. Sana is mostly going to run Windows and Pomu will be hosting Linux VMs, so that works. A good QLC drive is fine for typical Windows stuff but not ideal for server workloads. Unlikely to be a problem running my development environments but TLC is still better.
Arriving tomorrow.
* There's also Pina, a thin-and-light laptop provided by work. Pina is smol.
** Actually slightly more expensive than the original supplier, but considerably cheaper than the second one. And hundreds of dollars cheaper than other 4TB TLC models, which is why I was willing to go QLC in the first place.****
*** USB rather than NAS, and cheap SMR drives. I'll get a new NAS with good drives some other time.
**** Price just jumped by 50%. After my order was placed, paid, and confirmed. Appears that I lucked out on this one. Huh. Did they just sell it to me at the US price but in Aussie dollars? Shoulda bought two.
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