Friday, October 04
Fourth Of What Edition
Tech News
- To no-one's surprise the New York Times is going all-in on fascism.
They're for it.
- The Microsoft Surface Pro X is an overpriced Android tablet that runs Windows. (PC Perspective)
Starting model is $999 with 8GB RAM and 128GB SSD, and up tp $1799 for 16GB RAM and 512GB SSD. Not including the $140 keyboard or $150 pen.
The 2880x1920 screen is nice, but my rather elderly (and much cheaper) Nexus 10 has a 2560x1600 screen.
CPU is the SQ1 which seems to be an 8CX which is basically a slightly bigger and faster Snapdragon 855. It has the same design with four fast cores and four slow cores, but double the L3 cache.
Still, that would be fine for a notebook except that it's going to end up emulating x86 code and that's gonna suuuuuck.
- The elusive Ryzen 3900 (non-Pro) has been cornered and benchmarked. (Tom's Hardware)
The first thing they do with a low-power CPU is overclock it and add liquid nitrogen. Of course.
- PDF encryption is broken. (Tom's Hardware)
Also, there's this Print Screen button.
- The governments of the US, UK, and Australia are working together to ban arithmetic. (TechDirt)
Idiots.
- Hey, free Caddy! (GitHub)
Caddy is going back to fully open source and free to install. I use Caddy for mee.nu / mu.nu and also at my day job, and it saves me a ton of messing about compared with Nginx. I've been paying the startup rate of $20 per month to support the project because it's saved my bacon a dozen times over.
(When this server got blacked out the other day, I fired up a little Caddy node at DigitalOcean, routed traffic through there and across an SSH tunnel, and got us up and running again in no time. I could also have done that with Nginx, true, but not nearly as quickly or easily.)
The author is making a revenue sharing deal with a training and support company to handle enterprise support so he can concentrate on developing the software, with Caddy 2.0 planned for Q1 of next year.
Hope that includes the API. It will be awesome with an API.
- The Rise of Rome: The 64 core Epyc 7702P put to the test. (Serve the Home)
This is the $4000 single-socket version rather than the $7000 dual socket version, but with 64 cores per socket we may see a market swing away from the dual socket platform that has been 80% of sales for over a decade.
It seems to be keep pace with a dual Xeon Platinum 8280 - processors that cost $10,000 each - except if you are using AVX-512 right now ahead of an upcoming patch.
Unless you have some specific need, such as VMWare live migrations from an existing host, you'd be stupid to buy Intel over AMD here.
- HP is restructuring and expects to shed 7000 staff over the next three years. (ZDNet)
No direct layoffs are expected though, just voluntary takeup of redundancy and early retirement offers.
- Need a truly modular case for your Raspberry Pi? (Amazon)
The price is pretty good. Wonder if they have an Amiga 1000 version....
- Well, that was short-lived: The European Court of Justice has ruled that EU member states can force internet companies to remove content worldwide. (Associated Press)
The same court recently ruled that this does not apply to the entirely fictitious right to be forgotten, so they must have gone off their meds since then.
This is the EU's highest court and there is no appeal, but you are entirely free to run your business from outside the EU and tell them to get fucked.
- Feast of Legends.
For a novelty tabletop RPG designed as a promotion for a fast food franchise, this is exceptionally well done.
Direct PDF linky.
Video of the Day
That is just slightly unnerving.
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Blearghck Edition
Tech News
- The semi-custom Ryzen APU in the new Surface Laptop 3 is barely custom at all. (AnandTech)
It has Vega 11 graphics like the desktop APUs instead of Vega 10 like the high-end mobile APUs, and that's about it. Standard DDR4-2400 memory too.
- Microsoft's Surface Duo is a dual-screen Android phoneblet with a 180° hinge. (AnandTech)
Not as seamless as the Galaxy Fold but probably more robust. Each screen is 5.6", and it's powered by a Snapdragon 855, but precise specs aren't available yet.
- The Internet of Insecure Pieces of Crap (IoIPoC) strikes again. (TechDirt)
- I still call Australia home. (TechDirt)
I don’t know what the mushy-headed vegans think, or why they think, but they better get this through their mushy heads: that we're changing the law in a substantial way that spells trouble, big trouble, for anyone who goes trespassing on agricultural land with the intention of disrupting agricultural production.
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Thursday, October 03
Blargh Ack Edition
Tech News
- I have the flu, so updates may be shorter than normal for a few more days.
- Intel's 10th-generation Cascade Lake high-end desktop CPUs are here - accidentally. (AnandTech)
The actual launch was planned for a week from now, but then all the details leaked out so Intel said what the hell and lifted the embargo.
Some people were not impressed.
These are mostly minor tweaks to the 9th generation parts, but with major tweaks to the pricing. The new 18 core part costs less than the existing 10 core, bringing Intel's pricing in line with Threadripper list prices.
I expect Thirdripper to thoroughly spoil the party when it arrives in November.
- AMD's Radeon 5500 is expected to arrive next week and to compete with the GTX 1660. (Tom's Hardware)
Looks like a slightly cut down 5600, which doesn't exist yet so I'm just guessing.
- Franz Kafka is alive and well and living in Delaware. (TechDirt)
Figures.
- The Surface Laptop 3 has a custom Ryzen 7 APU from the sound of things. (Tom's Hardware)
The event is happening right now, so I'll see if I can find the full specs.
- Twitter fell over. (Tech Crunch)
It seems that they have a twisty maze of variations of their something went wrong message, all different.
- StackExchange gonna StackExchange. (StackExchange)
- One journalist has had the Galaxy Fold for six days without destroying it. (ZDNet)
Apparently it's very well designed and robust except for the OLED panel itself, which disintegrates if someone says a bad word in its presence.
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Wednesday, October 02
Ack Blargh Edition
Tech News
- The rumoured 65W 12 core Ryzen 3900 is now slightly less of a rumour. (AnandTech)
Specifically, AMD has announced a Ryzen 9 Pro 3900 for corporate systems needing trusted firmware. 12 cores, 65W 3.1/4.3 GHz. Also some lower-spec Ryzen Pro 3000 models, but that's the interesting one.
- New Microsoft Surfaces and Surface Laptops are about to be announced, and are expected to come in Intel, AMD, and Arm flavours. (Tom's Hardware)
Exactly which models get which chips we will learn soon enough.
- A new study shows pretty much what you would expect: Pirated copies of ongoing series attract new customers and can increase overall sales. (TechDirt)
But pirated copies of completed series are more likely simply to be lost sales.
Given that, One Piece is safe forever.
- The only thing that can self-destruct faster than a journalist on Twitter is a corporate lawyer on Twitter. (TechDirt)
Third place goes to a snowball in a supernova.
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Monday, September 30
Duck Tales (Clean Edit) Edition
Tech News
- Just when you thought it was safe to go back into consumer SSDs Intel and Toshiba are working on PLC technology. (Ars Technica)
As in 5 bits per cell - 32 levels. Intel uses a floating gate design rather than the more common charge trap cell, which is supposedly better at high numbers of levels, but this is really pushing things. The cost/benefit doesn't seem to be worthwhile at all.
- A recent Windows update means that it no longer trusts SSDs to properly handle encryption themselves. (Tom's Hardware)
You can optionally enable self-encryption, and existing drives don't change, but the new default is to use software encryption. Given that some popular drives have been found to have default master passwords, store the password in plantext, or just not encrypt the data at all (ZDNet) this is a wise move.
- The EcoFlow Delta, a Kickstarter portable "battery generator", is... Not fake. (Tech Crunch)
Not where I expected the article to go whe I started reading it. Complaints are that the fans are noisy - but it needs active cooling to charge and discharge quickly, so you can't make such a device without them.
- Speaking of Kickstarter, the idiots in management are still at war with their idiot employees. (Current Affairs)
To give an idea of the slant of that article:So we got together with our colleagues at Protean Magazine, Pinko Magazine, the Nib, and the Baffler (all of whom had done Kickstarter campaigns in the past) and released a statement condemning the firings and expressing solidarity with the union.
Kickstarter's response was surprisingly commendable, being, roughly paraphrased, Fuck you and the fucking horse you fucking rode in on, you fucking Marxist fucks.
- The iPhone 11 is Apple's best product in years. (Six Colors)
Partly because it's thicker and heavier than last year's model - not enough to notice, but enough to deliver better performance and battery life.
- Cuphead has sold five million copies. (One Angry Gamer)
That's quite a lot for an indie game. That's quite a lot for any game.
- Linux 5.4 has a new security lockdown feature that restricts some kernel features even from the root account. (ZDNet)
That's something that was traditional in mainframe and minicomputer operating systems, but Unix has always granted free rein to the root account.
Video of the Day
Kumo desu ga, nani ka intensifies.
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Sunday, September 29
Necromancers R Us Edition
Tech News
- An ROG RGB LED USB SSD. (AnandTech)
- The Atari 2600 game Entombed reliably generates solvable mazes - and no-one knows exactly how. (BBC)
They have the code, of course, and it works, but no-one knows mathematically why it works.
- Thirdripper will not be backward-compatible unless it is. (WCCFTech)
In terms of sockets and motherboards, not software. Of course, since it looks like there will be at least two variants with different numbers of memory channels and PCIe lanes, it could be both compatible and incompatible.
With PCIe 4.0 it would need a new motherboard to take full advantage of the capabilities in any case.
- A Robert Heinlein cover illustration takes flight. (Tech Crunch)
Or maybe John Varley.
- Firefox won't use DNS-over-HTTPS by default in the UK. (Gizmodo)
Because it makes extra work for Big Brother and we can't have that.
It will be available, just not on by default.
- Speaking of Big Brother, he also wants end-to-end encrypted apps to hand over user messages. (Bloomberg)
Which is mathematically impossible, but it's not like that argument ever got anywhere with politicians.
- If you ever wondered why "banana flavour" tastes nothing like bananas, the answer is apparently it does, it just tastes like the Gros Michel, which was destroyed by Panama disease in the 1950s.
The familiar Cavendish variety might be facing a similar fate. (Nature)
This is because domestic bananas are clones with almost no genetic variation within a given cultivar - the ultimate monoculture. Fortunately we now have far better tools for twiddling genes to add resistance than we did sixty years ago.
I don't know the truth of the banana flavour story, but Gros Michel can still be found as a special import, so I hope to check some day.
Video of the Day
A piece of professional test equipment that normally costs hundreds of dollars even from a no-name Chinese brand going for $8.70 delivered? Can't be real, right? Well, maybe. Either way, as usual you would have had to click that link yesterday to have a chance of getting one.
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Saturday, September 28
Don't Give Them Ideas Edition
Tech News
- Me: Why not put an RGB water cooler on it while you're there?
Phone designers: Brilliant! (AnandTech)
The Nubia Red Magic 3 is the usual Snapdragon 855 with 8 or 12GB RAM, 128 ior 256GB UFS 2.1 flash, a 6.65" 2340x1080 AMOLED display, 5000mAh battery, 48MP camera, USB-C, a headphone jack... And a fan.
$479 for 8/128 and $599 for 12/256.
- Arm and TSMC demonstrated an 8 core 4GHz dual-chiplet processor. (Tom's Hardware)
LIPNCON is to CoWoS what AIB or MDIO is to EMIB.
Right. Got it.
- Older iOS devices may be unfixably jailbreakable. (Tom's Hardware)
The secure boot ROM on older devices had a flaw, and it's a true ROM - it can't be reprogrammed. It still needs a device-specific exploit on top of that, but the secure boot ROM is what is supposed to prevent device-specific exploits in the first place, so this is likely just a matter of time.
- The Adland website, covering the history of advertising, is shutting down due to a bullshit DMCA notice. (TechDirt)
Their hosting provider gave them 24 hours to move the entire site.
I get these on average every three months. When the whole of mee.nu went offline recently, it was over something similar - though in that case it was a polite request and not even a DMCA notice and had already been resolved and the ticket closed when the server got shut down.
It's insanity.
Yes, I have off-site backups.
- AMD's Navi-based Radeon 5600 and 5800 cards are on their way unless they aren't. (WCCFTech)
The 5700 and 5700 XT have 36 and 40 CUs respectively. The 5600 looks set to have 24 CUs, which should make it competitive with the RX 580. No definite numbers for the 5800 yet, except for "probably more than 40".
- A psychology study that got huge media attention when it was published but turned out to be completely and obviously wrong has been retracted. (Psychology Today)
The retracted study claimed to show that children raised in religious families were less generous, and was being cited in the media as recently as last month, and will likely continue to be cited forever or until the heat death of the Universe, whichever comes first.
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Friday, September 27
Gender Neutral Pet Rock Edition
Tech News
- The Humble Painter bundle has Painter. (Humble Bundle)
Formerly Fractal Design, now Corel. The $25 bundle also includes PaintShop Pro 2020 and Pinnacle Studio 23, plus a bunch of plugins.
- AMD's server market shar is epxected to grow tenfold from 2017 to 2020 - to 10%. (Tom's Hardware)
Sio, yeah, their marketshare was not in great shape before the Ryzen launch.
- Kazakhstan took down 93,000 websites to block just one. (TechDirt)
Who do they think they are, Australia?
- bootRogue is a Roguelike game that fits in a boot sector.
It has 26 different monsters, armour and weapons, food, sort of gold, at least 26 dungeon levels (there can be more), and the Amulet of Yendor - in 510 bytes.
- TSMC is telling clients to book 7nm production a year in advance due to high demand. (Tom's Hardware)
This may be a big advantage for their 5nm process. It's not a lot faster, and it doesn't use much less power, but it is a lot smaller. They get nearly twice as many dies per wafer, all else being equal.
- DARPA is working on 10 terabit networking. (Tech Crunch)
Achieving that will require rethinking every layer of the network stack. Also, I don't know how they'd connect it to rest of the system. 128 lanes of 112G SERDES? That at least is a thing that exists.
- HTTP 1, 2, and 3.
HTTP 3 abandons TCP for UDP because building an entire new error-checking protocol is easier than fixing TCP.
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Thursday, September 26
A Wild Blockchain Appeared Edition
Tech News
- The rumoured Ryzen 3900 looks to be on its way. (AnandTech)
This is a 65W 12 core Zen 2, with expected base and boost clocks of 3.1 and 4.2 GHz. Which would make it the perfect processor of a new Inspiron 27 if Dell hadn't sabotaged that product range beyond redemption.
No ETA, but a launch at the same time as the 3950X would make sense.
- Good news for chip makers is bad news for you. (PC Perspective)
DRAM and flash prices are low, video cards are readily available, so of course now there's a CPU shortage.
- Global Foundries announced an updated version of its 12nm process node. (AnandTech)
With up to 40% lower power than their existing 12nm process.
AMD produces its I/O dies and chipsets at Global Foundries, so this is good news for future Ryzen and Epyc systems.
- Intel announced the 665p, an update to the 660p family of QLC SSDs. (AnandTec)
It promises to be up to 40% faster, though the figures Intel used for the 660p are lower than those from independent reviewers, so pinch of salt time.
Still a PCIe 3.0 x2 device, so it has a hard cap at 2GB per second. Not that that is slow.
- Can't deal with TechDirt today. It's a mish-mash of important news and complete nonsense.
- Amazon had a Telescreen event today. (Tech Crunch)
It was behind the painting.
- Zen 3 will come with four threads per core unless it doesn't. (WCCFTech)
IBM's Power architecture has four or eight threads per core, as do some Sparc processors, so this isn't entirely novel. It could be attractive to cloud hosting providers, particularly given all the bugs in Intel's hardware threading. I believe that Amazon don't use hardware threads at all, but Digital Ocean do.
- At least 70 countries have had disinformation campaigns, study finds. (New York Times)
Does the name Walter Fucking Duranty mean anything to you, you assholes?
- Prehistoric porcelain baby bottles. (NPR)
Is that a kangaroo? It looks like a kangaroo, but can't be, because in 7000 BC there weren't any domesticated animals in Australia to provide milk, except for the dingo, which seems rather unlikely.
- The recent plague of unbootable Macs has been traced to Chrome. (Bleeping Computer)
Which apparently was deleting /var. Which is a symbolic link on MacOS, so this is like renaming C:\Windows just for the hell of it.
Nice work, Google.
This didn't happen to everyone because with the default security settings MacOS would refuse to do something so obviously stupid.
- Alex Jones is suing Brianna Wu for libel. (One Angry Gamer)
There is not enough popcorn in the world.
- Twitter got something right for once? (One Angry Gamer)
They had to get it wrong first, of course, since this is still Twitter.
- In a shocking finding that is bound to cause panic among the terminally innumerate, table salt contains 0.005 micrograms per gram of plastic. (New Scienist)
That's five parts per billion. The concentration of uranium in seawater is three parts per billion.
- /e/ is a Google-free Android fork with a dumb name. (ZDnet)
In fact, it's a fork of LineageOS, which is a fork of CyanogenMod, which is a fork of Android.
Which is Linux.
It's forks all the way down.
- Dapper Labs, the CryptoKitties people, have announced their own blockchain, called Flow.
I say announced advisedly, because while the technical papers they've published look sound, there is no code or documentation for the actual implementation yet.
The launch of CryptoKitties basically trashed the Ethereum network for weeks, so these guys are as familiar with the limitations of that platform as anyone, and probably well-placed to produce something better.
Video of the Day
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Is It Wrong To Pick Up Food In A Dungeon Edition
Tech News
- Smartphones are just slabs of black glass. It takes real talent to make them this ugly. (AnandTech)
Why not put an RGB water cooler on it while you're there?
- AMD's upcoming B550 chipset is a step up from the X470, but a big step down from X570. (Tom's Hardware)
Compared to the X470 it adds 2 SATA ports and 4 PCIe 3.0 lanes. No PCIe 4.0 at all, not even for the uplink.
- A Pennsylvania DA has been busy deploying a China-grade (in more ways than one) surveillance network. (TechDirt)
WTAF as the kids are saying these days.
- eBay's CEO is stepping down. (Tech Crunch)
As far as I can tell, the worst that is happening at eBay is some investor grumbling, and this is fairly routine.
- Facebook has said it will not censor or fact-check political speech. Journalists are outraged. (Tech Crunch)
- WeWork continues to implode. (Sydney Morning Herald)
I found a couple of more detailed articles at Tech Crunch and The Information but they require registration and/or payment to access.
And I'll note again that WCCFTech called it before any of the big business news sites.
- Double it, add one, and use the next larger unit.
There are three kinds of estimates: Educated guesses, the fever dreams of software development project leads, and tech startups.
- CentOS 8 is out. (ZDNet)
Great, except that I moved to Ubuntu for all my new stuff about three years ago.
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