You're Amelia!
You're late!
Amelia Pond! You're the little girl!
I'm Amelia, and you're late.

Friday, October 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 October 2025

Twentieth Century Frog Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • When did Australia join the 20th century?

    Anyway, I'll be upgrading from my 100Mb internet plan this weekend to a cheaper 500Mb one with the same provider.  I have a business plan for the static IP and extra support (one of which I depend on and the other I have never used), and they didn't offer the cheap fast plans that recently became available to consumers.

    Now apparently they do.

    I could upgrade as high as 2Gb now but that costs twice as much as my current 100Mb plan (for 20x the speed) and requires a tech visit to upgrade the modem.

    Update: Done.  Went from 100Mb to around 250Mb, at least as measured from my laptop's WiFi.

    Apparently these new plans became available just last month.  Consumers automatically got the speed upgrade, but business customers had to request a plan change.

    It was completely painless; even my SSH connections to work didn't hiccup.  I made sure I could access all my servers through my bastion host just in case, but there was no need to worry.


  • Also bought two weed eaters today because my old one went phut.

    The old one was a Bosch cordless, which I bought because I have several other Bosch tools and a stockpile of batteries.  It worked well until it when phut so I went onto Amazon to buy a new one and they're out of stock.  Bosch sells at least three different models in Australia and Amazon has none of them.

    So I found something cheap with decent reviews for about $70 with two batteries and a charger, and bought that.

    Then I discovered that Bosch runs its own store on eBay, and bought their current model for about $85 without a battery.

    Weeds better look out!  In a week.  Out here in rural Australia, same-day delivery is still a pipe dream, even if 2Gb internet is readily available.


  • The Earth is getting darker and scientists are trying to find out why.  (404 Media)

    We've been warned about this since at least the 1970s.

    Or wait, was that the other thing?


  • Digital ID: The new chains of capitalist surveillance.  (The Slow Burning Fuse)

    Ignore this woman, she is clearly deranged.


  • Everything is terrorism in Trump's America.  (The Verge)

    No, not everything.  Just terrorism.


  • Apple has removed the ICEBlock app from its App Store.  (The Verge)

    Like that.


  • AI has already run out of training data.  (Business Insider)  (archive site)
    With the web tapped out, developers are turning to synthetic data - machine-generated text, images, and code. That approach offers limitless supply, but also risks overwhelming models with low-quality output or AI slop.
    The risk there is 100%.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: To the rhythm, or not to the rhythm?

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:20 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 604 words, total size 5 kb.

Thursday, October 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 October 2025

Oops All Slop Edition

Top Story

  • OpenAI's new social app

    Wait, let me stop you right there.

    Noah, we'll need you to build another boat.  No, same size as last time would be fine.


  • OpenAI's new social app, Sora, is filled with horrifying Sam Altman deepfakes.  (Tech Crunch)
    In a video on OpenAI's new TikTok-like social media app Sora, a never-ending factory farm of pink pigs are grunting and snorting in their pens - each is equipped with a feeding trough and a smartphone screen, which plays a feed of vertical videos.  A terrifyingly realistic Sam Altman stares directly at the camera, as though he’s making direct eye contact with the viewer.  The AI-generated Altman asks, "Are my piggies enjoying their slop?"
    I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit.
    In the next video on Sora’s For You feed, Altman appears again.  This time, he’s standing in a field of Pokémon, where creatures like Pikachu, Bulbasaur, and a sort of half-baked Growlithe are frolicking through the grass. The OpenAI CEO looks at the camera and says, "I hope Nintendo doesn’t sue us."  Then there are many more fantastical yet realistic scenes, which often feature Altman himself.
    Build a global network that everyone can share, they said.  Make access cheap and easy, they said.  What could go wrong, they said.
    People on Sora who generate videos of Altman are especially getting a kick out of how blatantly OpenAI appears to be violating copyright laws.  (Sora will reportedly require copyright holders to opt out of their content’s use - reversing the typical approach where creators must explicitly agree to such use - the legality of which is debatable.)
    Guys?

    OpenAI isn't violating copyright anymore than a typewriter.

    You - the people posting this drivel - are doing that.

Tech News



Musical Interlude



Disclaimer: No, I don't know either.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:23 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 549 words, total size 6 kb.

Wednesday, October 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 October 2025

Chainblock Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Ack.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:59 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 225 words, total size 3 kb.

Tuesday, September 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 September 2025

Gardenising Edition

Top Story

  • Qualcomm's next-generation Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme looks like a strong performer.  (Hot Hardware)

    Given that it offers faster cores and 50% more of them when compared with the previous generation, that was expected.

    It leads the chart in Geekbench, but then it's a future CPU being compared against currently available products, and Geekbench results are sometimes a bit quirky.

    But it also leads the pack in BrowserBench, and in Cinebench 2024 single threaded, while losing by around 10% to Intel's 24 core 285HX and AMD's 16 core 9950HX3D.

    Integrated graphics also look good - about half the speed of AMD's Ryzen 395, making them faster than any other integrated graphics solution...  As long as your game actually runs which is by no means guaranteed.


Tech News


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Ye canna escape the suburbs!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:26 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 270 words, total size 3 kb.

Monday, September 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 September 2025

Baked Alaskan Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • AMD's Strix Halo CPU has a 40 core graphics chip paired with two much smaller 8 core CPU chiplets.  But those 8 core chiplets are different from the 8 core chiplets used in all socket AM4 and AM5 CPUs.  (WCCFTech)

    All multi-die AMD CPUs use Infinity Fabric over a high-speed serial link to wire things together.  This limits the memory bandwidth for a single consumer CPU chiplet to a fair bit less than fast DDR5 RAM can offer.

    Except for Strix Halo, where the 16 CPU cores have twice the write bandwidth of a 16 core 9950X.

    That's because it doesn't a serial bus of any kind to connect the chiplets; the CPU dies are placed directly adjacent to the GPU die and the gap is bridged by a direct parallel connection over an advanced multilayer substrate from TSMC.

    Well have to wait and see what happens with Zen 6 next year, but it's interesting that AMD was willing to spend the money on a different CPU chiplet just for Strix Halo.


  • Looking for a new switch?  Want two 400Gb ports, two 200Gb, eight 50Gb, and a 10GB management port?  Think that would be wildly expensive?  $1295 from Mikrotik.  (Serve the Home)

    Which is still a lot for a home network switch - gigabit switches are so cheap these days you find them as toys in the better brands of breakfast cereal - but networking is one of the few places where you can get 20x the speed for not even 20x the cost, rather than prices shooting straight into the ionosphere.


  • Asus will be releasing a fix for its stuttering gaming laptops. (Hot Hardware)

    Real soon now.

Anime Update

Ruri Rocks - FIN (for now).  This was the last episode this season and there's no hint as to a continuation, though the manga goes nearly twice as far and is still running.  But it cuts off at a perfectly suitable point in the story, and the story itself is a delight throughout, so no objections from me on that point.  Highly recommended if you like to watch cute girls geeking out over some obscure point of science for half an hour each week, which everyone does.

A Wild Last Boss Appears - First episode of the first show of the new season to hit Crunchyroll, and I've seen a lot worse.  Still, it's standard reincarnated-in-an-MMO fare and will likely go swiftly downhill.

Mathematical Interlude

If you read that story the other day about knotting numbers and said, basically, as I did, huh?, here it is physically demonstrated.



Two conjectures - unproven, but previously considered very likely to be true - said that combining two knots of a known complexity would produce a combined knot with a complexity neither less nor more than the sum of the complexity of the two individual knots.

Here Matt physically combines two knots each with a complexity of 3, and shows the combined knot has a complexity of 5.

The procedure is actually a little complicated which explains why this sat unnoticed until someone could write a Python program to try out all the possible permutations, but once you know how to do it, still simple enough to prove the counterexample really works.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Get it off!  Get it off!!!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:12 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 658 words, total size 5 kb.

Sunday, September 28

Geek

Daily News Stuff 28 September 2025

Warm Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Got bread.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:24 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 220 words, total size 3 kb.

Saturday, September 27

Geek

Daily News Stuff 27 September 2025

A Edition

Top Story

  • Two new Xbox models have just gone up on pre-order, sort of: The portable Ally X for $999 and the cheaper Ally Nothing for $599.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Can these portable devices from Asus really be described as Xboxes?  They have AMD Ryzen CPUs - but then, so do the current Microsoft Xboxes.  But they have AMD Radeon graphics - which the current Microsoft Xboxes also have.

    So I guess the answer is yes.

    The Ally X has a Ryzen Z2 AI Extreme, with 8 Zen 5 CPU cores and 16 RDNA3.5 graphics cores, and 24GB and a 1TB SSD.

    The Ally Nothing has a Ryzen Z2 A, which doesn't sound like a huge downgrade but definitely is: Just 4 Zen 2 CPU cores and 8 RDNA2 graphics cores, plus 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD.

    It has the same screen and controllers as the more expensive model, but offers less than half the CPU performance.  Comparing the desktop equivalents, a four-core Zen 2 would be one third the speed, but in a mobile device the faster chip is likely the be thermally constrained anyway.


  • And it's sold out, for rather dubious values of "sold out".  (WCCFTech)

    It's a pre-order, so this restriction is limited to the units from the first production batch that were allocated to the Microsoft Store.  There are plenty more out there.


Tech News


Artistic Interlude


Good news: The pigment this week wasn't made of cow piss.

Bad news: It was supposed to be made of cow piss.

Ugly news: It was made of arsenic.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Razors pain you;
Rivers are damp;
Acids stain you;
And drugs cause cramp.
Guns aren’t lawful;
Nooses slump;
Gas smells awful;
You might as well jump.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:17 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 467 words, total size 5 kb.

Friday, September 26

Geek

Daily News Stuff 26 September 2025

Steak And Kidney Tau Edition

Top Story

  • Raspberry Pi has announced the Raspberry Pi 500+, which is what everyone had hoped the Raspberry Pi 500 would be, but.  (Raspberry Pi)

    Specifically, it includes an M.2 slot - and comes with a 256GB M.2 SSD - so storage is many times faster than using microSD cards.

    It also includes 16GB of RAM instead of 8GB on the Pi 500, and 4GB on the Pi 400.

    It also has a mechanical keyboard.  Including the Four Essential Keys, which the 400 and 500 are both missing.

    Unfortunately, all this comes at a price: Compared with the $66 Pi 400 and $90 Pi 500, it costs $200.  Not unreasonable given the capabilities and quality, but something that is not quite as easy an impulse buy.

Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Nice.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:31 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 360 words, total size 3 kb.

Thursday, September 25

Geek

Daily News Stuff 25 September 2025

Brushing Bottles Edition

Top Story

  • Qualcomm has announced the Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme and Elite Not Quite So Extreme As All That, successors to the Snapdragon X Elite family.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The 12 core X Elite performed pretty well among laptop chips, just slightly behind AMD's own 12 core chip, the Ryzen 370.  So long as the software you were running was compatible, which wasn't always the case.

    It was doomed to irrelevance by a combination of high prices and being promoted with Microsoft's even more doomed Recall software which absolutely nobody wants or trusts.

    The X2 Elite Extreme updates the cores in unspecified ways, bumps the clock speed from 4.3GHz to 5GHz, increases the core count from 12 (8 fast plus 4 efficiency) to 18 (12 fast plus 6 efficiency), and also increases the memory width from 128 bits to 192 bits.

    Qualcomm claims this will increase multi-threaded performance by 75%, and given that it has 50% more cores that seems plausible.

    Laptops with the new chips will ship in the first half of next year.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Mushroom mushroom!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:24 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 344 words, total size 3 kb.

Wednesday, September 24

Geek

Daily News Stuff 24 September 2025

Uphill Climb Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: You cut WHAT in half?

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:21 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 165 words, total size 2 kb.

<< Page 8 of 707 >>
100kb generated in CPU 0.1245, elapsed 0.3399 seconds.
58 queries taking 0.3235 seconds, 392 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
Using http / http://ai.mee.nu / 390