Friday, August 08
Theory Of Everything Else Edition
Top Story
- The Framework Desktop is here and it is the perfect machine for a very specific subset of users. (Tom's Hardware)
The 16 core CPU is as fast as you'd expect, and the 40 core integrated graphics are quite capable of playing your games at 2560x1440.
But where it really excels is when you need 96GB of memory on your GPU. That would cost you $10,000 or more on a dedicated graphics card, while this entire PC is just $2000.
If you don't need 96GB of memory on your GPU, it's still nice, but you're probably be better off with a system with dedicated graphics.
Tech News
- Silicon Motion offered a sneak peek of is PCIe 6.0 consumer SSD controller. (Tom's Hardware)
But Pixy, didn't you say that PCIe 6 wouldn't be coming to the consumer market for at least three years?
Yes. It won't. Expected in 2028.
- The Radeon Pro W7400 is AMD's latest graphics card, sort of. (Notebook Check)
It's not super fast, but it's a half-height, half-length, single-slot card with 8GB of RAM four mini-DisplayPort outputs, and it uses on 55W of power so it can draw all its needs from a standard PCIe slot.
- The CWWK X86-P6 NAS is an N355 eight-core mini-PC designed for NAS duties. (Serve the Home)
With four M.2 slots and... An external fan.
- The Xyber Hydra is a GMK Nucbox G9 - a tiny four-bay NAS - but with better cooling. Which is to say, any cooling. Liliputing)
That being the Achilles heel of the Nucbox. The Achilles everything, really.
Does it solve the problems?
Mostly, yes. The Nucbox has serious thermal throttling problems, while this model only shows throttling at the end of a long test, with default fan settings, and the CPU running at 100%.
The current model Hydra offers a four-core Intel N150 and 16GB of RAM. A model with an eight-core N305 and 32GB of RAM will follow. The reviewer does offer a word of caution if you hope to run all eight cores at 100% with the current cooling solution though.
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Thursday, August 07
Piezoelectric Edition
Top Story
- Ron Deibert, the director of Citizen Lab, a group monitoring the intrusion of government surveillance into the private internet, has woken up confused from a fifteen-year coma and ready to fight. (Tech Crunch)
Ahead of his talk, Deibert told TechCrunch that he plans to speak about what he describes as a "descent into a kind of fusion of tech and fascism," and the role that the Big Tech platforms are playing, and "propelling forward a really frightening type of collective insecurity that isn’t typically addressed by this crowd, this community, as a cybersecurity problem."
You mean like banning the country's oldest newspaper from all social networks over a factually accurate article?
No?"I think that there comes a point at which you have to recognize that the landscape is changing around you, and the security problems you set out for yourselves are maybe trivial in light of the broader context and the insecurities that are being propelled forward in the absence of proper checks and balances and oversight, which are deteriorating," said Deibert.
What?Deibert, who this year published his new book
Oh. So that's what this is about.
Tech News
- In the future all food will be cooked in a microwave and if you can't deal with that then you need to get out of the kitchen. (Colin Cornaby)
Yeah, developers are not welcoming yesterday's comments by the GitHub CEO.
I like this summation over at Reddit:As someone who’s been using AI for work it’s been great though. Before I would look up documentation and figure out how stuff works and it would take me some time. Now I can ask Claude first, get the wrong answer, then have to find the documentation to get it to work correctly. It’s been great.
AI assistants are great if you already know the answer.
- One of Google's corporate Salesforce instances got hack. (Bleeping Computer)
Using known social engineering techniques.
- Atlassian has redesigned project management tool Trello for the modern audience. (The Register)
I've used Trello. It was awful. It's kind of impressive that everyone agrees that the new version is infinitely worse."People are comparing this to the worst software updates in history," the post says. "One user said, 'This is the worst UI update I’ve ever seen, including Windows 8.' If you’re being measured against Windows 8, that should say something."
Ouch.
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Disclaimer: A song about my eyes? Sounds awful.
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Wednesday, August 06
Solar Edition
Top Story
- Intel is reportedly struggling with yields on its latest 18A (1.8nm) process. (Reuters) (archive site)
Intel has said it plans to use this process for consumer chips, but that could prove difficult if yield really are bad.
- Meanwhile the US government has reportedly asked TSMC to buy 49% of Intel in return for tariff relief. (Notebook Check)
Well, that's one way to fix things, I guess.
Tech News
- Sandisk has announced a 256TB enterprise QLC SSD. (Tom's Hardware)
If you have to ask, you can't afford it.
- The CEO of GitHub says programmers must eithe embrace AI or quit. (FinalRound)
How nice that he gives us the option.
- As programmer usage of AI grows, trust across all platforms continues to decline. (Ars Technica)
As users grow more familiar what it has to offer, satisfaction has slid from 40% last year to 29% now.
- PCI-SIG has announced plans for PCIe 8.0, which will be twice as fast as PCIe 7.0. (Liliputing)
A full PCIe 8.0 x16 slow will offer 1TB per second of bandwidth, which used to be a lot.
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Tuesday, August 05
All All Nighters Edition
Top Story
- The Moon is a harsh parking lot. (Engadget)
NASA's Trailblazer mission ended in disappointment.
After just one day.
When the batteries went flat.
- NASA is planning to build a nuclear reactor on the Moon. (Politico)
No scrounging though the kitchen drawers for AAA cells on Christmas morning for these guys.
Tech News
- Details have leaked of AMD's Radeon 9060 non-XT mode, which has the same GPU chip but slightly slower clock speeds and memory. (WCCFTech)
But -
- AMD has officially announced the Radeon 9060 non-XT only the information above is wrong and you can't buy one. (Tom's Hardware)
Strictly for prebuilt systems.
- AMD may be preparing a 9950X4D model with extra cache chips attached to both CPU dies. (Tom's Hardware)
The company already does this for server CPUs, but hasn't done it before now on the desktop because the performance gains for typical desktop apps are limited.
- What the Amiga looked like before it got its famous custom chips. (Tom's Hardware)
Big and complicated and likely to fail if a gnat farted nearby.
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Disclaimer: What he said.
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Monday, August 04
Hot Water Edition
Top Story
- Did Craigslist really kill newspapers? (Poynter)
Yes. Sort of. Maybe. But also mostly no.
Newspapers had been in slow decline for thirty years when Craigslist launched in 1995.
What the site did certainly do was accelerate a process started by the newspapers themselves.
Tech News
- FCC chairman Brendan Carr is Literally Worse Than Hitler. (The Verge) (archive site)
His crime?
Nobody watches Stephen Colbert.
Constant outrage must be really tough on brain cells.
- The acquisition of Commodore by Christian "Perifractic" Simpson and his backers has been completed. (Tom's Hardware)
I don't have any particular association with the classic 8-bit Commodore machines - I was an Amiga kid - but this is still welcome news.
I wonder if FPGA hardware-emulated Amigas might be in the works in the future through a collaboration with Amiga Inc. and Cloanto, which publishes the software-level emulator Amiga Forever.
- Early versions of Microsoft Recall were pulled from distribution when it was discovered they collected all your most sensitive information in one database where it was convenient for hackers to steal it. It still does that. (The Register)
Do not want.
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Sunday, August 03
Rehumidification Edition
Top Story
- Why Johnny still can't read. (APM Reports)
Well, the original book examining that question was published in 1955, so one possible reason is that Johnny is now 75 and refuses to wear his glasses.
But another reason is exactly what that book explained: Johnny can't read because teachers aren't teaching phonics - aren't teaching the relationship between written letters and spoken sounds.
Back in 1955 the trend was to jump too quickly from phonics to sight reading - recognising an entire word and its pronunciation from memory. If you were already a strong reader you were likely fine with this; if you were at all behind you would be left struggling.
Fast-forward a few decades and we find new generations of children who still can't read because they have been trapped by new - or once new - trendy pedagogies. Molly Woodworth was a poor reader as a child and came up with tricks to help make it through lessons, though the tricks never worked terribly well.
When she looked at the reading lessons for her daughter Claire, she was horrified to discover that the tricks she created for herself - the same ones that didn't work for her - were being taught as standard practice.A couple of years ago, Woodworth was volunteering in Claire's kindergarten classroom. The class was reading a book together and the teacher was telling the children to practice the strategies that good readers use.
Why are teachers deliberately sabotaging reading skills?The teacher said, "If you don't know the word, just look at this picture up here," Woodworth recalled. "There was a fox and a bear in the picture. And the word was bear, and she said, 'Look at the first letter. It's a "b." Is it fox or bear?'"
Woodworth was stunned. "I thought, 'Oh my God, those are my strategies.' Those are the things I taught myself to look like a good reader, not the things that good readers do," she said. "These kids were being taught my dirty little secrets."
Enter Ken Goodman.The theory is known as "three cueing." The name comes from the notion that readers use three different kinds of information - or "cues" - to identify words as they are reading.
Goodman still believed that when this article was written in 2019 - the author requested and was granted an interview.The theory was first proposed in 1967, when an education professor named Ken Goodman presented a paper at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association in New York City.
In the paper, Goodman rejected the idea that reading is a precise process that involves exact or detailed perception of letters or words.
The problem is, he was proven wrong fifty years ago:So, in 1975, Stanovich and a fellow graduate student set out to test the idea in their lab. They recruited readers of various ages and abilities and gave them a series of word-reading tasks. Their hypothesis was that skilled readers rely more on contextual cues to recognize words than poor readers, who probably weren't as good at using context.
Or to put it another way:They couldn't have been more wrong.
"To our surprise, all of our research results pointed in the opposite direction," Stanovich wrote. "It was the poorer readers, not the more skilled readers, who were more reliant on context to facilitate word recognition."
Goldberg realized lots of her students couldn't actually read the words in their books; instead, they were memorizing sentence patterns and using the pictures to guess. One little boy exclaimed, "I can read this book with my eyes shut!"
Why did Goodman still believe in his failed ideas after all this time? (At the time the article was written, he was 91 and had just published a new edition of his book.)"Oh no," Goldberg thought. "That is not reading."
Put as politely as possible, he was a dingbat:"Word recognition is a preoccupation," he said. "I don't teach word recognition. I teach people to make sense of language. And learning the words is incidental to that."
No, he really meant that:I pressed him on this. First of all, a pony isn't the same thing as a horse. Second, don't you want to make sure that when a child is learning to read, he understands that /p//o//n//y/ says "pony"? And different letters say "horse"?
He tripled down minutes later:He dismissed my question.
"The purpose is not to learn words," he said. "The purpose is to make sense."
In his view, three cueing is perfectly valid, drawn from a different kind of evidence than what scientists collect in their labs.
And why is fashionable nonsense so entrenched in education?"My science is different," Goodman said.
Lots of reasons, one primary reason, it seems to me, is that teachers don't have to live with their mistakes. You have a child for a year, cause lasting harm, and then get handed a fresh batch of impressionable young minds the next year.
Tech News
- Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute. (Tom's Hardware)
An article about companies that were hacked, and subsequently went bankrupt. One paid the demanded ransom; the other did not. The outcome was the same.
Somewhat galling is that German police captured the criminals behind the first company's demise along with their crypto wallets, but refuse to return the ransom payment.
- Reddit is people, so its search function searches content created by people rather than AI slop, says Reddit. (The Register)
Two problems here:
First, Reddit is not magically immune to AI slop.
Second, about 80% of Reddit users are insane, climbing quickly to 100% on any of the major "subreddits".
- In a very slow-moving flash of insight, I realised I need a humidifier.
Never needed one all the years I lived in Sydney, but up here in the mountains you're not struggling to keep the air dry and cool, you're struggling to keep it warm and wet. Warm I have covered, but I completely skipped the wet part, leaving the air very dry indeed.
Ordered a cheap model from Amazon. Shipped today so I'll have it this week.
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Saturday, August 02
That Happened Edition
Top Story
- UK premium luggage service Airportr, which provided door-to-door service and worked with ten European airlines, was not hacked, exactly. (Wired) (archive site)
Because it had no security at all. Anyone could look up anyone's personal information, or even log in as an administrator and redirect their luggage.The vulnerabilities resulted in complete confidential private information exposure of all airline customers in all countries who used the service of this company, including full control over all the bookings and baggage. Because once you are the super-admin of their most sensitive systems, you have have the ability to do anything.
It was found by security analysts before anyone took advantage of it. The CEO of security group Cyber9X is quoted above.
Tech News
- Three senior executives are retiring from Intel Foundry, Intel's foundry division. (Tom's Hardware)
The departures come as Intel implements a major cost-cutting plan, aiming to reduce its global workforce by 15%. The company expects to close the year with approximately 75,000 employees worldwide, which means that the company will have fired 30,000 people in 2025.
Those numbers don't add up because Intel has already laid off 15,000 staff this year.
- Titan Quest II is out in early access right now, available on Steam at 50% of the planned launch price of $50. (WCCFTech)
Titan Quest was a great game - linear, yes, but a very long line - but that was all the way back in 2006.
Titan Quest II is reportedly good as well, though the playable content in the early access release so far only lasts about four hours.
- Google has filed an emergency motion in its failed case against Epic, arguing that it needs more time to make the changes ordered. (Thurrott)
Google has been given only 14 days to deliver, which is not a lot of time, true.
But the lawsuit started five years ago, and Epic won the case - on all counts - twenty months ago.
Time for Google to pull an all-nighter.
- Atlassian - Australia's largest tech company as far as I know - fired 150 of its European staff via prerecorded video. (Cyberdaily)
I used to kind of like Atlassian because small companies could buy any of their products for $10 and host them on they own servers. They did get their fangs into you as you grew, of course.
Now it's just loathing all the way down.
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Friday, August 01
Rainy Weekend Edition
Top Story
- Epic just won its lawsuit against Google. Again. (The Verge)
Google plans to appeal - again - to either an en banc sitting of the 9th Circuit or the Supreme Court.
But Google no longer has a stay on the lower court's ruling, and Epic plans to put its own app store inside the Google Play store as soon as tomorrow.
Tech News
- Vibe code is legacy code. (Val.Town)
And everyone hates legacy code.
- Seagate has started selling 28TB HAMR external drives. (Serve the Home)
The bare drive costs around $570.
The external drive in a USB case with a power adaptor costs $330.
Why? Because.
Does it work the same? Yes.
- Intel has rolled out the Core 5 120 which looks just like the Core i5 12400 including the support for DDR4 memory. (Tom's Hardware)
Looks just like it because that's what it is.
- How did they create the Universal Pictures animated logo in 1936. (Stack Exchange)
Today it looks like a simple bit of 3D CGI, but that was a little less common 90 years ago.
So how did they do it?
They built it. It really existed.
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Disclaimer: I rolled a 1.
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Thursday, July 31
Stroganon Edition
Top Story
- Spotify collects your private information and then leaks it. (The Verge) (archive site)
Which doesn't sound so bad except that Spotify collects a lot more than your playlists.
- So do your sneakers. Here's why that's a good thing. Maybe. (Tech Crunch)
Skechers makes kid's shoes that have a hidden compartment for an Apple AirTag. Which is great if your child has a habit of wandering off or you live in a crime-ridden left-wing shithole.
Tech News
- Micron has announced its first PCIe 6.0 SSDs. (Tom's Hardware)
These are not for desktop computers - there are no PCIe 6.0 desktop computers after all - but rather for high-end servers.
There are also no PCIe 6.0 servers, but PCIe is backward compatible so they'll work fine with ten year old PCIe 1.0 hardware.
The drives can transfer data at up to 28GB per second and will be available in capacities up to 245TB, both of which used to be a lot.
- The future is self-hosted. (Drew Lyton)
The article title says the opposite.
The article title is wrong.
- Well, that's sneaky: There was a bug in Google's "refresh outdated content" button that let anyone delete anything. (Ars Technica)
If you adjusted the capitalisation of the URL it would raise a 404 internally when it tried to refresh the link because URLs are usually case-sensitive.
But Google's system was not case-sensitive, so on seeing the 404 it would consider it a dead link and remove it from the search index.
Mostly Not Tech News
- Was able to sleep soundly last night. Added to the previous three nights, that put me back to... About half of normal.
- Ruri Rocks continues to be worthwhile.
In episode three, our grad student promised Ruri a sapphire.
This week she found one.
It was the size of a grain of sand. And she spent a whole day hunched over a microscope looking for it.
Also we were introduced - sort of - to the fourth member of the team, who will presumably be making her entrance proper next time.
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Wednesday, July 30
Viral Load Edition
Top Story
- What's up with Steam and Itch.io suddenly vanishing all those games and books and art and stuff? (The Verge) (archive site)
Proximate cause: Visa and Mastercard deciding they have to act as global fun censors.
Distal cause: Some group of Australian Stalinist nutcases called Collective Shout who have for years believed they have to act as global fun censors.As a result of Collective Shout's actions, in tandem with the payment processors, over 20,000 games, books, comics, and other creative works - confirmed via the Internet Archive - functionally ceased to exist on the site (though purchased content remains in users' libraries so long as it doesn’t violate itch.io's new guidelines), imperiling the creators who depend on sales from itch.io. In addition to NSFW content, notable projects that didn’t have the tag were caught up in the purge as well.
Anything not mandatory is forbidden.Whenever a platform announces a blanket ban on adult content, LGBTQ+ creators are almost always disproportionately affected, harming queer artists and invariably queer people.
This is true, because "queer" artists and "queer" people are sex-obsessed lunatics, but I'll support them before a bunch of Stalinist fun censors who are probably from Melbourne anyway.
Update: Nope. Sydney. Well, I moved out of there just in time.
Tech News
- AMD finally announced a Ryzen 9000 12 core chip with a 65W TDP. (Tom's Hardware)
The Ryzen 9 Pro 9945 is a lower power Ryzen 9900X.
The company also has - I only learned this today but it was announced a couple of months ago - the Epyc 4545P, which is a Ryzen 9000 16 core chip with a 65W TDP.
This is aimed at small servers, but it goes in Socket AM5 boards, the standard for AMD's desktop chips.
The 9950X, the full power desktop model, uses 170W of power by comparison. But it is 20% faster on average.
- Corsair has announced its own version of the Ryzen AI Max mini desktop PC. (Liliputing)
These are really aimed at running AI on large models on your own hardware, because they can give you 128GB of video RAM for not much money.
I'm a little surprised that so many companies are bringing out models given that, at the price of $2000 for a 128GB model, there wouldn't seem to be that large a market.
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