Saturday, December 15
Tech News
- Censored. (The Herald Sun)
Censored-censored. Censored? Censored:{"message":"Unsupported content type \"undefined\"","code":"400","raw":"{\"message\":\"Content is deleted, expired or legal killed\",\"code\":410}"}
Censored censored geofenced. (The Daily Beast)
- What all that was about. (Tech Dirt)
- Discord's game service only takes 10% of the gross, not the more common 30%. (WCCFTech)
I don't particularly need or want more game distribution services - I already have Steam and GOG and Humble Bundle and Battle.Net and fucking Origin - but if Steam keeps randomly banning slightly risqué visual novels we may need them. (One Angry Gamer)
- There's a report of a remote execution vulnerability in SQLite. (Tencent)
SQLite is installed on approximately three and a half billion devices. If you have a phone, it has SQLite installed. If you have a smart home device, you have SQLite. If you run Chrome or any of the Chromium-based browsers, SQLite.
- Every Android device
- Every iPhone and iOS device
- Every Mac
- Every Windows 10 machine
- Every Firefox, Chrome, and Safari web browser
- Every instance of Skype
- Every instance of iTunes
- Every Dropbox client
- Every TurboTax and QuickBooks
- PHP and Python
- Most television sets and set-top cable boxes
- Most automotive multimedia systems
Browsers are actually the worry here, because web sites can access SQLite via JavaScript, where on most devices it's embedded and not directly accessible. Update your browsers.
Firefox and the current edition of Edge are relatively safe since they don't support direct access to the database from remote JavaScript (ZDNet) but Chrome, Opera, Vivaldi, and Brave are affected. Safari not confirmed.
The bug has already been fixed, which just leaves us with three and a half billion devices to update.
Google Home devices are also confirmed to be affected.
According to this test page the latest version of Chrome (71) is fixed and Safari is not vulnerable.
- Ugh.
- Not that it matters if your password is 123456. (Bleeping Computer)
- Anyway.
- Samsung's 2019 (is it 2019 already?) Notebook 9 Pen 13 Arsenal Nil looks nice. (Anand Tech)

1.12kg for a 13" notebook is kind of chunky next to LG's 1.3kg 17" laptop - and heavier than my 2014 LG UltraPC - but it does have a 40% larger battery than last y... This year's model. And a stylus. And Thunderbolt 3.
Only a 1080p display. That's not really a problem on a 13" notebook - it's the same pixel size as the LG Gram 17's 2560x1600 screen - but I do love the 3000x2000 resolution of the HP Spectre X2.
- Intel's Optane memory modules - as opposed to regular Optane SSDs - have an access time of 350ns. (Extreme3d)
This is where those hyperbolic numbers from the early press releases were coming from. Intel hasn't been able to deliver that performance through a conventional SSD controller, but with this they could have a game changer for a segment of the server market. Optane is more expensive than NAND flash, but it's a lot cheaper than RAM - and these modules are closer in speed to RAM than to flash.
- I told you butter wouldn't suit the works: Phoronix compares ZFS, BTRFS, and EXT4 with 20 SSDs.
I've already committed to ZFS for the new servers, so I was concerned when I saw that first chart, then I realised it was labelled seconds, less is better.
It's a mixed bag overall, with different configurations proving better for different workloads. For example, EXT4 RAID0 is great for PostgreSQL if you don't care about your data.
- Doctors without Borders says it is becoming increasingly difficult to assist and promote human trafficking, and we are upset about this. (Axios)
Possibly not really a tech article. Should take Axios out of my roundup; it's full of dumb.
- Huawei is getting well-and-truly Miloed. (Axios)
It is an arm of the Chinese Communist Party.
<looks at Huawei tablet>
Sigh. Most of the concern is around 4G/5G network equipment, though, not handsets and tablets.
- A roundup of AMD's Navi graphics card rumours. (Tom's Hardware)
Plausible, given the publicly reported performance of TSMC 7nm, but just rumours at this point.
- Samsung's enterprise SSDs get poked and prodded properly. (PC Perspective)
All the devices show great I/O latencies, from 30µs for the SATA drives down to 16µs for the Z-NAND PCIe devices. That's 60,000 IOPS even single-threaded.
Social Media News
- If you don't want important content censored post it to Facebook and mark it as private. (Tech Crunch)
- Signal to Australia: Rule 5: NO BACKDOORS.
- Apple is the Google messaging appatoir of social networks. (9To5Mac)
We’ve made a few changes to Apple Music that we’d like to tell you about.
To streamline your use of your 2019 Ford, we have created an all-new design and removed the following infrequently-used features: Wheels, doors, engine.We’re always looking for ways to enhance our focus on artists and help them better connect to fans. So we’ve given Artist Pages an all-new design and added new, personalized Artist Radio.
Today we’re streamlining music discovery by removing Connect posts from Artist Pages and For You.
-
The time has come, the Arkansas politician said, to regulate social media. (Tech Dirt)
I.... Maybe? -
I say maybe because, after Patreon banned a user for using a rude word to describe Neo-Nazis, many people jumped ship from Patreon to join competitor SubscribeStar, and PayPal immediately stopped supporting pay outs from SubscribeStar. (Video)
Regulation is one option. Dusting off and nuking the site from orbit is another. -
Amid all the chaos and misery, some joy and hope: YouTube's Rewind 2018 is the most hated video of all time with 12 million downvotes and 1.7 million comments, most of them scathing. (One Angry Gamer)
On the other hand, good work on the comment system, YouTube engineers.
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I think I've been there. To that exact island. Years ago.
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Friday, December 14
Tech News
- If you edit video, you can do a lot worse than picking up the Humble Vegas Pro Even More Creative Freedom Bundle
Terrible name, but for $1 you get Fastcut Plus (entry level), and for $25 you also get Sound Forge Audio Studio 12, Vegas Movie Studio 15 (both current versions of their mid-range tools), and Vegas Pro 15 Edit and Vegas DVD Architect, the previous versions of their high-end tools, normally priced at... Well, right now you can get Vegas Pro 16 for $299. Which is more than $25.
Not included in the bundle is Acid, which is my favourite of the Sonic Foundry/Sony Creative Software/Magix range.
Also, if you're quick, they're giving away Lego The Hobbit free right now.
- If you need site monitoring with SMS alerts, like, for example, you run a blog platform that has a memory leak that pops up from time to time, StatusCake is offering 25% off paid plans right now. They also have a pretty good free plan if you don't need SMS alerts, but that's not 25% off.
- Gigabyte's R161 is a liquid-cooled overclocked server based on Intel's high-end desktop CPUs. (AnandTech)
Two questions: First, why? And second, at least it's not called the R101. Yes, I realise that's not a question.
- This 65" monitor is 10" larger than existing 55" monitors. (AnandTech)
- ADATA announced the XPG Gammix S11 Pro SM2262EN. (AnandTech)
A cat? Maybe a dog?
- AMD's new video drivers deliver up to 39% better performance in Battlefield V. (PC Perspective)
If the frame rate improves 39% in a game that nobody plays, does it make a sound?
- The first Ryzen 3000 family benchmarks have leaked. (Tom's Hardware)
Except that these aren't the big new 7nm desktop Ryzen 3000 parts, these are the 12nm Ryzen laptop refresh parts. (There were no first-generation laptop parts, so the numbers are a bit screwy.)
- Etsy's internal documentation is carved in stone. (Code As Craft)
Tiny, adorable, organic stone, lovingly individualised just for you and smelling faintly of lavender.
- The latest Bitcoin email scam comes packaged with its own little bomb threat. (Bleeping Computer)
I suspect the FBI will be taking this one a bit more seriously than the average "we hacked your laptop camera" spam.
Social Media News
- So the twatwaffle-in-chief responsible for Europe's abominable new copyright laws has said ha ha fuck you and removed the critical amendment that got the legislation through the EU Parliament. (Tech Dirt)
Between America's FOSTA/SESTA, the European Articles of Intellectual Serfdom, and Australia's Asinine Internet Insecurity Act, it's really been a race to the bottom lately.
- Tumblr is back in the app store having shed 95% of its users and 130% of its content. (Tech Crunch)
- Journalists hired as face checkers by Factbook are upset that they aren't being allowed to peddle their usual lazy, disingenuous lies. (The Grauniad)
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Thursday, December 13
I found that great live performance of the Nuku Nuku opening song by Megumi Hayashibara from last year and it's gone already.
Whoever is doing that needs to be launched into orbit via steam catapult.
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Tech News
- Intel had their 2018 architecture day where they discussed their new lineup of cornices and finials. (AnandTech)
Highlights
- They have finally run out of lakes, so the next architecture on the roadmap is called Sunny Cove - or maybe not, since Ice Lake will have Sunny Coves in it, though apparently a bit chilly this late in the year.
- A major focus of Intel's CPU designers going forward is cheating on benchmarks (though the term they use is special purpose performance increases). To be fair, when you have billions of transistors to play with, and you find a common workload that you can speed up 10x at the cost of 50 million transistors, it would be foolish not to consider it.
- Integrated graphics will suck less.
- There will be chips with both Core and Atom CPUs in them, similar to what Arm has been doing with their mobile chips for approximately three hundred years now.
- How does Battlefield V run on integrated graphics? (Tom's Hardware)
Trick question. No-one is playing Battlefield V. On Intel integrated graphics it doesn't run at all, but no-one cares, so Intel has that going for them.
- Shady torrent sites are using fake DMCA notices to shut down competing, slightly less shady torrent sites. (TechDirt)
The problem with DMCA - one of the problems with DMCA - is that while filing a false takedown notice is technically perjury, the Act defines no penalties. One of our servers got shut down twice last month due to false DMCA notices by a company which was getting penalised for comment spam that they themselves posted.
- I haven't been following Nvidia lately, but ouch. (Tech Crunch)
They've lost half their market valuation in the last six weeks, despite largely having a lock on high-end laptop, desktop, and workstation graphics cards and a major share of server AI accelerators. I think they were overvalued before and this is just reality catching up with overheated investors; the company's technical fundamentals are solid, and no-one else even has a competitor to the RTX 2080 on their roadmap.
- Water may not have memory - well, water does have memory, but it only lasts for about a femtosecond, like when you go into the kitchen late at night - but ant colonies do. (Smithsonian Magazine)
- MacOS Mojave poops on Nvidia. (Forbes)
I updated to Mojave without major breakage, but my Mac has AMD graphics. I don't know what the last Mac model was that came with Nvidia graphics. One of the Macbook Pro models, probably, the one where half the graphics chips failed and Apple swore off Nvidia for all of this eternity and half of the next.
- Grafana Loki is like Prometheus, but for logs.
If your reaction is Well, I know what logs are, rest assured that you are not alone.
Apparently it is particularly well suited for storing Kubernetes Pod logs, just in case you happen to have those cluttering up your living room.
- It is illegal in the United States to trade futures in onions.
- The tax numbers of 120 million bajillion people were exposed online due to an oops. (Bleeping Computer)
Wait, that's 120 million Brazilian people. Still rather a lot.
- Smart fish or dumb test? (Quanta)
Is the cleaner wrasse a red herring, or is it truly smarter than an Ivy League sociology major?
- MediaTek's Helio P90 features two A75 and six A55 cores, a PowerVR GM 9446 graphics thing, a dual-core AI coprocessor, and a three-core image coprocessor. (Android Central)
MediaTek is well-known for producing cheap, low-end mobile chips, like all those eight-core 1.3GHz A53 parts, but this is a very capable midrange part.
- Google CEO Sundar Pichai argues that Google could fail at any moment. (Axios)
Because Google is finally getting the anti-trust attention they've been begging for all year.
Also, Google Chrome marks Google's CEO's name as a spelling error.
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Wednesday, December 12
Tech News
- The Nokia 8.1 is a phone. (AnandTech)
In fact, it's probably the Nokia X7 with a different label and a software update. It has a headphone jack. And a mid-range but pretty decent Snapdragon 710 (2 xx A75, 6 x A55).
Only three cameras, which is almost none these days.
- AMD's Ryzen rumours rounded up. (Tom's Hardware)
- These peanuts make my HDMI connection glitch.
- Will you still feed Firefox now it's 64?
- DigitalOcean has launched its Kubernetes service. (Tech Crunch)
What does this do? I have no fucking idea. Something about getting all your servers compromised at once, automatically.
- Intel has offered a sneak peak of its SunnyCove server platform. (Reddit)
It runs faster on 7-Zip. 7-Zip, the zip that refreshes!
- Australia is doomed. (The Next Web)
- Amusingly, Australia's new internet insecurity law violates the GDPR. (alp.fail)
- Odroid's XU4 gets reviewed. (Phoronix)
It's twice as fast as the Raspberry Pi 3, sometimes three times as fast, four times on Python, but it does have a fan rather than a passive heatsink for cooling, so it might not be useful for every application.
- The Odroid H2 is very very out of stock but will be back in three months or so. That got a review as well.
- Animal, vegetable, mineral, fungi, protozoan, or hemimastigote? (Quanta)
Look, just stop it, okay? Stop finding new things.
- China may be behind the Starwood hack. (New York Times)
Geng Shuang, a spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, denied any knowledge of the Marriott hacking. "China firmly opposes all forms of cyberattack and cracks down on it in accordance with the law,†he said. "If offered evidence, the relevant Chinese departments will carry out investigations according to the law.â€
He almost made it through the speech with a straight face, too.
- Axios examines the positive impact of low unemployment without ever once mentioning the T-word.
- Now that the useful idiots in Labor have voted for the Asinine Internet Insecurity Act (AIIA) the useless idiots in the Liberal Party are telling them where to shove their amendments. (ZDNet)
- In slightly less pathetically stupid news, the Australian Space Agency will be setting up shop in Adelaide. (ZDNet)
I wonder if they'll reopen Woomera for launches. Woomera, though a shadow of its original self, is still bigger than Ohio. (When first established, it was the size of Colorado).
- Supermicro has completed an external security audit that found no signs of the backdoor chips alleged by that stupid Bloomberg report. (ZDNet)
Bloomberg still has offered no hard evidence, or even documentation, supporting its assertions.
The next step is a multi-trillion-dollar lawsuit. I hope.
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Tuesday, December 11
That memory leak came back and took the site down again.
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Tech News
- Want a new system based on AMD's Zen CPU and Vega graphics? Only got fifty bucks? AMD got you covered with the Athlon 200GE. (Tom's Hardware)
Yeah, don't expect too much out of the integrated graphics on a $55 CPU, even in 2018. If you want to play games, and don't have even a second-hand graphics card, scrape together the money for the Ryzen 2200G which can actually put in a decent showing at 1080p if you turn down the detail settings a bit.
- In shutting the barn door after the horses have disappeared over the horizon making gleeful whinnying noises news, the iPhone 6S, 7, and 8 can no longer be sold in China. (WCCFTech)
This is over the ongoing patent dispute with Qualcomm.
China is enforcing foreign patents? China?
- It includes dust covers for the serial ports. (Fanless Tech)
They're still used in embedded applications!
Social Media News
- The European Union has fired back in the fiercely competitive stupidest government body in the world stakes. (Tech Dirt)
Their latest bid tells social networks and content providers that (a) they need to block all potentially infringing content, (b) never let infringing content return after it has been blocked, (c) never block non-infringing content, and, the piece-de-la-creme, (d) not use filters for this.
- Apple, Google, and Microsoft have called the Australian government a bunch of flamin' wowsers over the country's new internet insecurity legislation. (Tech Crunch)
Meanwhile, the Labor Party has likened the new law to a cane toad which is a bit fucking rich after they voted to pass it. (ZDNet)
- Google is planning to shut down Google+ after a bug was discovered to have given developers access to private data of over 50 million users. (WCCFTech)
No, not that one. This is brand new. The bug was introduced during code updates last month as the company moved to shut down the network next August.
The shut down has now been moved up to April.
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Monday, December 10
Tech News
- Eye holes are the new notch. (WCCFTech)
Case manufacturers necessarily know the dimensions and camera positioning of new phones before launch, so this might be real. When I saw "in-display camera" I thought it might be something more significant, but no.
- Impossible functions in Swift.
This is not one of those look how awful this language is posts. It looks like both the designers and implementers of Swift knew what they were doing. It can, for example, trace the possible paths of a recursive function and give you a compile-time error if it can be proven never to return. (Which is not the logical inverse of being proven to always return, since in between lies undecidability and the Halting Problem.)
I still don't like the language much.
- Why not to use Quora. Even when they've already leaked your email address and password.
Short answer: Because the site is run by shitheads.
- The problem with Jira. (Tech Crunch)
Or at least, with how Jira tends to be used. Just like some programmers can write Fortran in any language, some managers can implement waterfall development with any tool.
- NEC's SX Aurora supercomputer processor can perform 2.4 double-precision teraflops per 8 core CPU. Also, you can buy one and stick it in your PC,because it's available on a PCIe card. (WikiChip)
- Google's management seems to be in a slow-motion meltdown, now viewing stopping leakers as more important than actually shipping working products (Business Insider India)
Looking at you, Pixel 3.
- WinUAE can emulate not only your old Amiga that's sitting in the closet, but the Sidecar that you sold umpty-odd years ago.
My Amiga Sidecar once killed 40,000 people. It locked up while I was playing SimCity, and I was using it as a shared hard drive so I couldn't save my game.
- If you run a Kubernetes cluster you already know about this. (Serve the Home)
If you don't run a Kubernetes cluster, go back to bed.
- Axios is right on the edge of working out that the Russians didn't elect Donald Trump but will probably recover tomorrow.
- Australia's new internet insecurity legislation is a complete pile of shit. (ZDNet)
The imbeciles in Labor having thrown their weight behind the Liberals' legislation to get it passed, now hope that their proposed amendments will be considered next year.
Social Media News
- The outrage mob has a brand new target: Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. (Tech Crunch)
He is charged with wrongwoke, the worst crime there can be.
- The ACCC is going after Google and Facebook for being, respectively, Google and Facebook. (ZDNet)
It's a fair cop, guv.
(The ACCC is Australia's Combat Camel Corps, but they also monitor corporate behaviour, like the FTC, but with supernumerary dromedaries.)
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Sunday, December 09
Tech News
- I'm almost out of disk space. Except for the 2TB free on the external drives on my Mac, and the 8TB drive that is still sitting in Nagi, my old Windows system that Tohru replaced last year, and the brand new 8TB drive that is sitting in a box in the spare bedroom... And about 25TB of RAID-Z storage on the new servers. Maybe not quite out of disk space.
- I haven't looked at FreeNAS, but my recent positive experience with ZFS suggest that maybe I should. Anyway, FreeNAS 11.2 is out and just the thing for the software component of that latter-day Cobalt Qube. (Serve the Home)
- If you update your Mac to Mojave and apps start demanding to take over your computer via accessibilty, you can either (a) let them or (b) they stop working.
You can control it in System Preferences / Security & Privacy / Accessibility / Allow the apps below to control your computer.
Trillion dollar company spent thirty cents on that design decision.
Also the settings panels in iTunes are now, for some reason, mauve.
And iTunes still stops downloading your podcasts whenever it feels like it, and the Download All button has been MIA for at least seven releases.
- In unrelated news, Pocket Casts is down for emergency server maintenance.
- Why you need a supercomputer to build a house. (Tech Crunch)
Because the box a laptop comes in is too small.
- AMD's Navi 10 may launch in mid-2019 and compete head-to-head with Nvidia's RTX 2070. (WCCFTech)
Even WCCFTech suggest that you take this one with a bucket of salt. What makes the story plausible is that it still cedes the high-end market to Nvidia - there's no competitor even rumoured for the 2080, 2080 Ti, or Titan.
- You know what this $1 comics bundle needs? A bunch of 4GB PDFs.. (Humble Bundle)
Social Media News
- Facebook are trying to comply with the campaign finance laws of every country in the world.
Good luck to them. I'd sooner bathe in a barrel of - oh. Huh.
- Despite what you may have read, white tail spider bites do not make your legs fall off. (Australian Geographic)
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Saturday, December 08
Tech News
- Looking for a single-chip 64-port 200GbE switch? Go Barefoot.
That's quite a lot of bandwidth. And we're still waiting for consumer-priced 10GbE switches.
- The Asus ZenBook Pro - the one with the screen in the touchpad - gets a hands-on review. (ZDNet)
Shows how spoiled we are getting when a major complaint is that it is nearly 19mm thick and weighs almost 1.9kg.
Wasn't very long ago when that was a thin-and-light model.
- This Sunday marks the 50th Anniversary of The Mother of All Demos. (TechDirt)
Social Media News
- Facebook hadn't crapped over everything for at least a week so they just did. (TechDirt)
It's a compulsion or something.
The Facebook community guidelines now ban Tier 1 hate speech, such as calling someone a stick insect, X-rays, excerpts from Lady Chatterly's Lover, vague suggestive statements, anything that might hurt the feelings of liberals, or that liberals might think might hurt the feelings of other liberals.
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