Dear Santa, thank you for the dolls and pencils and the fish. It's Easter now, so I hope I didn't wake you but... honest, it is an emergency. There's a crack in my wall. Aunt Sharon says it's just an ordinary crack, but I know its not cause at night there's voices so... please please can you send someone to fix it? Or a policeman, or...
Back in a moment.
Thank you Santa.

Wednesday, August 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 August 2024

Powerfail Edition

Top Story

  • Lots of juicy details from that Google antitrust ruling.  (The Verge)

    Google pays device makers enormous amounts of money to direct search requests to them.  20% of Apple's profits come directly from Google.

    Estimates from the two companies suggest that it would cost Apple $20 billion in development costs and $6 billion per year in operating expenses to replace Google Search with its own platform, and when Google is paying you $20 billion a year not to do that the decision is pretty simple.

    The only problem is that if you are deemed to have a monopoly - which doesn't necessarily mean an absolute monopoly - this is illegal.

    Exactly what will happen is still anyone's guess, but Google has few friends on either side of the political aisle.  Deemed insufficiently woke for the Democrats, the company has burned every imaginable bridge on the conservative side, many of them twice.

Tech News



Disclaimer: Well, that's not good.

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Tuesday, August 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 August 2024

Emmanuel Goldthiel Edition

Top Story



Tech News


A Little Close to Home

Mayonaka Punch is an anime about a vtuber kicked out of her little group over creative differences who hooks up with a vampire (they use the term banpai in the Crunchy sub).

Clicked over to Twitter in the intermission and saw that Hololive's Minato Aqua will be graduating at the end of the month.  Which reminded me of Yozora Mel, who was terminated in January, whose nickname was banpire because she was a vampire who kept getting banned by YouTube.

Which made me sad.

As for the show, it's not terrible so far.

Update: They're not going to do what I think they...  They did.  Well, respect, but ouch.


Disclaimer: Peter Thiel!!!1!

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Monday, August 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 August 2024

Oops Part Twelve Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • How to run DOS on modern hardware.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The way the economy is going this might be useful information.


  • Adding RAM to an RP2040.  (Dmitry)

    This is the chip used in the Raspberry Pi Pico.  It doesn't have a memory bus in the usual sense, but supports external serial (SPI) ROM and has an onboard cache to keep things fast.

    You can also wire up SPI RAM - but it will be read-only because the RP2040 is expecting ROM, not RAM.

    You can get around that, but it's, uh, interesting.


  • The Breville Oracle Jet is a $2000 computer that makes coffee.  (The Verge)

    Okay.


  • KOSA - the Kids Online Safety Act - is dead.  For now.  (TechDirt)

    I haven't linked TechDirt much lately since Mike Masnick went insane, but he seems to be having a lucid day.  He praises the House GOP for killing the train wreck bipartisan Senate bill, and approvingly quotes Rand Paul's scathing letter.


  • Need for Speed: SSD Edition.  (Serve the Home)

    This is Kioxia's (formerly Toshiba) latest datacenter drive aimed at low latency rather than transfer rates.  It's about twice as fast as typical SSDs - access times of around 25 microseconds vs. a more typical 50 microseconds.

    It's intended to replace phase-change drives in heavy workloads, now that Intel and Micron have abandoned phase-change memory entirely.

    Intel's Optane drives could get access times down to 10 microseconds, but they were power hungry and expensive, and ultimately not commercially successful.


Disclaimer: I didn't do it.

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Sunday, August 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 August 2024

Dissolve The People Edition

Top Story

  • Should we try cooling the planet with sulphur dioxide? (Japan Times)

    I mean, we know that it works. What's the catch?
    "The whole notion of spraying sulfur compounds to reflect sunlight is arrogant and simplistic," Canadian environmentalist David Suzuki said. "There are unintended consequences of powerful technologies like these, and we have no idea what they will be."
    Yeah, we have no idea what would happen if large amounts of sulphur dioxide were suddenly released into the upper atmosphere because such a thing has never happened before.
    Raymond Pierrehumbert, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Oxford, said he considered solar geoengineering a grave threat to human civilization.

    "It's not only a bad idea in terms of something that would never be safe to deploy," he said. "But even doing research on it is not just a waste of money, but actively dangerous."
    I'll just pause here to say that this is a wonderful case of nominative determinism, because this is precisely what you would expect to hear from someone named Raymond Pierrehumbert.
    Opponents of solar geoengineering cite several main risks. They say it could create a "moral hazard," mistakenly giving people the impression that it is not necessary to rapidly reduce fossil fuel emissions.
    In other words, I don't want to solve the problem. I want global communism.

Tech News

Disclaimer: Which is widely considered a bad thing.

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Saturday, August 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 August 2024

Mathematical Unicorns Edition

Top Story

  • Intel shares are down 30% overnight.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Oops.  How did that happen?

    And down 50% for the year so far.

    This helps explain why AMD delayed its biggest CPU release in years over a much smaller problem.  They basically did exactly the opposite of Intel: Catch the problem before selling the CPUs and recall everything.

    AMD hasn't been entirely forthcoming on the nature of their problem either, but they weren't selling chips with known faults.


Tech News



Disclaimer: Well, not that shocked.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:48 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 500 words, total size 5 kb.

Friday, August 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 August 2024

Alarums And Excursions Edition

Top Story

Tech News



Disclaimer: Just don't land in Bolivia.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:10 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 386 words, total size 4 kb.

Thursday, August 01

Geek

Daily Tech News 1 August 2024

Close Enough For Government Work Edition

Top Story


Tech News




Disclaimer: No search results for you

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:33 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 469 words, total size 5 kb.

Wednesday, July 31

Geek

Daily News Stuff 31 July 2024

No Kids Allowed Edition

Top Story

  • Kids have been banned from the internet.  (The Verge)

    That's not what they are saying, but that's the likely result of the Senate passing the Kids Online Safety Act, which requires online services to actively monitor children using their services and protect them from all possible sources of harm, real or imaginary.

    Which is more than parents do.

    Far cheaper and easier to just ban children outright.

    Of course this nonsense passed by a 91-3 majority.  Senator Rand Paul called it a "Pandora’s box of unintended consequences."  

    I call it dogshit.

    There is a matching bill in the House but the article doesn't indicate the current status except that it hasn't been passed yet.

Tech News

Disclaimer: Even more than IPFS I hate meetings.

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Tuesday, July 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 July 2024

Don't Make Me Tap The Sign Edition

Top Story

  • AI has been determined by the State of California to cause rats in laboratory cancer: SB-1047 - legislation introduced by Scott Wiener, so you know it's bad - aims to make it illegal for AI to do things which are illegal in the first place and which it cannot possibly do in the second place.  (Ars Technica)
    The bill lays out a legalistic definition of those safety incidents that in turn focuses on defining a set of "critical harms" that an AI system might enable. That includes harms leading to "mass casualties or at least $500 million of damage," such as "the creation or use of chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear weapon" (hello, Skynet?) or "precise instructions for conducting a cyberattack... on critical infrastructure." The bill also alludes to "other grave harms to public safety and security that are of comparable severity" to those laid out explicitly.
    It's illegal to kill people, even in small numbers.

    It's illegal to destroy property that is not your own, even when it's less than half a billion dollars in damage.

    It's illegal to create chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear weapons.

    It is trivially easy to find information on how to do any of these things, and that information cannot be erased, because people have done all of these things.


Tech News


Disclaimer: Skill issue.

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Monday, July 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 July 2024

Bit Rot Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Disclaimer: I hate IPFS.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 07:05 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 316 words, total size 3 kb.

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