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

Wednesday, January 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 January 2026

Kyboard Dition

Top Story

  • AMD's VP of its client division has hinted that AM4 might see a return.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Socket AM4 runs on DDR4 memory, where AM5 is DDR5 only.  And DDR4 memory hasn't increased in price as much as DDR5, but more importantly, people already have it.

    Several AM4 chips are still in production, but some of AMD's most popular CPUs like the 5700X3D and 5800X3D were cancelled because the competed too well with newer models, while others like the 5600X3D and 5700G were never widely available in retail channels.

    Don't expect anything actually new, but a return of the 5800X3D would be welcome.


  • AMD also hinted at open-sourcing FSR4 upscaling.  (Tom's Hardware)

    They accidentally made the code public for a short ehile, which quickly led to experimental backports that supported RDNA3 and even RDNA2 graphics cards.


Tech News

  • How about an overpriced keyboard for that new computer you can't build?  The Asus ROG Falchion Ace 75 is a 75% mechanical keyboard for $219.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's...  Okay, I guess.  It has the Four Essential Keys but that's no great achievement in a desktop keyboard.  It has a "programmable touchbar" but that just means you can change what it does; you can't change the display.


  • Corsair's Galleon 100 SD has a 1280x720 display.  (Notebook Check)

    Strange thing: It's another keyboard.

    It's ten-keyless, which is to say, it has no numeric keypad.

    But in its place it as twelve fully programmable keys - with LCD keycaps, the aforementioned 1280x720 display (I'm not sure it's really 1280x720 because the article also says it's a 5" screen and it's definitely not that big) and two small rotary dials.  A mini Stream Deck built right into your keyboard.

    At $350 it is very not cheap though.  You can get 16GB of RAM for that.  Or a Corsair TKL keyboard like the K70 and a Stream Deck.


  • AMD has announced its P100 series of embedded Ryzen chips.  (Serve the Home)

    These are identical to existing Zen 5 desktop and laptop chips - including embedded version of the Strix Halo AI processer - but the family includes models rated for industrial and automotive conditions (-40C to 105C) and for operating 24/7 for ten years. 


  • WiFi 8 is at CES.  (The Verge)  (archive site)

    It's no faster than WiFi 7 but is instead designed to be more reliable and use less power.


  • Powerbanks got bedazzled.  (The Verge)  (archive site)

    A righteous rant from The Verge about useless features ruining the functionality of what should be simple, inexpensive devices.


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: I was a couple of months ago old when I learned this was a Robert Palmer song.

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Tuesday, January 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 January 2026

Corporate Electronics Show Edition

Top Story

Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: No need to do the dishes when you have a window.

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Monday, January 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 January 2026

Revengers Resemble Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Incoming!

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Sunday, January 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 January 2026

Projection Is Not Just A River In Egypt Edition

Top Story

  • The US Invaded Venezuela and Captured Nicolás Maduro

    ChatGPT and the Perplexity search engine are here to help you understand why this is not only a bad thing, but absolutely did not happen.  (Wired)  (archive site)
    "What’s likely going on is a mix-up with real events that are often described in dramatic or misleading ways online. Here's what actually has happened:

    What the U.S. did not do
    ❌ No U.S. military invasion of Venezuela
    ❌ No arrest or capture of Nicolás Maduro
    ❌ No overthrow of the Venezuelan government by U.S. forces
    Maduro is still in power in Venezuela."


    I have used Grok as an augmented search tool on occasion and it's often pretty good.  When you don't know the exact name of what you are looking for it will match things up better than Google.

    Sometimes it misses things or simply gets it wrong, but I haven't seen it get things this wrong.  (Grok told me in answer to a poorly-worded question, "No, the US did not capture Nicolas Maduro today.  It happened yesterday." which was true at least in my own time zone.)
    "Pure LLMs are inevitably stuck in the past, tied to when they are trained, and deeply limited in their inherent abilities to reason, search the web, 'think' critically, etc.," says Gary Marcus, a cognitive scientist and author of Taming Silicon Valley: How We Can Ensure That AI Works for Us.  While human intervention can fix glaring problems like the Maduro response, Marcus says, that doesn’t address the underlying problem.  "The unreliability of LLMs in the face of novelty is one of the core reasons why businesses shouldn’t trust LLMs."
    This problem has been greatly alleviated by AI providers enabling live search, which loads fresh data into the context window - the AI equivalent of short-term memory.

    But it can't be properly fixed without continual learning, which is an unsolved problem with LLMs.


Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: There is no war in Ba Sing Se.

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Saturday, January 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 January 2026

Barbary Corsair Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: If I get the two 32GB kits, then 768GB in total.  Half of which is new.  Which used to be a lot.

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Friday, January 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 January 2026

Early Entries Edition

Top Story

  • OpenAI is betting big on audio.  (Tech Crunch)
    OpenAI is betting big on audio AI, and it’s not just about making ChatGPT sound better.  According to new reporting from The Information, the company has unified several engineering, product, and research teams over the past two months to overhaul its audio models, all in preparation for an audio-first personal device expected to launch in about a year.
    This is going to sink without a trace and I am here for it.
    It's not just the tech giants placing this bet. A motley crew of startups has emerged with the same conviction, albeit with varying degrees of success. The makers of the Humane AI Pin burned through hundreds of millions before their screenless wearable became a cautionary tale.
    OpenAI's effort is going to burn through far more money and achieve the same results, which is to say none whatsoever.

    We already have phones.  They already do everything these AI devices do, and more, and if we don't want to look at the screen, we can just not look at the screen.

    But there's a reason video killed the radio star.

    At least Tech Crunch has an early entry in its "Dumbest Things in Tech in 2026" roundup.


  • The phone is dead long live...  What, exactly?  (Tech Crunch)

    OpenAI and the unlamented Humane pin are not alone in this folly.  There's billions of dollars chasing this lack of ideas.

    The one place where I see possibility is AI glasses.  You can integrate a camera and a speaker and a microphone and a tiny display.  Your hands are free to do whatever.  There are problems, yes, but also real value.


Tech News


Musical Interlude


Song is Konya wa Hurricane from the anime Bubblegum Crisis.  Anime is...  Oh.  You guessed.

One of the best opening sequences to anything ever.  Apart from the great soundtrack, it introduces us to all the major characters without telling you that they are the major characters, and to the premise of the series without saying a word.  There are a couple of minutes of establishing shots before the song starts, but I chose this clip precisely because it has those.



Disclaimer: Burning touch?  We have pills for that now.

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Thursday, January 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 January 2026

Fluffles In Edition

Top Story

Tech News



Musical Interlude


Song is Good Girls by Elle King.  Anime is of course Dirty Pair.  The original and the best.




Disclaimer: It's not our fault!

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Wednesday, December 31

Geek

Daily News Stuff 31 December 2025

New Year's Vaporeon Edition

Top Story

  • The problem with letting AI do the grunt work.  (The Atlantic)  (archive site)
    Fresh out of college in the mid 2010s, I'd scored a copy job for a how-to website.  An early task involved expanding upon an article titled "How to Get Rid of Dark Lips."  For the next two years, I worked on articles with headlines such as "How to Speak Like a Stereotypical New Yorker (With Examples)", "How to Eat an Insect or Arachnid," and "How to Acquire a Gun License in New Jersey."  I didn’t get rich or win literary awards, but I did learn how to write a clean sentence, convey information in a logical sequence, and modulate my tone for the intended audience - skills that I use daily in my current work in screenwriting, film editing, and corporate communications.
    Not seeing the problem here to be honest.

    The writer's latest feature film, How to Write Slop for Fun and Profit, is airing nowhere now.


  • 2025 was Hollywood's year of creative bankruptcy.  (PCGamer)

    I mean, more so than usual.


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Yes, there's a pattern.

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Tuesday, December 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff -1 January 2026

Countdown Edition

Top Story

  • Binance's Trust Wallet Chrome extension turned out to be misnamed.  (Web3isGoingGreat)

    It got hacked - from the inside, a so-called supply chain attack where a developer's system is compromised and used to slip malware into critical applications - and users lost $7 million.

    Binance has updated the extension and will reimburse users who lost money due to the attack.


Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: A pox on all three of your houses.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:31 PM | Comments (5) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 520 words, total size 5 kb.

Monday, December 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 December 2025

Unflow Edition

Top Story

  • My PC, it will not boot.
    I rm'ed * while su root.

    Now maybe Gemini and Grok will be able to find this.


  • Did Qualcomm strangle Arduino by changing its terms of use after the acquisition?

    Yes says competitor Adafruit.  No says Qualcomm.  (The New Stack)

    Well that's to be expected.  How about a neutral and trustworthy third party?

    No says the EFF.

    Does that settle things?

    Given how long the article is, I'd say it doesn't.  While the hardware is nominally still open, users are pushed heavily toward cloud services that are not open in any sense of the word.


Tech News


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Sorry folks, stairway's closed.  Angel out front shoulda told ya.

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