Sunday, June 13
Top Stories
- Even the greatest of players can fumble the ball on occasion. It's how they recover that sets them apart.
Software development platform Codecov got hacked at the end of January, an event not discovered for two months, leaving their users exposed that entire time. (Bleeping Computer)
The vulnerability was via a Docker configuration flaw, and the attackers modified the shell script Codecov used for uploading files to be tested. That meant that everything in the customers' code or the test scripts used with it could be stolen by the hackers.
So that one hack potentially meant that every single one of Codecov's customers also got hacked.
The thing is, complete retards also fumble the ball on occasion, and it's clear now which category Codecov falls into: They replaced their shell script with a 43MB binary-compiled Node.js application using 579 third-party libraries.
This is the equivalent of Ford apologising for a critical safety failure in brakes manufactured cheaply in China and replacing them with brakes made for one quarter that price in Burkina Faso using radioactive recycled hamster bedding from North Korea as lining material.
Do not use Codecov. They are morons.
- Audi / Volkswagen got hacked, if the term hacked is relevant when you connect a database directly to the internet. (Bleeping Computer)
The hack includes loan and lease applications, which would contain all sorts of sensitive financial and identity information.
They don't know how exactly many people are affected, but at least 90,000 had financial data leaked and millions more had personal data leaked.
- Intuit did not get hacked - they say - but they've been notifying customers of individual accounts that appeared to have been hacked after a security breach at another company. (Bleeping Computer)
Assume that everything you put online passes immediately into the hands of your worst enemies.
- McDonalds got hacked too. (Bleeping Computer)
Not sure how much that matters. Who gives personal information to fast food franchises?
I know, probably a hundred million people.
That's a fun premise, but it wouldn't be enough except that in her gremlin form she's drawn as being about two feet tall - and the virtual camera angles used in the animation follow that little absurdity as if it had been carved in stone and handed down on Mount Sinai. They never call attention to it directly, but it's there in every scene.
It also helps that she's not actually bad, or lazy, she just human and can't maintain her perfect image 24x7.
Tech News
- Blockchain ruins everything, Part 378: The free plan at Docker Hub no longer includes Autobuild. (Docker)
Because people have found a way to write build scripts that mine cryptocurrencies. It's astounding inefficient, but that doesn't matter because they're not paying for it.
Docker has been suspending thousands of free accounts each week, and has now decided to stop playing whack-a-mole.
- China's ban on cryptocurrency mining is also expanding. (Tom's Hardware)
China was mining about half the Bitcoin in the world, and is the home to the Chia plague. The growing restrictions have caused the price to sink, at least temporarily. I have no idea what will happen longer term.
- PLC flash is years away. thank goodness. (Tom's Hardware)
Flash memory comes in four densities at the moment - SLC (1 bit per cell), MLC (2 bits), TLC, the most common (3 bits), and QLC (4 bits), used in SD cards and low-end SSDs.
For each additional bit they try to pack in, the circuitry needs to be twice as sensitive. Single-bit cells have two electrical levels, two-bit cells have four, three-bit cells eight, and so on.
QLC seems to be okay so far, but a major feature of newer drives is being able to switch storage blocks between SLC mode and TLC or QLC. A drive that is mostly empty could actually be running entirely in SLC mode, and will gradually switch over - and slow down - as it fills up.
PLC - 5 bits per cell, with 32 electrical levels - sounds like a bridge too far to me. The cost savings are minimal - they're already pretty small for QLC vs TLC - and the lifespan would be at best a quarter of current mainstream TLC drives.
- Click on this link. (BBC)
Yeah, login required. Never mind that.
See that stock photo of a programmer sitting a laptop? Try selecting the text on the laptop screen.
When In Doubt Bribe the Reviewer Video of the Day
Hardware Unboxed made news not long ago when they posted a critical review of an Nvidia graphics card and Nvidia blacklisted them from receiving review samples.
That caused a shitstorm across all the popular review sites and YouTube channels. Hardware Unboxed is a smaller Australian channel and even they have nearly 800,000 subscribers. Linus Tech tips has over 13 million subscribers and they picked up that story and Nvidia was forced to back down.
Same thing here. LG has contacted Hardware Unboxed and said, in effect, that the people responsible for firing the people responsible, have now been fired. The LG division involved in this - their IT services department, not the producer of the product under review - has been relieve of any future involvement in that process.
I don't trust LG, but they probably won't repeat that particular mistake. Multiple people have pointed out that the whole thing was pointless anyway, because the product and the center of the controversy is actually good.
I May Have Already Used This Anime Music Video of the Day
I need to start keeping a list.
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Saturday, June 12
Long Weekend Edition
Top Story
- The last two long weekends here marked the start and the end of the problems related to the datacenter fire, so I not only didn't get long weekends then, I didn't get weekends at all. This time it looks like I'll at least get the normal two days off.
I need to configure some new servers tomorrow, but they'll make my life a lot easier. And make our newly hired sysadmin's life a lot easier, which will make my life even more easier.
- Regular updates for Windows 10 will end in 2025. (Tom's Hardware)
This doesn't mean that support and bugfixes will stop then, but it does indicate that there's an entirely new version of Windows on its way.
We'll see what that brings. As long as they don't drop 32-bit application support like MacOS. I doubt that will happen, because there's still a 32-bit version of Windows and that can still run ancient 16-bit apps.
She doesn't know what she's the god of, though, so she tries some experiments with her friends, and soon finds out.
It's lovingly drawn and animated, almost Ghibliesque in its art style, and the story just follows Yurie's daily life as she navigates her new responsibilities and tries to avoid inadvertent natural disasters.
Interesting too is that the show is set in a very specific time and place, from 1983 to 1984 in the city of Onomichi on Japan's Inland Sea. The background illustrations of the city take great care to capture that particular period.
Tech News
- Intel's new 11900KB seems to be nearly as fast as the 11900K at half the power consumption. (Tom's Hardware)
That would be great if you could use it in your own desktop builds. But because this is Intel and we can't have nice things, that's not possible. It's a surface-mount BGA package and only useful to OEMs.
- HBM3 pushes data clocks to 5.2GT/s. (WCCFTech)
Think of it as 5.2GHz. Technically it's half that because all memory these days is DDR - double data rate, transferring two bits of data per clock - but it doesn't matter unless you're actually designing hardware yourself.
Since the idea behind HBM - high bandwidth memory - is that it would run at relatively low clocks but use very wide buses - 1024 bits for a single chip - pushing the clock up to 5.2GHz makes it very fast indeed.
GDDR6X can currently reach 19GHz, but those chips are only 32 bits wide.
- TSMC is looking to add a chip packaging plant to its planned expansions in Arizona. (WCCFTech)
The company has already expanded earlier expansion plans and is looking to build as many as six leading-edge fabs - chip factories - in the US, but those would produce raw silicon dies that would need to be shipped to another factory to be packaged. On this scale adding local packaging facilities makes sense.
Also, the first of the new buildings looks like a WiFi router. I mean, you can see the ventilation slots and the RJ-45 ports and everything.
- BuzzFeed has won a Pulitzer Prize. (BuzzFeed)
Before you scoff - I mean, go ahead and scoff anyway, just before that - they won the prize for documenting China's genocide of the Uyghurs. The New York Times won the same prize for covering up the Soviet genocide in Ukraine.
It's progress. It's not much progress, but its something.
- Hackers broke into Electronic Arts by social engineering internal tech support via their Slack channel. (Vice)
Rule One: Don't use Slack.
Rule Two: When someone asks for a password, tell them to fill out Form 404.
- The Avaddon ransomware gang has called it quits and released decryption keys for their remaining victims. (Bleeping Computer)
No, I don't know why. Water getting too hot with the recent spate of high-profile hacks? More profitable avenues to pursue? Government funding dried up? Don't know.
- The US Senate has just agreed on a $52 billion bailout for an industry currently making record profits. (ZDNet)
It's not the dumbest thing they've ever done, not even close, but the three big companies lobbying for this handout have a combined market cap over $5 trillion.
- Meanwhile the New York Senate has passed a right to repair bill. (IFixit)
Louis Rossman is currently in Florida, and could not be reached for - who am I kidding, here are his thoughts:
Basically it looks like one step forward and then take the rest of the year off. What a certain blogger calls failure theater.
- Proposed federal and state legislation would force online marketplaces like Amazon to publish direct contact information for their sellers. (Ars Technica)
Amazon hates this. Real companies that actually get sued for selling fake products are strongly in favour.
- Radeon 6800 and 6800 XT cards seem to be back in stock after going missing for several weeks. Supply is still limited, but they are there, and prices for the 6700 XT are heading back down into the troposphere with the higher-end cards trailing behind. The 6900 XT is still about 20% higher than it was a few weeks ago, but hopefully that will correct itself soon.
I might get a new PC this year after all. I'm currently running on a Ryzen 1700 and a Radeon 580; I'm looking at a 5900X and a 6700 XT for the new build. That would be about 2.5 times as fast.
Nvidia, as yet, need not apply. The RTX 3060 is currently priced as high as the 6700 XT despite being a much slower card.
Satellites Anime Music Video of the Day
Not technically groundbreaking but I love the energy of this one.
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Friday, June 11
Rickrolled By Moona And By The Internet Generally Edition
Top Story
- Got delayed by network problems at work, so I'll keep this short and then maybe add some stuff later.
Update: Network is back up.
Update 2: Network is suffering 97% packet loss and 340ms ping times.
Update 3: Network is down.
Update 4: Network still down. Wait, up, no, down, updown, downup... Up!
- Intel has made a $2 billion offer to buy embedded processor startup SiFive. (Tom's Hardware)
The whole attraction of SiFive is that their instruction set is an open specification, so anyone can implement it themselves if they want. Most companies wouldn't want all that work and would rather license a design or buy an existing chip, but you can.
Intel is pretty much guaranteed to fuck things up. It's not in their DNA to be open.
Tech News
- Back 12 M.2 NVMe drives into your DVD bay. (Tom's Hardware)
Don't have a DVD bay? Tough.
- Dirt as a service: Backblaze is offering online Chia farming. (Tom's Hardware)
Backblaze has an enormous number of disk drives, perhaps enough to actually make a dent in Chia. You'd still need to prepare your farm locally before uploading it - it's the preparation that burns out drives; after that they're mostly idle.
Or, you know, not do any of that at all.
- Food services supply company Edward Don has been hit by a ransomware attack and is offline. (Bleeping Computer)
Exactly how do these companies have their networks configured?
- Slilp, a market for stolen logins, got stolen itself by law enforcement agencies from four countries. (Bleeping Computer)
They'll be up again somewhere else tomorrow.
- Hackers broke into Electronic Arts' network, and are now desperately trying to forget what they saw. (Bleeping Computer)
The horror.
- Samsung security kind of sucks. (Bleeping Computer)
Though the bug that gave random apps admin rights over your phone was hard to miss because it also deleted all your other apps.
- The one thing worse than being in Bat Plague Lockdown in a communist dystopia is being stuck in Bat Plague Lockdown in a communist dystopia with bad weather and no internet. (ZDNet)
Must check in on my brother living inHellMelbourne.
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Thursday, June 10
Endless Squawking Edition
Top Story
- Bitcoin vs. the volcano. (ZDNet)
El Salvador has not only made Bitcoin legal tender, but announced plans to power Bitcoin mining with volcanoes. Well, geothermal power. Which is something they actually have, unlike money.
One of the effects of this is that there's no capital gains tax on Bitcoin in El Salvador. The other effects - well, too early to tell.
I'm pretty negative on blockchains generally, but I'm not a huge fan of the traditional financial system either.
- Meanwhile, JBS reportedly paid hackers $11 million in Bitcoin to get their cows back. (Blockchain News)
That's how it works, right? I think that's how it works.
The older sister is the most interesting character because she shows real growth over the course of the series. At the beginning she just wants to drink and smoke and leech money off her younger sibling (in the manga she was sixteen but they wisely increased that to twenty in the anime). Mid-way through she's realised she's stuck with being the baby-sitter for the younger girls, and by the end she actually enjoys watching and sometimes planning their adventures. And even spends her own money on them.
And seeing Miu - the main trouble maker - face-down on the floor after one of the other girls has gotten fed up with her antics and thrown something at her will never stop being funny.
Tech News
- Nvidia's GeForce RTX 3070 Ti is here. (Tom's Hardware)
Reviewers are unimpressed. It splits the nominal price difference between the regular 3070 and the 3080, but is barely faster than the 3070. If you can get it for recommended retail price it's great value in today's market, but that's rather unlikely.
- Video card of the day is the GeForce GT 730 from 2014. (Tom's Hardware)
Things are so bad that they've pulled them back off the dusty shelves of Warehouse 13 and are shipping them out to retailers.
They're not great. They're not good, even. But they work.
- Things are much better if you were holding out for a new CPU. All models of the Ryzen 5000 range are in stock at most retailers and selling at or below recommended retail prices. In Australia the 12 core 5900X is selling for what the 8 core 5800X cost just a month ago.
AMD's Radeon 6700X graphics cards are also readily available. Expensive, yes, but available.
- Western Digital and Seagate are ramping up production of hard drives - specifically in response to Chia. (Tom's Hardware)
They're not expanding production facilities as yet but will be adding shifts to run existing factories at full capacity. They're fully aware that the Chia bubble could burst at any moment and flood the market with second-hand disk drives.
- Raptor Lake - Intel's next next generation of desktop CPUs - could have up to 24 cores. (WCCFTech)
Of course, that's 8 good cores and 16 crappy ones, because Intel is absolutely determined to hand the high-end desktop market to AMD on a platter.
- Patch your Chrome stuff. (Bleeping Computer)
Google has fixed an actively exploited bug, so if you're still on 91.0.4472.77 you should update to 91.0.4472.101 right away.
- Asked how many customers had had video data from their Ring video doorbells handed over to police without a warrant or even notification, the company, now owned by Amazon, said. (Tech Crunch)
That's an unedited quote, by the way.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation was more forthcoming:Ring is ostensibly a security camera company that makes devices you can put on your own homes, but it is increasingly also a tool of the state to conduct criminal investigations and surveillance.
They also catch fire.
- Everything new is old again: The Vivaldi browser now has built-in email, calendar, and RSS feed support. (The Verge)
What about news, though? No love for NNTP?
Not Exactly Tech News
- A certain Japanese-American dragon announces her retirement from Hololive, and a certain Japanese-American indie streamer gains 200,000 subscribers in one day.
I knew she had another account, but hadn't looked into it. Just like I know Gura had a big following before she became Gura, but have never gone looking for her videos. Let the past be the past.
But wherever she goes after Hololive, I'll at least check it out.
I Told You They Were Unimpressed Videos of the Day
Episode Zero Video of the Day
The preview episode for Ichigo Mashimaro. No, it's not all like this. Sometimes it gets a bit weird.
Teenagers Anime Music Video of the Day
The song fits the show perfectly because it doesn't fit at all.
Disclaimer: Like a square peg in a keyhole.
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Wednesday, June 09
Cascade All The Things Edition
Top Story
- Like the first episode of James Burke's Connections, one customer changed one parameter on one account at one CDN and within seconds the entire
eastern seaboard lost powerinternet was toast. (Fastly)
- Reddit, Twitter, the BBC, the UK government, and amusingly, Amazon were among those who experienced sudden plagues of unhelpful error messages. (Online or Not)
It's harder for Fastly to tailor their errors in a completely friendly way for end users, but the default error messages that come out of tools like Nginx and Varnish are so abstruse that even people who work with them daily complain.
- Just a comment on that story about the FBI reclaiming millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin from the Darkside hacking group:
What almost certainly happened is the hackers used an online wallet so they could easily share access to the funds. Problem is, that's not remotely as secure as a local wallet. The feds knew what wallet address the money was in, so they just had to ask all the major exchanges whether they managed that address, and serve a warrant on the one that did.
If the online wallet was properly secured it would still have needed the hackers to log in before the key could be retrieved, and that's quite likely what happened. They logged in, the key was decrypted, and before they could do anything else there was this huge sucking sound and all the money disappeared into the coffers of the federal government never to be seen again.
Which I'm sure is a metaphor for something. Just can't think what.
Under the surface it's something much more insidious: An online cooking class.
Tech News
- The chip shortage continues to bite: Now there aren't enough power management chips to keep up with demand for Thunderbolt ports on notebooks. (Tom's Hardware)
Thunderbolt ports can draw and supply up to 100W - you can charge your laptop that way, or plug in another device to charge from your laptop. So they need fairly capable power management, and the chips certified for the task are out of stock.
Intel has temporarily certified compatible but not technically compliant chips, which will work fine, probably.
Reportedly Intel is also short of power management chips for their enterprise SSDs, which isn't great at a time when a certain blockchain is chewing up all the non-enterprise storage the industry can produce.
- Why is everything in short supply? A lot of it is the blockchain bubble in GPUs and (more recently) storage. GPU sales spiked by 40% between Q1 last year and Q1 this year. (WCCFTech)
Yes, there were somewhat more people playing games during the two week lockdown. Yes, there are new cards out. But are there really that many more new computers being sold?
- As it happens... Yes. In fact, overall US PC shipments are up 73% in the same timeframe. (Tech Crunch)
HP in particular grew by 122%. Which is kind of a lot.
- The state of Ohio has filed a suit seeking to regulate Google as a public utility. (Columbus Dispatch)
Good luck, guys. Don't think it will fly, but worth a try.
- Patch your Adobe stuff. (Bleeping Computer)
I'm not sure if I still run any Adobe stuff. I used to have the entire Creative Suite but that expired long ago. I've replaced Photoshop with Affinity Photo, which might not be quite as good but is a hell of a lot cheaper.
Anyway, they've patched 41 vulnerabilities as well as the usual raft of bugs.
- Patch your Windows stuff. (Bleeping Computer)
I do still run Windows. The latest update patches seven actively exploited vulnerabilities and 43 that aren't actively exploited yet.
- Graphene could boost hard drive capacities by a factor of ten. (ZDNet)
They're not making the drives out of graphene, just coating the platters with it. It's thinner than current protective coatings, which means the drive heads can be closer the the surface of the disk, which means higher densities.
Or possibly not. It's not quite as bad as predictions about new battery technology but it's not far off.
- Why is Verizon blocking Nyaa and Mangadex? (TorrentFreak)
Someone asked me recently if I'd had any trouble accessing Nyaa, and I hadn't, mostly because I'd been too busy to try. Also because I don't use Verizon.
Also, it's kind of pointless blocking Mangadex, because it got hacked and it's been down for weeks while they rewrite the software.
Not Exactly Tech News
- Kiryu Coco of Hololive announced her graduation - that is, retirement - today. (Reddit)
The Hololive fanbase kind of exploded over this because she's the first established member of any of the main Hololive branches to leave. There were a couple who flamed out in their first month, and the regrettable West Taiwan episode, but she's the first mainstream talent to quit.
We'll miss our foul-mouthed shit-posting drug-dealing Yakuza dragon, and wish her the very best in whatever strange incarnation she finds herself in coming months.
Her final stream is on July 1. Unusually for the industry, and commendably, her channel and all her existing content will remain active, though members-only streams will expire automatically three months after she leaves YouTube.
Update:
She's gained 30,000 subscribers in nine hours, and at least a couple of thousand paid members. Had to reload the tab because it was using 11GB of RAM thanks to the insane number of chat messages.
Fans are trying to solve the problem by throwing love at it. Probably won't work but worth a shot.
Update Two: 40,000 subscribers in 11 hours. She's streaming right now, but it's a collab on Fubuki's channel.
- The Minecraft Caves and Cliffs Part One update is out. (Hot Hardware)
This part doesn't actually have any caves or cliffs. It does have goats, axolotls, and glow squids though.
Plummeting Rabbits Anime Music Video of the Day
Anime is Usagi Drop a.k.a Bunny Drop from 2011. The manga had a time skip that divided the audience, but the anime never goes near that. It's beautifully animated and utterly charming.
Disclaimer: But that is not this day! Wait, yeah, it is this day. Damn.
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Tuesday, June 08
4000 TPS Edition
Top Story
- Rule One of Encryption: Never roll your own encryption
Rule Two of Encryption: Never trust anyone else's encryption either. (Reuters)
Australian police arrested 224 suspects and seized $45 million in cash after hacking into a custom messaging app used by a criminal ring - and also stopped a murder plot.
All in all not a bad day's work.
- Meanwhile in the US, the DOJ stole back $2.3 million from the Darkside gang that hacked Colonial Pipeline. (Justice)
The moral of this story is that everyone is dumb, but criminals exceptionally so. If they were smarter they'd go into politics, or if they were smarter and less ethical, marketing.
I tend to give these shows my own names, because it's shorter, like Re: Slime, or as with Autistic Psychic Alien Yakuza Battle Robot because if someone just mentions Hinamatsuri I can't remember if that's the one with the girls practicing traditional Japanese festival dances (it's not).*
* Hanayamata. You're welcome.
Tech News
- It's Apple's World Wide Developer Conference, the one week each year where they try to persuade developers they didn't really mean what they said the other 51 weeks. (AnandTech)
Apple themselves announced a bunch of stuff no-one cares much about except for the update to Siri. Siri will now process voice commands locally on your device and send only data requests to the cloud.
That's how it should have worked all along, but it couldn't be done at the time; devices just weren't fast enough.
Of course Siri doesn't work very well anyway, but at least now it doesn't spy on you quite so egregiously.
- AMD's new FidelityFX game upscaling feature is coming to the new Xboxen. (Tom's Hardware)
Since these are basically PCs running a cut-down version of Windows on AMD processors and graphics and FidelityFX will run anywhere, even on Nvidia hardware, this comes as very little surprise.
- CPUs are back in stock, so should you even consider the 11700K? (Tom's Hardware)
Performance is, well, it's fine. It's pretty close to the Ryzen 5800X.
Power consumption - and thus heat - is a different story. Under load it not only uses significantly more power than the competing 5800X, or even the 12-core 5900X, it uses twice as much power as last year's 10700K.
Intel have cranked things up to the max to remain competitive with AMD across a big gap in process nodes, and that means a lot more heat and noise for the same performance.
Alder Lake, due later this year, should improve things.
- Your antivirus will now mine Ethereum for you. (Bleeping Computer)
I remain unconvinced that this is a good idea.
- Step One: Release a useful online tool.
Step Two: Quietly subvert it to hack other people's websites.
Step Three: Get caught, because you're dumb. (@wrede)
You're doing this in public, you idiots. How do you expect to not get caught?
I Can't Belive It's Not Haruhi Anime Music Video of the Day
Sharada is the definitive AMV for season one, but this is the definitive AMV for season two. It reduces the Endless Eight arc to five and a half minutes, which is probably worth a Nobel Prize. In physics, or maybe medicine.
For those who haven't seen it, the story spends eight episodes trapped in a time loop, with scenes repeating over and over, but with not a single frame of animation reused. It's a lot of fun if you start out with a high SAN score, but watch out if you used that as your dump stat.
Got Milk? Don't Got a Kitchen Knife? Let's Fix That Video of the Day
Yes, there's an entire channel where the guy makes knives out of things it shouldn't be possible to make knives out of. Milk is not even the most surprising.
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Monday, June 07
Vtubers Watching Grass Grow Edition
Tech News
- We interrupt this program to annoy you and make things generally irritating for you. (ZDNet)
Microsoft recommends different browser settings. Want to change them?
...
I don't know how to get "fucked". Updating your browser settings now.
Microsoft Edge and Outlook. Better together. Let's go ouch. (ZDNet)
But I've read something like 200 chapters of the manga - which is great - and this trailer absolutely nails the feel of the story. The voice of the male lead is perfect, which is a good thing because he's going to have to carry a lot of weight in the show.
Despite the name of the series, they do have a voice actress cast for Komi herself. It will be interesting to see how they translate it from an inherently silent medium to television.
Tech News
- So, those PNY drives that received an abrupt durability downgrade? People have been speculating that this is because of Chia, but the company has now gone on the record to announce that yes, it's because of Chia. (Tom's Hardware)
Cryptocurrencies come in two basic forms: Proof-of-stake, which basically codifies rent-seeking, and everything else, which is even worse.
Chia is in the even worse category.
- If it ain't broke, fix it until it is: Chip flaws that affect one core in a million show up on about 63% of computers with a million cores. (The Register)
Well, computers still mostly don't have a million cores, but a datacenter can pack 50,000 cores into a single rack, so a million cores is not really that much.
The article mentions a system where one core had a bug that affected encryption, so that only that core could decrypt files it had encrypted. And this is because we are pushing close to the fundamental quantum limits of silicon.
- The US Air Force wants to contract SpaceX to deliver cargo by rocket. (Ars Technica)
SpaceX's Starship has a cargo capacity of 100 tons to orbit, maybe slightly more for a suborbital trajectory. Anywhere in the world in an hour.
If you can keep it ready to launch 24/7, which you can't, making it useful for cargoes that need to be delivered in an hour but that you know about a week in advance.
- The EFF is unimpressed with the recent court decision against Cox Communications. (EFF)
They argue that the District Court award of a billion dollars in damages gets the law wrong, violates due process, and will destroy the internet.
And they're largely correct.
F.Y.C. Anime Music Video of the Say
This one goes a little beyond just syncing up anime clips with a popular song.
Honestly, it's a technical tour-de-force as well as a lot of fun,
Weekly Hardware Roundup Video of the Day
It's Computex time, and though there's no physical Computex this year, everyone has decided to announce new hardware at the same time, so these weekly updates really have been running daily.
Disclaimer: Unlike me.
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It's a four-pomf alert!
We'll have to wait a few months to see how it is, but that trailer absolutely nails it.
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Sunday, June 06
Whirling Deadlines Edition
Top Story
- POKEGB is an emulator for the Nintendo Gameboy. It currently only works for one game, Pokemon Blue.
But it's 62 lines of code and looks like, well, you'll see.
Except season one.
After a while spent watching it while doing something else, I gave up on the show entirely perhaps a third of the way through. Later on, remembering that I had liked it originally, I went back and rewatched the beginning. And the beginning is good. In fact, the whole first season is good.
Then the showrunners realised they had a hit on their hands and they were burning through the source material too quickly, so rather than pausing the show to allow the manga to catch up, they slowed down the pace of the show. The transition between the tightly-written and fast-paced first season and the wallowing second season is jarring when you go back knowing what happened. At the time I was waiting for the show to return to its earlier pace, but it never does.
If you're a completionist, this is definitely one to avoid. 20 good episodes don't make up for 346 bad ones.
Tech News
- Apple may have fixed the issue reporting reduced SSD lifespans on M1 Macs. (Tom's Hardware)
All M1 Macs have their SSDs soldered onto the motherboard and encrypted by a chip also soldered onto the motherboard, so if it wears out your computer is dead and you can't even boot from a backup drive. So having the operating system reporting rapid wear on the SSD was an unwelcome feature.
Apple says the bug was in the reporting software, and the drives themselves are fine. We'll see, but it's probably true; the drives and their T2 controller chips have been used in previous Mac models without issues.
- Meanwhile second (or is it third) tier SSD maker PNY has kind of done the opposite. (Tom's Hardware)
Their XLR8 drive just got an update, and the quoted drive lifespan has been reduced by 80% - without any change to the product name or model number.
- All Zen 4 desktop CPUs will be APUs. (WCCFTech)
Unless they're not, since this is all leaks.
Some of it - like the fact that Zen 4 CPU chiplets will be made on TSMC's 5nm node - has been officially confirmed.
More significantly, the I/O chiplet will moved from Global Foundries' older 12nm process to TSMC's new 6nm process. That doesn't make much difference for just an I/O die because I/O circuits don't shrink that much. But the new I/O die has a GPU on board, and that benefits enormously from the newer process.
I'm not sure why they didn't do this with Zen 2, though they probably had enough on their plate just switching over to 7nm and the chiplet architecture. Even a small and slow GPU is extremely useful when building or testing a system, because as long as the CPU is working you can get video out.
No leaks as to the configuration of the GPU, but I'm expecting something similar to the current laptop parts, with the next-generation laptops parts being the first to get higher-end integrated graphics.
- Qualcomm's Snapdragon 895 will be manufactured on Samsung's 4nm node. (WCCFTech)
That's likely because TSMC's initial production capacity for 4nm - and given the timing, that's starting right about now - has been bought out by Apple. TSMC is already shipping 5nm in volume but most of their customers are still on 7nm because, again, Apple booked out 5nm capacity.
And Apple has reportedly booked out initial capacity at 3nm as well.
While I'd love to see AMD processors and graphics cards on 5nm this year rather than next year, the truth is that Apple paid for TSMC's massive R&D budget over the last decade.
So all those people with more dollars than sense buying Apple's shiny baubles year after year are the reason I can now just push a button and deploy a 96-core server at my day job, and the reason the Xbox Series X is so much better than the Xbox One X.
- Big Tech, having worked tirelessly to put socialists into office, have just discovered that they've put socialists into office. (BBC)
The G7 economies are pushing a new unified tax plan to shake down multinationals for every penny they've got.
And Big Tech has made quite sure that they have no friends on either side of the aisle.
- Windows 11? With one email, Microsoft has the attention of the world. (Thurrott.com)
This is on the premium side of the site - commentary and analysis rather than news and reviews, but you can read it with a free subscription and Paul Thurrott is a decent guy.
Since the new announcement hasn't happened yet, most of the article covers the missteps Microsoft has made in recent years and what they need to do to recover.
I was going to pair this with a counterpoint article that said that no-one cares about the new version of Windows, but when I followed the link I found that the article didn't actually say that.
So, Microsoft, please don't screw this up. I recently reinstalled a music editing package I originally bought in 2006, and which hasn't been updated in nearly that long - and it worked. It simply worked. It's a 32-bit app, and those aren't supported at all on modern versions of MacOS, but on Windows it simply worked.
I appreciate that. But please try to make some progress on some of your own stuff that hasn't been updated since 2006.
Not Exactly Tech News
- Amelia Watson of Hololive held her long-awaited charity stream today, raising funds for animal shelters. This is the first charity stream Hololive has run by itself, and it was viewed as something of a test case.
She reached three times her original goal before the stream could even start, and ended at more than fifteen times.
Watch the counter when she appears on stream. It goes up by $18,000 in three minutes.
Twitter Gonna Twitter Video of the Day
Twitter's going to automatically mute and block accounts, which comes as startling news to me after getting suspended 116 times in a single year before they gave up and banned me entirely.
Everything not compulsory is forbidden. Most of what is compulsory is also forbidden, because fuck you, that's why.
Panty and Stocking Anime Music Video of the Day
The show is Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt, and while it's certainly not one of may favourites - I didn't even make it through the single season - this is a great clip.
It's done in a cheap animation style by people who actually know how to animate. It's also loaded with gross-out humour. So if you like that sort of thing, maybe take a look.
I'm So Classy Anime Music Video of the Day
This video is from exactly the opposite end of the AMV spectrum, but it's every bit as good, because good is a scalar metric imposed on an infinitely differentiable Riemannian manifold.
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Saturday, June 05
Bonfire Of The Motes Edition
Top Story
- Pay no attention to the censor behind the curtain: Bing searches - and thus also DuckDuckGo searches - for "tank man" were returning no results. (Motherboard)
Tank Man of course being the hero who stood down a column of armoured vehicles armed only with a couple of grocery bags, and yesterday being the 32nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
The search results are back and Microsoft blames human error. (Gizmodo)
Bing is permitted to operate in China, unlike Google, but does so under strict censorship rules. Nothing that reflects badly on the genocidal fascist rulers of that country is allowed.
I suspect that what we saw yesterday was human error - a glimpse into the the daily reality of the Chinese people under their government's massive propaganda machine.
Meanwhile the state-run Global Times is openly boasting on Twitter of the country's mutilation of history.
And those who remember Tiananmen are being arrested in Hong Kong. (PJ Media)
They're all living away from their families to study at this school, staying at the luxurious (cough) Hidamari Apartments nearby. Well, they're better maintained than Maison Ikkoku anyway.
Nothing particularly dramatic happens during the series; no explosions, no major fires, just daily life. But then the biggest point of excitement in Non Non Biyori is when the girls get mugged by a squirrel, and that show is one of the best of the past decade. Not every show has to feature a PT boat shooting down a helicopter. Maybe only one or two a year.
Tech News
- It's getting cold here in Sydney, which this being a subtropical coastal region means that in the middle of winter if you sit in an unheated house for hours doing nothing more energetic than occasionally moving the mouse you will eventually notice that you're cold and turn on the reverse cycle on the AC.
It's snowed here exactly once in my lifetime, in one location, and it melted within the hour.
- Do not adjust your vBIOS. (Tom's Hardware)
Alienware laptops with RTX 3070s have been shipping with 10% of the GPU cores missing. Dell is rolling out a patch, because while that's a hardware problem it's not a hardware problem.
- Nvidia says that smart phones aren't ready for ray-tracing. (Tom's Hardware)
What they mean by that is that Apple and AMD are either shipping or preparing mobile chips with ray-tracing - it's currently in high-end iPads and coming soon to a range of Samsung mobile products using AMD graphics - and Nvidia and Arm don't have anything to compete.
On the other hand, AMD said something similar about Nvidia's first attempts at ray-tracing on the desktop.
On the third hand... They were right, at the time.
- Speaking of which, if you're finding video cards just too darn cheap and readily available, AMD is bringing out their Radeon Pro W6800. (Tom's Hardware)
The GPU is equivalent to a fully-configured 6900 XT, but with 32GB of GDDR6 RAM rather than 16. It also has six DisplayPort outputs so you can run six 4K monitors at once - though apparently only one 8K monitor. Not sure how many people are using multiple 8K monitors just yet, anyway; the only readily available model I know of will set you back four grand.
That said, 6800 and 6800 XT cards seem to be showing up again. At roughly double the launch price, true, but they are in stock at online stores.
- The usual suspects are fleeing Medium after a memo from CEO and Twitter co-founder Ev Williams asked them to at least try not to be complete shitbiscuits on company time. (Tech Crunch)
Frankly this seems like a brilliant way to simultaneously reduce expenses and boost productivity: Just leak a milquetoast memo suggesting the employees should be a tad bit less woke and the worst offenders will self-identify and storm out and you won't even need to pay severance.
The employees quoted in the article are just comically un-self-aware.
- DON'T CONNECT CRITICAL FUCKING INFRASTRUCTURE DIRECTLY TO THE INTERNET. (Ars Technica)
There's a level 9.8 vulnerability in VMware, allowing anyone to stroll in and take over servers - if they already have access to the management network.
There's actually a site that tracks exposed software like this. Great for hackers, but network admins should also go there and check that they are not on the list.
- Nothing more expensive than a free tier. (Cloud Irregular)
I vastly prefer fixed-price services over cloud, particularly anything that promises to automatically scale with load. It sounds great but you're one mistake away from a maxed-out credit card. Lately I've got some servers that are prepaid a year at a time; the cost saving against billed-by-the-hour AWS is huge.
Anyway, the specific problem in this case is Amazon's promise of an "always free" tier of services in AWS that will immediately start charging the card you use for Amazon purchases the moment you step outside their Byzantine grimoire of limits and quotas.
The AWS management interface is, on the whole, insane. Some serious problems have persisted for fifteen years. Even IBM does it better. Google does it far better.
- Russia again. The last big Xcode trojan attack was from China though.
This thing doesn't attack users directly; it infects the machines of iOS developers, and then secretly inserts vulnerabilities into their code.
- Steak is back on the menu. (Bleeping Computer)
JBS says it is fully operational again and delivering delicious beef and bacon (and in Australia, lamb) to a hungry world.
I had some pork steaks for lunch yesterday. No idea if they were processed by JBS; I just added them to my grocery order and they showed up on my doorstep at the appointed time, the way nature intended.
- iPadOS 15 will finally allow the iPad to reach its full potential. (MacWorld)
And 2021 is the year of Linux on the desktop.
...
I mean, it's taken over everything from embedded devices to supercomputers, so it's surprising that's taken as long as it has.
- Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Mozilla are joining forces on browser extensions. (Thurrott.com)
On my new tablet I'm using Brave exclusively. I've even given it the Chrome icon, just to rub it in. Works very well. Chrome on Android doesn't even support extensions.
Anyway, this isn't as bad as it sounds. It's a standardisation effort, and those are even more effective than the Medium approach for sidelining your least productive staff. A standards committee appointment can keep a officious busybody distracted for decades.
- Satire is dead: Startup company Stealth Data seeks to rip aside any pretense of anonymity on the internet in the name of because fuck you, that's why. (Slashdot)
The main article is on a site called Bizjournals which requires a paid subscription or skill with the Chrome dev tools to read. But the idiots involved in this look like - literally, because they're pictured in the article - look like caricatures created by the idiots in the Medium story above.
- Microsoft: Developers, developers, developers!
Apple: Fuck you, you whiny little shits. You didn't build this. (Marco Arment)
This comes out of Apple's posturing in the Epic Games case. Because the allegations of unfair practices are self-evidently true, and an adverse decision could slaughter its cash cow, Apple has been throwing everyone under the bus, including themselves, notably implying that CEO Tim Cook is uninvolved with operations of the company.
Developers are the last thing on Apple's list of concerns.
Weekly News Stuff Video of the Day
Steve is here with all the details. Believe it or not, I skim over the really geeky stuff.
Subaru Sits Down Video Video of the Day
So, that Vtuber who was complaining that her duck was getting more views than she was, has got 1.15 million views on an eleven second clip of her sitting on a chair. And to be clear, this is a fully-clothed 3D model.
Yes, I watch Hololive regularly. There was a fun stream just this morning where Ina was building an underwater cafe in Minecraft and their server glitched while she was transporting a cat convoy through the subway to Atlantis... Um. Doesn't mean I understand even 10% of what is going on.
I think the best introduction to this stuff is still where I came in: Korone's classic game streams.
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