It's a duck pond.
Why aren't there any ducks?
I don't know. There's never any ducks.
Then how do you know it's a duck pond?
Monday, May 24
Every Week Is Shark Week In Shark Town Edition
Top Story
- So apparently yesterday's AMV - Kevin Caldwell's classic Engel - doesn't play in the US. There's only one copy of it on YouTube that I can find so I can't even try to offer an alternative.
It is still available for download on AnimeMusicVideos.com. It's video number 230 on that site. The latest arrival is number 206,621.
- If Apple is the only organisation capable of defending our privacy, it's time to panic. (The Guardian)
Apple isn't protecting your private information, you obtuse womble. It's monopolising it.
But it is good to see the Big Tech companies fighting among themselves; it's when they all agree on something that you really know you're about to get screwed. Like legislation with bipartisan support, it is never about what is good for you.
(I just checked, and no, there was a gap of nearly a year before Ranma started airing.)
Tech News
- The TI-84 Plus CE Python Graphing Calculator runs Python. (Tom's Hardware)
Well, Circuit Python to be precise, which is a version of MicroPython, which is not actually Python but looks a lot like one and is quite good at its job.
- Chia has written 186 exabytes of data to 10 exabytes of disk. (WCCFTech)
That's a lot.
- That page, by the way, had an ad for the HP Omen 15 (at least for me). It's currently $1050 with a a 6 core Ryzen 5600H - which I think is Zen 2, not Zen 3, but it doesn't make a huge difference, RTX 3060 graphics, a 15" 1080p screen, 8GB RAM, 512GB of NVMe storage, and the Four Essential Keys in the standard desktop layout.
16GB of RAM is only another $50, and the nice 2560x1440 display option is $160. If you want to step up to an 8 core 5800H and an RTX 3070, that adds $340. So it adds up if you want all the factory options.
Shipping date, though, is July.
- A man, a plan, a YouTube channel: Louis Rossman. (Columbia News Service)
Anyone who thinks I'm tough on Apple should watch Rossman's videos where he repairs the blighted things.
- There are close to half a million open jobs in computer and network security in the US. (CBS)
Why?
Because the job sucks. It's like being a sewer maintenance worker only the rats shoot back.
- Is this dirt cheap no-name USB-C to 2.5GbE adaptor on Amazon any good? (Serve the Home)
Actually.... Yeah. It is. Surprise!
Louis Rossman MacBook Logic Board Repair Warranty Job Video of the Day
Before Hololive I watched every single one of these. Well, more I played them on the third monitor while I worked to help mute the screams of the damned from next door. (I work from home and my neighbours have small children. About thirty of them it sometimes seems.)
What Poor Company Will Steve Eviscerate This Time Video of the Day
Cyberpower. This one almost didn't suck.
I mentioned in the Dell video that there was a second part that went over the rest of the problems. Here it is.
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Sunday, May 23
And Your Little God Too Edition
Top Stories
- Several more sources are reporting on the new dual-actuator drive from Seagate. None of them mention the price.
I think it's a pretty safe bet that it costs more than just buying two drives and putting them in RAID-1.
- You own nothing. (Motherboard)
An airbag vest for motorcyclists sounds like a potentially neat idea. This one, though, silently after some warnings - probably - stops working if your monthly payment doesn't go through, which sounds to me like a great way for the manufacturer to get sued out of existence.
Someone arrange the lawyers, I'll bring popcorn.
Highly recommended.
That's not the only version, though. There's also a series of 48 short comedy episodes from 1998 called Adventures of the Mini-Goddesses which is also fun; it's a kids' cartoon version of the main story but a well-crafted kids' cartoon version.
And there's a movie from 2000 which I recall liking quite a bit, though it's quite a jump from the OVA to the story told in that movie.
There's also a 26 episode TV series from 2005 that I wasn't crazy about - I'll get to why in a moment - and a 24-episode sequel series from 2006, which I don't recall watching, and a two-episode OVA from from 2007 and a three-episode OVA from 2011, all adapted from a 48-volume original manga series that ran from 1988 to 2014 and, apparently, just when it had finally reached a conclusion - I gave up on that about fifteen years ago - started up again in 2019 with another three volumes out so far.
The manga has sold over 25 million copies, half to fans, and the other half, so far as I can tell, to masochists.
I like the original OVA series because it picks five self-contained stories from the manga (including the origin stories of the four main characters), tells those, and is done.
I don't like the TV version because it is faithful to the manga, retelling the complete story, chapter by chapter, and the manga is just painfully slow moving.
Tech News
- AMD's socket AM5 is on its way with 1718 pins. (WCCFTech)
That's about 400 more pins than AM4 but it doesn't sound like it will bring major functional changes. It will support DDR5 RAM, which requires more pins per module than DDR5 - each module provides two 32-bit channels each with independent addressing and ECC, instead of a single 64-bit channel. This adds about 40 signals per module but provides much better support for multi-threaded workloads.
Zen 4 won't be out until next year, so the first parts to use socket AM5 will the upcoming Rembrandt APU with Zen 3 cores and RDNA2 graphics.
(Similarly, the first parts on socket AM4 weren't Zen 1, but an APU built on an older Bulldozer family core. This allowed manufacturers to qualify their boards ready for the arrival of Ryzen.)
- How to disable Windows 10's crappy new newsfeed. (Bleeping Computer)
Alternately, install Start10 from Stardock.
- The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano is a 13" thin-and-light laptop with the Four Essential Keys. (Thurrott.com)
The location of the keys is slightly awkward, but they are present, and in a laptop less than twelve inches wide and weighing under two pounds there's just not a whole lot of room for perfect keyboard layouts.
It comes with an 11th gen Intel CPU, up to 16GB of RAM and 1TB of NVMe storage, a 2160x1350 screen (a 16:10 ratio), two Thunderbolt ports, and a headphone jack.
So I/O is rather on the light side. It does however have a fingerprint scanner and a physical shutter for the webcam, so when you turn it off, it is off.
- The Indian government has asked that social media companies remove references to "Bombay Bat Soup Death Plague", which is the term that took hold after they previously requested the same firms to remove references to the "Indian variant" of COVID-19. (Reuters)
Slow learners.
The Only Good Thing to Come Out of Evangelion Anime Music Video of the Day
This one was originally created with two VHS decks and a stopwatch. When you notice that the lip-sync isn't perfect, it's actually a miracle that it lines up at all given the technology available.
This version is a frame-exact remake from the DVD release, but I think the original is still floating around somewhere.
Disclaimer: Gott weiß ich will kein Engel sein.
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Saturday, May 22
There You Go Again Edition
Top Story
- So we've been working very hard at my day job to land a major account, and at the last minute a second big account piggy-backed on that major account, and now both want to sign and I'm dealing with that kind of request:
We know we bought a car, and we agreed that delivery isn't until August, but now we need it to fly.
At Mach 2.
Under water.
By Friday.
- Seagate is also doing dumb things: Dual-actuator disk drives. (Tom's Hardware)
Those existed once before but got killed deader than a trilobite by the rise of RAID, because just having two disk drives is both cheaper and faster than fussing around with fancy mechanical designs. And more reliable too.
And now if you need high performance you would always go for SSDs rather than struggling with large RAID arrays, so it's double pointless.
They're doing it anyway.
Well, specifically here Hololive Alternative, since Hololive itself is a virtual idol group COUGH* and not an anime series. Hololive Alternative isn't an anime series either; at least not yet. It's a media production and the first release will be a manga covering the adventures of pirate captain Marine.
However, if and when Hololive does announce an anime version, the inquest will find that they died by suffocation from the weight of all the money thrown at them. The smallest of Hololive's more than forty channels has 300,000 subscribers.
* I just watch it for the Minecraft streams, honest. Counting collab streams just once - even when they include the entirety of Gen 0 - they've played 17 hours of Minecraft already today.
Tech News
- Apple's App Store is not a monopoly, says Apple CEO Tim Cook, because the company is run by morons. (Tech Crunch)
When the law is on your side, pound on the law. When the facts are on your side, pound on the facts. When neither is on your side, pretend to be retarded.
- Cook also said that Apple's digital slaves cannot be trusted to make decisions for themselves. (ZDNet)
True. They were dumb enough to buy Apple products.
- China has called out over 100 companies including TikTok owner ByteDance for mishandling user data. (South China Morning Post)
As always, it's a demarcation dispute.
- 35GB here, 35GB there, soon you're talking about real memory.
Particularly since this specifically affects Apple's Arm-based Macs and those support a maximum of 16GB of RAM.
- The Pareto Principle applies recursively. (Haxx.se)
The author of widely-used HTTP request library/tool Curl responds here to claims made by various nobodies that they could rewrite Curl in 100 lines in the space of a weekend.
Yeah, well, sort of. I once wrote an email server over the weekend. I used it personally for a while, but nobody else ever did, and nobody would have wanted to.
A skilled programmer could probably write a tool that supported 99% of the usage of Curl in, if not a weekend, then a week.
But that's 99% of the usage, by volume, which represents maybe 1% of the bizarre bullshit required to make code like this work all the time.
You already have a car. You can just buy a plane that flies at Mach 2. And there are plenty of boats. Some of them probably work under water. Friday seems perfectly reasonable to me.
- Microsoft will be publishing any further properties in the Outer Worlds franchise themselves. (WCCFTech)
Fuck you Epic Games Store. Stick to what you're good at, annoying Apple.
- Twitch, being run by totally reasonable and sane people has created a entire new category called Pools, HotTubs, and Beaches. (Twitch)
What your content may actually be about is irrelevant. What matters is the clothes you wear.
- Bad research is cited more often. (UCSD)
What's more, only 12% of citations of papers that have already failed replication bother to mention that replication has failed.
- Linux kernel maintainers have finished cleaning up the mess that the University of Minnesota created. (Phoronix)
80 developers were involved in the review, and 37 patches needed to be removed, either because of malice aforethought or simply because they were crap.
Handicapper General Public Service Announcement of the Day
All of Nvidia's upcoming video cards will have Ethereum mining artificially limited. They did this already with the RTX 3060 but then accidentally released a debug driver that delimited the card, something that is highly likely to happen again.
Meanwhile the crypto market is down mostly because of efforts by totalitarian governments to restrict the free exchange of goods and services.... Which was the primary driver for the crypto bubble in the first place. I'm not making any prediction except that video cards will remain hard to get for another year, at a minimum.
If It's Rocking Don't Bother Stopping Anime Music Video of the Day
This reminds me of a bunch of 90s anime series worth mentioning. It also has a clip from the original Final Fantasy X, which really did look that good.... Except that part was pre-rendered.
Elvis vs. Photoshop Anime Music Video of the Day
Another classic from the early-ish AMV scene - it's so old it features a pre-rendered clip from Final Fantasy VIII. Every frame of this video was composited individually in Photoshop, because there was no better tool available to hobbyists back then. Go back much further and everything was done with a stopwatch and a 1 inch editing deck. Or film and a sharp pair of scissors.
Disclaimer: Oh, just one more thing...
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Friday, May 21
Omens And Portents Edition
In Memoriam
- Kentaro Miura, creator of the massively popular manga series Berserk, passed away earlier this month from an acute aortic dissection. He was only 54.
Berserk has sold over fifty million copies and is well known for its fantastically detailed artwork - at least in recent volumes - and its long delays between volumes. It looks like the conclusion to the series has now gone to the great TBA in the sky.
I haven't watched the Berserk anime - and the most recent series was roundly panned - but if you don't mind scenes of graphic graphicness and are willing to put in a couple of volumes while the illustrator's art evolves, I can highly recommend the manga.
It sure as hell ain't for kids though.
Top Story
- HP's Omen 16 and 17 have the Four Essential Keys. (WCCFTech)
In fact, they have the ten essential keys - the entire cursor area you'd find on a full desktop keyboard is present exactly as it should be.
They also have eight-core CPUs from Intel or AMD, up to 64GB of RAM - user upgradeable - and 1TB of NVMe SSD - probably also user upgradeable, and a 2560x1440 165Hz display with 100% sRGB colour.
The 16" model has AMD or Intel CPUs and Radeon 6000 family or Nvidia graphics up to the RTX 3070; the 17" model is Intel only with Nvidia graphics up to the RTX 3080.
I/O includes one USB-C (Thunderbolt on Intel models), three USB-A, mini DisplayPort, HDMI, a full size SD card slot, a combo audio jack, and wired Ethernet.
They don't specify dimensions or weight but this is a serious laptop for serious laps, not some disposable bit of thin-and-light frippery.
All models ship next month with prices starting at $1050.
Tech News
- The ASRack B550D4-4L is a budget motherboard for entry-level servers. (AnandTech)
Where "entry level" is relative, and now means up to 16 cores at 4.9GHz, 128GB of ECC RAM, and five integrated Ethernet ports, albeit only gigabit speeds and one reserved for the management interface.
It only comes with six SATA ports and one M.2 slot, so this wouldn't be the first choice for a storage server, but is very close to the specs of the motherboard in our main server (the one that caught fire) which is also an ASRack. If you just want to add an M.2 drive and get a busy website up and running it will do just fine.
- New SSD firmware from Phison and Cigent (the names are dumb but Phison produces solid SSD controllers) makes your drive go hedgehog when it comes under attack. (Tom's Hardware)
It can hide files from the operating system entirely, so even if an attacker has broken into your computer, they won't be able to see critical files - they can't encrypt them or exfiltrate them.
Until, of course, that also gets hacked.
- Speaking of which, the Irish High Court has issued an injunction blocking criminals from committing crimes. (Bleeping Computer)
That'll solve everything.
- Google is opening a retail store in New York City. (Thurrott.com)
We’ll clean all spaces multiple times a day. The number of guests inside will be limited to ensure our customers feel safe during their shopping experience, and easy pickup options will also be available. We will continue to closely follow the guidance of the local and national authorities to adapt our health and safety procedures as needed.
What about products?Products?
- At least, as I said before, Apple consistently churns out shiny gadgets. And sometimes the insides even match up to the outsides. (ZDNet)
The new iPad Pro is a pointless beast for most of us - a high end model of something that doesn't need a high-end model - but it fixes the long-standing problem that iOS devices simply didn't have enough memory. Apple proudly proclaimed that they used less memory than Android, but the truth was they simply had less because they skimped on the hardware.
The top of the line iPad Pro has 16GB, which is actually enough for a device like this, because iOS... Can't actually do very much.
- A joint effort between TSMC, National Taiwan University, and MIT has made a breakthrough in the race to produce 1nm chips. (Taiwan News)
What this means is anyone's guess because it's been over a decade since the nominal nanometres of a semiconductor process node bore any relation to physical measurements. If they did, we wouldn't be able to produce 1nm chips in the first place; that's barely the width of 5 silicon atoms, and quantum tunneling would ruin everything.
That day will arrive soon enough, but not just yet.
Gratuitous Taylor Swift Anime Music Video of the Day
Gratuitous Bruno Mars Anime Music Video of the Day
Technically RWBY is a western animated series and not anime, but let it slide.
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Thursday, May 20
Quis Cancellare Ipsos Fuckbiscuits Edition
Top Story
- They addressed the email to "Quis".
I said I would hang around Twitter and poke the bear until they kicked me out, so I shouldn't be surprised if the bear occasionally takes a swipe at me, particularly when the bear is a terrorist-sympathising communist with a room-temperature IQ.
Did I break the rules? Obviously not. But that doesn't matter; it's a seven-day suspension and their appeals process takes more than seven days and results in an automatic rejection anyway. Been there. Done that.
To be accused is to be tried, convicted, and punished.... Punished by having a week off from patrolling the sewers of Plague City.
Oh no.
It's great.
Tech News
- Libera.Chat is a new IRC network formed from the ashes of Freenode. (Libera.Chat)
Freenode had been around since 1998, maintained by a staff of volunteers. It had a legal corporation formed to allow it to hold real-world conferences, and that was sold under unexplained circumstances to a holding company in 2017.
Recently the holding company decided this meant it owned the network, so the entire volunteer staff said fuck you and left.
The same shady corporate structure owns VPN provider Private Internet Access, so probably give them a miss as well.
- Telegram founder Paul Dirov says Apple users are "digital slaves". (WCCFTech)
Well, yes.
- Hetzner - a major European hosting provider - has banned cyrpto mining. (Bleeping Computer)
I've mentioned before that Chia will fry low-end consumer SSDs, but you're just fine on hard drives or enterprise SSDs... Says the founder of Chia, who totally wouldn't have a stake in this.
- Google is supporting RSS again. (Thurrott.com)
At some point and in some form. Maybe. There's an experimental feature currently in the Android version of the Chrome canary release that only works in the US, so thanks, Google, that really helps me test it.
- Android 12 targets the iPhone's biggest weakness. (ZDNet)
More open? Longer update guarantees? Better support for third-party app stores?
Nope. You can change the colours of the UI.
- MacOS is also the sewers of Plague City says... Apple's Senior Vice President for Software Development. (9to5Mac)
This is another gem coming out of Epic's lawsuit over Apple's digital slavery. (Note that no-one cares much about Apple's real-world slavery. No lawsuits for them.)
Apple is so determined to protect their theft of 30% of everything the comes within 400 yards of the App Store that they are willing to throw the entire Mac division under the bus.
Though they've been working privately towards that goal for years, so I guess it's really nothing new except for the public announcement.
- China has banned financial services providers from having anything to do with cryptocurrencies. (CNBC)
The price of Bitcoin plunged 30% on the news, from $insanity to $insanity-30%.
This is, of course, entirely about power. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are massively popular in China because they allow some glimpse of an illusion of escaping the totalitarian regime that runs the country. The totalitarian regime of course cannot permit that.
- The EU Parliament has adopted a report demanding 24x7 takedowns of pirate streams with a 30-minute mandatory resolution time. (TorrentFreak)
There's no way that's not going to cause problems.
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Looks like I'm on double secret probation.

Criticising people for siding with terrorists: 7 day suspension.
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The server was getting overloaded with crappy requests again, but I couldn't see any difference between the crappy requests overloading the server and the usual crappy requests that only take about 50 milliseconds and cause no problems at all.
Except that we were also getting indexed by Google and the Google bot was tracking links to RSS feeds in places where RSS feeds don't really belong but the server will do its best to fulfil anyway.
So I blocked a couple of those. Not all of them, just a couple.
And the problem was resolved.
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Wednesday, May 19
Yes We Have No Minecraft Edition
Top Story
- Which weird hybrid SSD should you buy? (AnandTech)
The short answer is no, but in fact both drives have particular strengths that produce convincing wins on certain benchmarks.
The Enmotus FuzeDrive has 128GB of SLC cache to speed up its 1.4TB of QLC storage. QLC flash is cheap but slow; SLC flash is, unsurprisingly, exactly four times as expensive, but can be more than four times as fast in certain cases.
Where this drive shines is when it's full. Consumer SSDs slow down significantly when they're full, because they have to spend more and more time erasing and remapping blocks to store new data. Because the FuzeDrive always writes to its very fast SLC cache and only later flushes to the main QLC storage, it never really slows down at all, even when it's 99% full.
The Intel H20 pairs up to 1TB of QLC flash with 32GB of Optane storage - another technology entirely. The H20 doesn't excel at bandwidth tests because the flash and Optane halves of the drive are on separate PCIe lanes, each getting only half of the available bandwidth.
But on latency tests - how long it takes to read a single, small chunk of data - it is up to five times faster than a regular SSD.
On the third hand, this drive only works with an 11th gen Intel CPU, a 500-series chipset, and a special driver. Lacking any of those what you have is - at best - a third rate and severely overpriced SSD.
Tech News
- movcc is a C compiler. (GitHub)
This one is slightly different to your typical C compiler, though: The code it produces consists exclusively of MOV instructions. MOV on the x86 architecture (and many other designs) is Turing complete, so although no-one sane would want to do so, you can write any program with just that one instruction.Q: Why did you make this? A: I thought it would be funny.
- Chrome can now automatically fix stolen passwords. (Tech Crunch)
If Google detects that a password you've saved is out in the wild, Chrome will automatically log in to that site with the old passwords, generate a new password, replace the old with the new, and remember the new one for you.
They're only doing this for certain specific whitelisted sites at the moment, but nowhere in the article does it mention opting in to the program. That question doesn't even seem to occur to these people.
- Ethereum's switch from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake will cut power consumption by more than 99%. (Crypto Briefing)
When this will happen is another question entirely. There's good money right now in mining Ethereum, and this change will erase that. The miners are not enthused at the prospect.
Without this change, though, Ethereum is dead. Recent spikes in the price of ETH and load on the blockchain have pushed the cost of even the simplest transactions over $20.
- Twitter is now co-operating with Russia. (TorrentFreak)
The Russian authorities have already been spying on Twitter traffic and throttling the bandwidth to force the company to comply.
I'd be far more sympathetic with Russia if they'd just banned Twitter for causing rats in laboratory cancer, or with Twitter if they just told Russia to go fuck themselves with a railroad spike, but neither of those much desired outcomes actually eventuated.
Bonus Anime Opening Video of the Day
It's Luna Varga, a four-episode OVA from 1991.
Yes, Luna is sitting on the forehead of an enormous rampaging dinosaur. Let's go with that. This is Japan, there certainly wouldn't be anything weird going on.
Dude, Don't Get A Dell Video of the Dell
With video cards in desperately short supply, it's tempting to buy a pre-built system from a major OEM rather than build your own.
But don't buy a Dell G5 5000, because it's such a piece of poop they had to break the review into two episodes to cover all the problems.
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Ina (of Hololive EN) slept in and missed her scheduled Minecraft stream - by two hours - and Kiara (also of Hololive EN) started her own stream and spent two hours roasting her.
With a cup of coffee in hand her virtual legs up on her virtual desk. Only Live2D doesn't actually do that so the legs don't move when her body does - though they do move independently which is just slightly disconcerting.
Ina still has 15,000 people waiting after now two and a half hours, and Kiara's roast got over 30,000 live viewers.
I checked The Hololive Minecraft stream index, saw Ina had streamed, clicked on the link, and thought YouTube was broken because it was showing me the "waiting for livestream" message rather than replaying it.
And Ollie is scheduled to invade the EN Minecraft server at lunch time.
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Tuesday, May 18
The Way We Weren't Edition
Top Story
- On June 8 the signal goes out and millions of Amazon Alexa and Echo devices will start turning everything around them into paperclips. (Inc)
Well, more precisely, every single Alexa and Echo device that hasn't been explicitly opted out will combine to form a single world-spanning mesh network.
This was the plot of a Matt Smith episode of Doctor Who. In fact, this was the plot of two Matt Smith episodes of Doctor Who, and also two David Tennant episodes, and a William Hartnell story, and a couple of Jon Pertwee stories as well.
I just happen to like it.
Tech News
- Intel's Tiger Lake-H high-end laptop parts are here-ish. So how do they perform? (AnandTech)
That's kind of complicated. They're not bad, performance-wise, but they sure are power-hungry. Configured with a 65W TDP they compete evenly with a 35W AMD part.
On the one hand, they seem to be held back from their full potential because the reference laptop design overheats when running at 65W.
On the other hand, the reference laptop design overheats when running at 65W.
- Ah, Amazon S3 access policies, you're just as fucked up as the day we met, about two trillion dollars ago.
- There may be a very minor Ryzen 5000 refresh on the way. (Tom's Hardware)
Similar to the 3000XT models. The advantage this refresh would have is that it could bump AMD over the 5GHz line, which they haven't crossed since the FX-9590, a 220W monster that despite its power draw was only just competitive with Intel's chips of the day.
- Breakthrough research has finally linked Linear A to Linear B. (Greek Reporter)
Linear B was used in Mycenaean Greece, and is the oldest form of written Greek. Once it was determined that the language was in fact Greek, scholars in the 1950s - well, actually it was initially one English architect - were able to map certain words to place names that persist today and from there decipher the entire script.
Linear B is adapted from Linear A, the script used to write inscriptions in Minoan Crete. We have over 1400 such inscriptions and clay tablets, but no-one knows how to read any of them.
The breakthrough shows the mapping between the older Linear A and Linear B, and it turns out to be closer than expected. This means that the the place name trick can be used again - once we recognise a place name in a Linear B script, we can map it to Linear A and find it in the older tablets.
Essentially we can now read Linear A. We just don't know what it means, because the Minoans didn't speak Greek.
- Apple is devoted to inclusivity, privacy, and civil liberties unless there's money involved in which case they will happily climb in bed with a genocidal fascist dictatorship. (New York Times)
And worse, they will do this even when it costs them money.
And still lecture you endlessly on how much more enlightened they are.
- LinkedIn - owned by Microsoft - also appears to be censoring critics of the Chinese regime. (Bloomberg)
Microsoft is generally the least worst of Big Tech, but that's all relative. In absolute terms, they are - most of the time - an uncaring behemoth that will squash you like a bug if you get in the way.
- Android 12 is on its way. (ZDNet)
Generally between versions 4 and 8 of any software, users switch from "can't wait" to "oh fuck, not another one".
With Android, I think it was 7. 6 introduced some critical missing capabilities, though OEMs - including Sony and Samsung - fucked it up anyway.
- Apple announced in court that it didn't take a cut of $400 billion of goods it didn't sell. (The Verge)
People are acting as if Apple made a coherent point.
- Parler is back on the App Store. (Reuters)
At this point the glow can probably be seen from Alpha Centauri.
Haba Haba Zot Zot Video of the Day
This is a scene-for-scene remake of the redo version of the classic AMV by Nic Neidenbach from 2001, using the recent Blu-Ray release of El Hazard.
This is the redo version, and you can see that whoever was in charge of the Blu-Ray release did an absolutely stellar job.
Disclaimer: Haba haba mori mori.
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