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Thursday, December 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 December 2020

Botangelion Edition

Tech News

  • Qualcomm has announced the Snapdragon 888, with the new high-end Arm X1 core.  (AnandTech)

    But it only has one of those cores, supported by three A78 cores and four rather decrepit A55 low-power cores.  It does have an integrated 5G modem, so it looks like that's where they spent the engineering effort.

    Manufactured on Samsung's 5nm process, which is good to see because TSMC's 5nm capacity is sold out.


  • When 10GbE doesn't cut it anymore: The Supermicro AOC-S100GC-i2C.  (Serve the Home)

    This is a basic dual-port 100GbE card.  No on-board FPGA or CPU, no 64GB of embedded RAM, though it does have packet processing to offload some of the work from the CPU.

    Networking is at an odd place in computer hardware.  You can simply plunk down a thousand bucks and get a network card ten (or a hundred) times faster than what you already have.  A card like this maxes out a PCIe 4.0 x16 slot, though, so you can't get that much faster with standard server motherboards.


  • α = 1/137.03599920611  (Quanta)

    But we have no idea why.  It just does.


  • Nvidia cards are in short supply because everything that goes into them is in short supply.  (Tom's Hardware)

    And even if they ordered an increase in wafer production three months ago, and Samsung started work immediately, and the other components are available, it will be another two months before the increased volume reaches store shelves.


  • A teardown of five PS5s found five different fans.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Some people have complained about the noise of the PS5, while others are happy.  Turns out to be something of a lottery.

    There are reports of noisy Xbox Series Xs as well, but those seem to be specifically due to a cable escaping slightly from a clip and hitting the fan blade.  Poking it back into the clip with a screwdriver - which you can do without opening the case - fixes that.  (Microsoft)

    Also in that thread: "My Xbox runs hot when running Call of Duty at 4K 120Hz."


I Don't Really Play Minecraft Video of the Day



The Hololive JP Minecraft server is half Disneyland and half World War III.  I do love how in the second video they're looking for a friend and see a cute doggy in the park - well, a giant lion-sniper anyway - and totally forget what they came there for.


Disclaimer: At night, the ice weasels come.

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Wednesday, December 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 December 2020

Washer Dryer Edition

Tech News

  • Getting a new combination washer/dryer on Friday.  The old one was starting to get rather fussy, sometimes complaining that it couldn't drain the water when it didn't have any water, and the dryer function stopped working at all. 

    And then one day recently I loaded it up and set it to work and it made an unpleasant noise followed by the rattle of bits coming off some mechanism inside and now it won't talk to me at all.

    It's over ten years old and way out of warranty, so time for a new one.


  • The recommended way to install LXC on a system not running ZFS is to create a nice big file on whatever filesystem you are using - ext4 probably - and turn that into a ZFS volume.

    That's not a good idea when you're running directly on hardware, because it prevents ZFS detecting and managing hardware problems, and adds extra CPU load to every I/O.

    But on a VPS you're not supposed to be seeing I/O errors in the first place, and if you are you're kind of hosed.  And since I'm getting acceptable performance with two cores and 4GB of RAM - until I run low on memory - a 12 core server with 48GB of RAM should be quite able to absorb that extra load.


  • New Aoi is now called Mikan, at least as far as it is concerned.  The management portal at SSDNodes doesn't let you change the name of your servers, so there it will remain Aoi forever.


  • The RTX 3060 Ti competes pretty evenly with the old 2080 Super.  (Tom's Hardware)

    So far it's not even listed anywhere as out of stock, so good luck getting one.


  • When the SSD you get is not quite the SSD you bought.  (Tom's Hardware)

    This article focuses on the Adata XPG SX8200 Pro, which has been sold in three different versions (different controllers and flash chips) without any notification or change to the model number, but Adata isn't the only company to have done this.

    And to be clear, the newer models of the Adata drive don't suck; they didn't drop from TLC to QLC flash or anything egregious like that.  But at least change the model number, guys.  Make it the SX8200 Pro S if you change from Micron to Samsung flash, or something.


  • Salesforce is buying Slack for some ridiculous amount of money.  (Tech Crunch)

    Just install GitLab.  Contains everything you need, including developer chat.  Does need at least 4GB of RAM these days, though.


  • A new experimental drug reverses age-related cognitive decline.  (Neuroscience News)

    In mice.

    Good news for Algernon, I suppose.


  • Deploying your own dedicated hardware for serverless apps.  (Cortex.dev)

    I mean, I guess.


  • AWS has announced Habana Gaudi instances.  (Serve the Home)

    These are apparently AI training engines - high-end hardware used to construct AI models that you can then deploy to cheaper systems, because learning is harder than doing.


  • HPE - Hewlett Packard's enterprise division since the Gallification - is moving from San Jose to Houston.  (CNBC)

    That's one way to solve the Bay Area housing crisis.


Not At All Tech News

  • Burn it to the ground and sow the ground with salt.

Disclaimer: Clunk thud rattle rattle rattle poing that will be a thousand dollars thanks.

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Tuesday, December 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 December 2020

Fifty Shades Of Blue Edition

Tech News

  • I have two servers named Aoi again.  Oops.


  • AMD expects AMD graphics cards to be selling at MSRP at some point.  Probably.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Probably next year though.


  • Amazon AWS has virtual Macs.  (Amazon)

    Or rather, they offer physical Macs that you can rent by the hour.

    Could be very useful for developers trying to ship both x86 and Arm versions of their apps.  Because you wouldn't want to buy one.


  • I don't want an iPhone but on the other hand would it kill Android device makers to produce a mid-range phone with a sub-6" screen?  (AnandTech)


  • Just recently officials cancelled planned renovations to the Arecibo radio telescope after a second cable snapped, leading engineers to conclude it was in danger of collapse and could not be safely repaired.

    Sadly, they were right.

    Thankfully because they were right, no-one was hurt.


  • Nvidia just launched the RTX 3060 Ti, which is 80% of a 3070 for 80% of the price.  But it includes the full 8GB of RAM, so that's a pretty good deal.

    If you can get one, which seems unlikely since it's the same chip as the 3070.




Disclaimer: And even if the answer is yes...

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Geek

New New New New New New York Server

SSDNodes is having another one of their sales.  I have a small server with them and though I don't use it heavily it basically behaves itself.  Only problem is its disk space is a bit limited (though larger than my Vultr dev system) and it's tricky to enable ZFS since they don't allow custom installs (which Vultr do).

Their current sale offers both reduced prices and extra storage, so I grabbed the largest node they had on offer.  12 cores, 48GB RAM, 720 GB of NVMe SSD, daily backups.  Since I had some account credit with them and prepaid for a year, the monthly price worked out too good to turn down.

That's where mee.ms will live to start with.  It's in Dallas, so it should be a very short ping from the mee.nu server.  Let's see...  452µs.  Yeah, that will probably do.*

http://ai.mee.nu/images/MidoriSSD-crop.jpg?size=720x&q=95

Host CPU looks like a dual Xeon Silver 4214 which maxes out at 3.2GHz, so it will definitely be slower than a dedicated system with a Ryzen or Xeon W processor, but again, for the price, it's just fine.


* Oh, right.  I was checking up to see what people have been saying about SSDNodes, and I saw from some network speed tests that they are using colo facilities with the same company that bought out the provider hosting mee.nu a couple of years back.  Which means that the two servers aren't merely both in Dallas, not just both in the same datacenter, but on the same network within that datacenter.  Neat.  I can use that.

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Monday, November 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 November 2020

Black Is The New Blue Edition

Tech News

  • The 1TB Western Digital Black SN750 is currently $115 at Amazon and Newegg and direct from the WD online store.  (AnandTech)

    But what about Amazon AU?

    ...

    Yes, there too.

    I just bought two of them.  They worked out to A$181* when they're normally A$269, and the slower Blue model regularly retails for A$165.

    Now I just need to decide on the memory.  The only real bargain I can find currently in stock is the 32GB module, and I'm not certain that will work.

    * US$115 = A$155, plus 10% GST brings it to A$170.  So the "free international shipping" apparently costs A$11.


  • Meanwhile, the best choice for noise-cancelling headphones appears to be the Sony WH-1000XM4.  (Trusted Reviews)

    Those don't seem to be discounted anywhere since they're a brand new release, but that means I don't need to pounce on a sale.  In fact, they're in stock at the local hi-fi store, so I can just wander over there and buy them the next time I get fed up with fan noise.  Or neighbour noise.  Or whatever.


  • The Radeon 6900 XT is still on its way.  (WCCFTech)

    Though you won't be able to get one.

    Meanwhile the third party Radeon 6800 XT cards are turning out very good indeed and you can't get those either.




  • Don't make your users mad.  (The New Stack)

    Seems like good advice, but this is coming from someone who considers Systemd a success story and not metastasis.


  • 35 years with the Amiga.  (Byte Cellar)

    I got mine a bit later than that, but it has indeed been a while.


  • Nvidia allegedly sold $175 million worth of RTX 3000 cards directly to crypto miners.  (WCCFTech)

    Now, this is via WCCFTech and it's using the word "allegedly", so take it with a pound of salt.  But the source is an analyst going over the company's financial reports, so...  Maybe.


Disclaimer: 3400MBps should be enough for anyone.

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Sunday, November 29

Geek

Daily News Stuff 29 November 2020

Ow Fuck Ow Edition

Tech News



We're An Idol Group Like AKB48 Part One Video of the Day



That's the official trailer for the upcoming Hololive live concert.


We're An Idol Group Like AKB48 Part Two Video of the Day



Couple of notes: 

Coco is officially listed as 180cm (5'11") and Marine at 150cm (4'11").  Those are the heights of the characters, but they have to be pretty close to the height of the actress because they're using live 3D motion capture here.  So the height disparity is real.

Second...  Where was I going, oh, right.  They wear an earpiece while doing these 3D routines so they can get instructions from the director without interrupting the session.  Apparently Coco was being told the entire time to tone it down.




Scientific Interest Video of the Day



The complete Coco / Marine Live 3D Performance.



Disclaimer: Error 502 disclaimer.org could not be contacted.  Server is down or overloaded.

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Saturday, November 28

Geek

Daily News Stuff 28 November 2020

Luggable Storage Edition

Tech News

  • Summer has finally arrived.  It wasn't so long ago that I needed to turn the heat back on, and today I've had the air conditioning running full blast.

    I took the Synology servers out of the spare bedroom this morning and now they're going to occupy my coffee table for a while.  The spare room is upstairs, and only downstairs is air conditioned, and I'm not leaving them to melt up there.


  • Was planning to get myself a couple of 1TB Western Digital Blue SN550 SSDs from Amazon during the sales.  The price went down from A$165 to $155 to $145 to $135.

    Then of course they ran out.

    Oh well.  They still have other 1TB NVMe drives in the A$140-150 range, which is fine.


  • ASRock has another range of mini-PCs based on the Ryzen 4000 APU family.  (WCCFTech)

    These are a different shape to NUCs, which are typically around 4"x4"x2".  Instead, the Mars system is 8"x6"x1".

    Ports include HDMI, VGA (why?), five USB 3.2, two USB 2.0,  gigabit Ethernet, audio in and out, and a full-size SD card reader.  It takes two SODIMMs, an M.2 drive, and a 2.5" 9.5mm high SATA hard drive or SSD.

    One of the USB ports is Type C but it doesn't appear to support video, so realistically you're limited to a single monitor.  I think this is designed to mount on the back of a monitor - hence the wide but thin form factor - so that would make sense.


  • A look at the Western Digital Black SN750.  (Serve the Home)

    This is about 40% faster than the SN550 and between 20% and 100% more expensive depending on which prices you look at.  A$400 for the 2TB model is quite attractive so naturally that one is out of stock until January.  


  • Scientists have discovered a huge body of water where you might least expect it: Under the sea.  (New Scientist)

    Specifically, several cubic kilometres of fresh water located about 500 metres below the seabed just off the coast of Hawaii.


Mitchiri Holo Video of the Day



Disclaimer: Just this once, let's not kill da ho.

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Friday, November 27

Geek

Daily News Stuff 27 November 2020

Six Of One, One Hundred And Twenty-Eight Of The Other Edition

Tech News



I Was There, Gandalf Video of the Day

Apparently this is now a meme but nobody knows where it came from.  Except us, of course.

Embedding disabled and I couldn't find an alternate source, so click the link for this one.


Disclaimer: I think you'll find it's a bit less complicated than that.

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Thursday, November 26

Geek

Daily News Stuff 26 November 2020

Turkeyween Edition

Tech News

  • Cowputers are back!  (Walmart, via Tom's Hardware)

    For $399 you get a 3.5lb laptop with a 14" 1080p IPS display, 10th gen Core i5 CPU, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, HDMI, USB-C, two USB-A, microSD, headphone jack, and fingerprint reader.  The Four Essential Keys are present and well-located, and you have a choice of four different colours.

    Unless there's something wrong with the hardware it looks like a bargain.


  • On the other end of the scale, here's a mini-ITX Epyc server motherboard.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Almost.  They call it "deep mini-ITX" because it's about 1.5" longer than standard, but since the Epyc socket is nearly the size of a standard mini-ITX board that's no real surprise.  It will easily fit in larger miniITX cases though - anything with room for a full-size GPU - and any microATX or larger case.

    It supports up to 1TB of RAM, dual 10GbE ports, one PCIe 4.0 x16 slot, one M.2 slot, and six U.2 connectors for 2.5" NVMe SSDs.


  • Leaked benchmarks of the Ryzen 5800U laptop chip suggest that it may be even more faster than expected unless they don't.  (WCCFTech)

    At least on single-threaded tasks, where it beat the 4800U - itself by no means slow - by 38%.  On the multi-threaded test it was only around 10% faster, presumably because there's only so much you can get out of a 7nm chip at a 15W TDP.


  • The Xbox One X is a great gaming console that you shouldn't buy just yet.  (Thurrott.com)

    Since you can't buy it just yet - it's out of stock everywhere - that won't be too much of a problem.


  • Third-party Radeon 6000 video cards have landed and are already sold out.  (Tom's Hardware)

    AMD said earlier that supply would improve dramatically with the launch of these models, designed and made by AMD's partners rather than AMD themselves.  This does not appear to be the case.


  • France is charging a 3% tax on revenue from digital services starting next month.  (NBC News)

    Or, to put it another way, the price of digital services in France just went up by 3%.


  • I can, in fact, get a Ryzen 5900X and a Radeon 6800 XT.  Both are in stock and ready to ship.  If I'm willing to drop A$4699 for a pre-built configuration.  (PCCaseGear)

    It's a nice system, except for only having 32GB of RAM.  But that's quite a lot of money.



Kitty!



Maru has a new baby sister.



Disclaimer: Unexpectedly.

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World

Twitter Archipelago

Back in Twitter Jail, which is the nicest part of Twitter to be perfectly frank.  That's what I get for moderating my language.

Meanwhile...

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