Sunday, September 18
Return Of The Moo Edition
Top Story
- What does the future of AI hold for us? Well first of all replacing the subliterate cretins who write for The Atlantic. (The Atlantic)
I recently started fooling around with Sudowrite, a tool that uses the GPT-3 deep-learning language model to compose predictive text, but at a much more advanced scale than what you might find on your phone or laptop. Quickly, I figured out that I could copy-paste a passage by any writer into the program’s input window and the program would continue writing, sensibly and lyrically. I tried Kafka. I tried Shakespeare. I tried some Romantic poets. The machine could write like any of them. In many cases, I could not distinguish between a computer-generated text and an authorial one.
I've read GPT-3 text. It's bullshit. No matter the subject, it reads like pomo litcrit, because there is no mind behind it. Indeed the entire point of GPT-3 is style over substance.I was delighted at first, and then I was deflated. I was once a professor of Shakespeare; I had dedicated quite a chunk of my life to studying literary history. My knowledge of style and my ability to mimic it had been hard-earned. Now a computer could do all that, instantly and much better.
Most people are not brave enough to admit they are so bad at their jobs they can be replaced by a chat bot.If you asked GPT-3 to continue, say, a Wordsworth poem, the computer’s vocabulary would never be one moment before or after appropriate usage for the poem’s era. This is a skill that no scholar alive has mastered.
If that's a skill no scholar has mastered, how can you tell that GPT-3 is doing it?
To those who know nothing, everything is magic.
Tech News
- Sony has showed off a new range of PCIe 5 SSDs for PCs. (Tom's Hardware)
Sony previously released its own SSDs specifically for the expandable storage for the PS5 (which has strict performance rules), and it looks like the company plans to keep making them. Speeds of these models are up to 9500MBps, and capacities up to 4TB.
- AMD's Threadripper processors are twice as fast for developing large software project as Intel's best workstation chips. (WCCFTech)
Now, that's comparing a 64 core AMD chip to a 32 core Intel chip, so it's not unexpected. But even the 32 core AMD chip is 50% faster than the 32 core Intel model. The 64 core Threadripper has always been constrained by power and heat.
- If you click Show Password in Chrome or Edge and you have Enhanced Spell Check turned on - or in the case of Edge, the Spelling & Grammar add-on installed - your browser might send your password straight to Google or Microsoft. (Bleeping Computer)
Oops.
- Intel's NUC 12 Enthusiast is available for pre-order. (Liliputing)
This model has Intel's own Arc A770 dedicated graphics and a 330W power brick, so it's really, really not something anybody should be buying, particularly not at a starting price of $1699.
- On the other hand, it looks like the regular NUC 12 is also shipping. It comes with an Alder Lake 1240P or 1260P CPU, slots for up to 64GB of DDR4 SODIMMs and an M.2 slot, two USB 4 ports and two HDMI ports supporting a total of four 4k displays, and four regular USB ports.
These new chips are quite a bit faster than the 11th gen equivalents, at least for multi-threaded tasks.
I'd much rather have a Ryzen 6800U, but I don't think there's a mainstream NUC with that CPU yet.
- Speaking of four 4k displays, HP's Pavilion Plus 14 can run two 4k screens via USB C and a third via HDMI. That's nice to see given that some recent Dell models have been cut back and can only run one external monitor at 4k.
The Framework laptop doesn't have a fixed port arrangement - it has four little modules that slot in with whatever mix of ports you want. If you want four HDMI ports, you can do that.
But the integrated graphics can only support four displays in total, including the laptop screen, so what happens if you have four monitors connected? Answer: The fourth is disabled, until you close the lid of the laptop, when it is automatically enabled.
That's pretty good.
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Saturday, September 17
A Plague On Both Your Datacenters Edition
Top Story
- It seems like only yesterday that I mentioned Texas House Bill 20, legislation that attempted to designate large social networks as "common carriers" just like phone companies, severely limiting the companies' ability to engage in viewpoint discrimination. That legislation, and a similar bill in Florida, had been blocked at the district court level.
Which injunction has just been overturned, nay, not so much overturned as nuked from orbit. (The Volokh Conspiracy)A Texas statute named House Bill 20 generally prohibits large social media platforms from censoring speech based on the viewpoint of its speaker.
Since the entire purpose of Twitter post-2018 - at least as its senior executives would have it - is to engage in viewpoint discrimination to protect leftists from reality, this is potentially devastating to the platform.
The platforms urge us to hold that the statute is facially unconstitutional and hence cannot be applied to anyone at any time and under any circumstances.
In urging such sweeping relief, the platforms offer a rather odd inversion of the First Amendment. That Amendment, of course, protects every person’s right to "the freedom of speech.†But the platforms argue that buried somewhere in the person’s enumerated right to free speech lies a corporation’s unenumerated right to muzzle speech.
The implications of the platforms’ argument are staggering. On the platforms’ view, email providers, mobile phone companies, and banks could cancel the accounts of anyone who sends an email, makes a phone call, or spends money in support of a disfavored political party, candidate, or business. What’s worse, the platforms argue that a business can acquire a dominant market position by holding itself out as open to everyone—as Twitter did in championing itself as "the free speech wing of the free speech party.†Blue Br. at 6 & n.4. Then, having cemented itself as the monopolist of "the modern public square,†Packingham v. North Carolina, 137 S. Ct. 1730, 1737 (2017), Twitter unapologetically argues that it could turn around and ban all pro-LGBT speech for no other reason than its employees want to pick on members of that community, Oral Arg. at 22:39–22:52.
Today we reject the idea that corporations have a freewheeling First Amendment right to censor what people say. Because the district court held otherwise, we reverse its injunction and remand for further proceedings.
It would also affect Facebook, of course, and comments on platforms such as YouTube and Instagram, but those platforms at least have other functions, whether you consider them worthwhile or not.
Expect Twitter to become even more frantic in its efforts to be taken over by its most hated enemy, because if HB 20 or the similar Florida legislation survives the court challenges, Elon Musk is the only thing that stands between them and oblivion.
Tech News
- EVGA - the largest of Nvidia's video card partners - is so sick of dealing with the GPU company's bullshit that they've exited the marked entirely. (Tom's Hardware)
Which is no small thing because video cards make up 80% of EVGA's revenue. Though not necessarily 80% of its profits - low margins, or right now, negative margins, being a major point of contention leading to the breakup.
EVGA has said it has no plans to switch to making AMD cards instead. All warrantees for existing cards will continue to be honoured.
- On the other hand GPU mining of Ethereum is now toast. (Tom's Hardware)
This should help with the availability of next generation cards, though not sp much with Nvidia's financials, because they sold a lot of cards to miners over the last two years.
- The 7900X is 30% faster than the 5900X. (Tom's Hardware)
In both single and multi-threaded tests. This Geekbench which is not a great benchmark, but when comparing two almost identical CPUs it's a pretty good indication of what to expect.
This also puts the 12 core 7900X well ahead of the 16 core 5950X. In fact, it would put the 7900X around the same level as the 28 core Xeon Gold 6348, which sells for close to $3000.
This also puts it ahead of Intel's 12900K in both single and multi-threaded tests. (WCCFTech)
Though of course Intel has the 13900K coming soon, which will offer significantly better multi-threaded performance because it has an extra 8 Efficiency cores.
The WCCFTech article has a score for the 7950X as well, which puts it at 31% faster than the 7900X. Perfect scaling would be around 35% (extra cores and a small clock speed boost) so that is quite good.
I'm looking forward to seeing more detailed benchmarks later this month, because I'm planning to build either a 7900X or 7950X system before Christmas.
- Caddy vs. Nginx benchmarks. (Tyblog)
Caddy fares better than I expected; indeed, there's no real reason to use Nginx if Caddy has the functionality you need.
Miscellaneous Australian Vtuber Nonsense Video of the Day
Disclaimer: Parrot Pie
Ingredients: 1 doz. paraqueets, a few slices of beef (underdone cold beef is best for this purpose), 4 rashers of bacon, 3 hard-boiled eggs, minced parsley and lemon peel, pepper and salt, stock, puff-paste.
Mode: Line a pie-dish with the beef cut into slices, over them place 6 of the paraqueets, dredge with flour, fill up the spaces with the egg cut in slices and scatter over the seasoning. Next put in the bacon, cut in small strips, then 6 paraqueets and fill up with the beef, seasoning all well. Pour in stock or water to nearly fill the dish, cover with puff-paste and bake for one hour.
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Friday, September 16
Land Of 998 Dances Edition
Top Story
- Uber got hacked. (Bleeping Computer)
By persuading one idiot to hand over their password, the hacker got access to the company's AWS account, Gmail dashboard, VMWare management, Windows domain, security software, Slack channel, and bug database.
This what we call in the tech biz, "bad".
Tech News
- Think I might buy the cheaper model of the HP Pavilion Plus 14. That's without the OLED screen and with a slightly slower processor, but it's still a 2240x1400 display, and still has 16GB of RAM, and it has the four essential keys, and is 40% cheaper.
The Framework laptop is inviting (because it's about the only small laptop that you can put 64GB of RAM in - and I do have a spare 64GB of RAM) but lacks the four essential keys.
- The Ethereum merge - switching from mining to staking - has happened. (CoinDesk)
On the one hand, they postponed it about two dozen times. On the other hand, it went through without a hiccup.
- Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1, like the independent 9.9.9.9, is fighting censorship on multiple fronts. (TorrentFreak)
Though given Cloudflare's past form they'll fold like a damp tissue if someone says something on Twitter.
- The MOS 7600 is a microcontroller after all. (Old VCR)
This chip powered home versions of Pong and some other very early - very early - video games. Since there was no published documentation and this was over 40 years ago, nobody knew whether the game was built into the chip at the hardware level (possible for something as simple as Pong) or a program written into the chips ROM, if it had any ROM.
The solution? Sand off the top of the chip very carefully - very carefully - and look at it under a microscope. If you know what to look for you can see ROM and RAM and things like shift registers and logic arrays.
Minecraft Computer Video of the Day
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Thursday, September 15
That Which Is, Is Not Edition
Top Story
- Those sudden gurgling sounds indicate that the third bottle of drain cleaner finally did the trick. Love the house. The plumbing not so much.
- The EU has upheld the EU's 4.1 billion euro fine on Google. (Ars Technica)
Google was hit with the fine for anticompetitive practices in the way it forces Android phone makers to bundle specific apps, to make Chrome the default browser, to make Google the default search engine, and in forbidding any company with an Android license from also forking the open source Android codebase.
On the one hand, this smacks of opportunistic looting of a foreign corporation by a corrupt and decaying bureaucracy.
On the other hand, Google should have stayed awake during the antitrust proceedings against Microsoft, or at least read the CliffsNotes.
Tech News
- So what's happening at Patreon? Patreon lays off its entire security team. (PC Magazine)
"Not the entire team", says Patreon.
- Patreon denies hosting child sexual abuse material. (PC Magazine)
"It's lies and slander by counterrevolutionaries", says Patreon.
- 7 Patreon alternatives for rats fleeing a sinking ship. (PC Magazine)
I think I might replace the as-good-as-deceased ZDNet with PC Magazine for my news roundups going forward. Some of this stuff was also at Vice and The Verge, but they presented Patreon's statements as fact rather than as mere statements.
- Don't buy the Dell Inspiron 27. (PC Magazine)
I have two of these and they were my workhorse desktops from 2017 up until May of this year when they got packed into boxes.
The original model had a 4k display, an 8 core Ryzen 1700, and Radeon RX 580 dedicated graphics. With all that they did tend to run a bit hot and one of them started overheating in the last few months, but I could probably fix that with a can of compressed air to blow out all the dust. (I did that before packing it in the box but haven't booted it up since then.)
They've released annual refreshes since then but not one has offered a 4k screen and the graphics options have been mediocre. Though with a 1080p screen and a laptop CPU in a 27" case they probably don't have the same cooling problems.
- The Ryzen 7950X will hit 5.85GHz - on one core, in Antarctica. (WCCFTech)
Base clock is 4.5GHz, all core boost clock is 5.1GHz, single core boost clock is 5.7GHz, and peak clock if thermals permit is 5.85GHz.
That's stock, not overclocked, but unless you have amazing cooling you're unlikely to see anything over 5.7.
- Have I been trained is a search tool that lets you explore all the training data that went into this new crop of AI image generators. (Have I Been Trained)
About 5.7 billion images.
Midjourney doesn't know what Hololive is, though.
- Meanwhile ERNIE-ViLG, the Chinese version, doesn't know what Tiananmen Square is. (MIT Technology Review)
And reports you for re-education for even trying.
- Superhuman AIs are going to kill us all. (Vice)
Probably not, but the paper behind the article does have a point. When you measure anything by proxy, you are promoting the proxy at the expense of the thing you are trying to measure.
Using college education as a proxy measure for success in life led to a flood of useless college degrees. And Google's Pagerank algorithm single-handled created the comment spam industry.
Similarly, current approaches are training AIs to cheat.
- After legislation by Texas and Florida to force social networks to make their moderation rules public (among other things) was delayed by the courts, a third state has joined the fray: California. (The Verge)
Be right back, making popcorn.
We Heard You Like Minecraft, So We Put Minecraft in Your Minecraft So You Can Minecraft While You Minecraft Video of the Day
It's a scaled-down version of Minecraft, with monochrome graphics, but it's implemented on a computer simulated at the transistor level within the game.
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Wednesday, September 14
Party Of The Eighth Part Edition
Top Story
- Congressional testimony from Peiter Zatko says that Twitter is run by idiots and infested with foreign spies. (WCCFTech)
Which former we knew and latter comes as no surprise.
Also that the company executives have been routinely lying to the board, to shareholders, and to the SEC.
Zatko was, until January, Twitter's head of security, before being abruptly fired and then receiving a $7 million settlement.
- It must be purely coincidence then that at least six "research firms" are offering money to besmudge Zatko. (New Yorker)
Former coworkers at Stripe, Google, and DARPA report being bombarded with aggressive requests for paid interviews about Zatko - with the clear implication that you had better be prepared to dish the dirt.The consultant told Provos that its analysts were assessing Zatko’s "personality professionally and socially," his "strengths and weaknesses," "motives for his whistle-blower complaint and any similar past complaints," his "need for attention," and whether he was a "zealot or ideologue," "conspiratorial," or "vengeful." She also said they were interested in Zatko’s "view of Elon Musk and Musk's bid for Twitter."
And they were prepared to pay $1000 per hour for this, which is a wonderful motivation for discovering a previously latent speech impediment.
How this reads to me is that everything Zatko has said is true and Twitter's management is in serious trouble, but I should beware of wishcasting.
Tech News
- A long review of Douglas Hofstadter's Godel, Escher, Bach with no part IV. (Less Wrong)
I first read GEB when I was 16 - it was a Christmas gift from my mum. Which tells you something about both of us. It's probably heavy going for a 16 year old but the way it is written you can read it once and get the surface of it, skimming over the maths-heavy pages, and then come back to it again a year later an get a lot more out of it. Maybe more than once.
Also, Hofstadter is right about the nature of consciousness.
- GlobalWafers is starting construction of a $5 billion factory in Texas this November. (Tom's Hardware)
Before you can build a silicon chip you need a silicon wafer - a sliver of ultra-pure crystalline silicon the size of an LP record. There are many chip factories in the US but this will be the first new wafer factory in 20 years.
- A tale of two hardware firewalls. (Serve the Home)
One good, one less good. And the only difference being the case - but since these are passively cooled, the case makes a big difference.
- China has formally accused the NSA of spying, which is the function of the NSA. (Gizmodo)
This may be true, in which case it's dog-bites-man except that the NSA broke Rule One of Spycraft, which is don't get caught.
Or it may be China making shit up to divert attention from getting caught spying on other countries itself, which, well, same as above.
- They said I was daft to build a datacenter in Strasbourg, but I built it all the same. It burned down. Then I built another one. (The Register)
OVH has built a new, hopefully less flammable, datacenter on the site of the one that burned to the ground last year.
Last year was not a good time for datacenters.
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Tuesday, September 13
Working Five To Eight Edition
Top Story
- Cockatoos in Sydney have learned how to open rubbish bins. (Cell)
Not only that, but the knowledge is spreading.
Tech News
- Intel's upcoming 13700T - a nominal 35W part - is reported to outrun AMD's 105W 5800X in both single and multi-threaded tests. (Tom's Hardware)
This could be true. The 13700K is a 16 core / 24 thread part, while the 5800X is 8 core / 16 threads, so with one core running very fast or all 16 cores running slowly it can outperform the 5800X in the respective benchmarks while using less power. But also being less useful for many workloads, because games (for example) really don't like it when one thread runs at half the speed of the others.
Also it could be using a lot more than 35W.
- Who cares if it scales? (Better Programming)
Me, because whenever someone writes something that doesn't scale, fixing it becomes my problem. Often at 3AM. On a holiday weekend.
- Quad9 continues to fight those jerks at Sony in court. (TorrentFreak)
Quad9 is one of the public, global DNS servers - the others being Google's 8.8.8.8 and Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1. Sony wants it to block pirate sites, even though it doesn't have anything whatsoever to do with the pirate sites - it just performs lookups of DNS information from other servers.
It's a pretty important case because at its core is whether you can repeat a piece of information that is (a) public and (b) verifiably true when someone decides they don't like the implications of that information.
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Monday, September 12
First Catch Your Rabbit Edition
Top Story
- How to build a Greek temple. (Antigone Journal)
In case your plans for the weekend fall through, here's a handy list for a quick DIY project.
Tech News
- And three hundred degrees.
Intel planned to hit 10GHz about 15 years ago, but reality declined to cooperate. Still, it's good to see some level of progress. The only 6GHz CPUs that have shipped previously were in expensive IBM servers.
- The flips side of more gigahertz is, of course, more cores. (Serve the Home)
The article makes the point that if 128 core CPUs are readily available, it makes little sense to run servers with 4 cores that are less than 25% busy most of the time. Slice a 256 core system (two 128 core CPUs) into 256 virtual servers and you get 256 times as many customers in the same amount of rack space.
Unfortunately that's also part of the entire you'll own nothing and like it mantra. It makes economic sense, but I'm going to continue running my own servers as long as it's at all feasible.
- A problem with the planned introduction of 2nm chips has been resolved with the help of a microwave oven. (Tom's Hardware)
Might have some difficulty banning the sale of those to China.
- Coinbase is funding a lawsuit against the treasury department over sanctions on Tornado Cash. (Bleeping Computer)
Tornado Cash is a cryptomixer, and cryptomixers are often used to hide stolen funds. It's online money laundering.
But Tornado Cash isn't a website or a business; it's open source software. It can be used for illegal purposes, but it's hard to see how it can itself be illegal under US law.
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Sunday, September 11
Good, Bad, I'm The Guy With The Typewriter Edition
Top Story
- Nobody buys books anymore. Maybe.
The truth is slightly more complicated, as it usually is. (Countercraft)
Nobody knows how many books are published each year, how many are sold, how many of each book published are sold, or how to work out answers to any of those questions. The first comment to that post - one of the rare exceptions to Rule 1 of the Internet - has a lot of statistics that indicate that, within the quantities that can be quantified, 15% of new books sell fewer than 12 copies, sort of.
Tech News
- While AMD just announced welcome price cuts with its new Ryzen 7000 range - sort of - Intel is planning just the opposite. (WCCFTech)
To unpack that a little, the 7950X, due in about two weeks, is priced at $699, where the 5950X was priced at $799 at launch and was unavailable for months in any case. But the 5950X is now readily available at around $550, so the new chip is simultaneously $100 cheaper and $150 more expensive than the old one, depending on what numbers you are comparing.
Meanwhile Intel is planning on price increases of up to 20%, particularly in the consumer market sector. Intel's consumer product earnings are down 25% year-on-year and the easiest way to bring them back up is to increase prices.
AMD doesn't have to fab capacity booked to steal the market from Intel, so it could come down to a choice of waiting until the AMD chip you want comes into stock again, or settling for an overpriced intel chip. We'll see how that works out.
- WiFi 7 is coming, with transfer rates up to 5Gbps. (Tom's Hardware)
Not sure yet if I'm going to cable the three rooms in my house that don't have wired networking. I'll probably just run the cables on the floor to start with. Right now I'm using WiFi 6 which according to my router's specs can reach 4.8Gbps. The same way a Yugo GV can hit 150mph - if you drop it from a sufficient height.
- Get ready to switch browsers by January. (The Register)
If you haven't already.
Google will be killing Chrome support for fully functional ad blockers - the ones that let you select exactly what you want blocked and where. This is ostensibly because this requires the ad blocked to be able to inspect the contents of all web pages, and the internet requests they make.
But mostly because Google is an advertising company.
Safari and Edge are expected to do the same.
Brave and Mozilla have specifically said they won't, but Mozilla is run by communists so this does not leave us with many viable choices.
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Saturday, September 10
Don't Open The Door Edition
Top Story
- I found a new door to not open. Now that spring has come to New House City I opened up the sliding doors to the dining room to air the place out. I didn't worry about the screens because there aren't many insects around yet.
There are birds, however, and it wasn't ten minutes before I had a magpie as a houseguest.
Turns out that magpie poop does clean out of carpet if you get to it promptly, so that could have gone worse.
- Don't buy a graphics card for more than $500 right now. (Tom's Hardware)
In fact, the article suggests, don't buy a graphics card for more than $250 right now. Mid-range and high-end cards from Nvidia and AMD are only a couple of months away. Low-end cards aren't expected to be replaced until later, perhaps the middle of next year, so the RX 6600 remains a solid choice if you need something right now.
Otherwise hold off if you can.
Which is slightly annoying if you want to build a Ryzen 7000 system because the new CPUs launch in two weeks.
Tech News
- If you already did buy a graphics card for more than $500 and want to tinker with AI stable diffusion image generation programs like Img2img Stable Diffusion web UI makes that easier. (GitHub)
Written in Python it provides you with - as the name suggests - a web UI so you don't need to remember 900 arcane command line arguments.
It does specifically need an Nvidia graphics card - or rather, Img2img does - but I have a couple of those sitting unused right now and might give this a try.
- Winamp 5.9 is out. (Bleeping Computer)
Because that llama's ass ain't gonna whip itself.
- The US Navy says all UFO videos are classified and releasing them will harm national security. (Vice)
Did the Zerg also give 10% to the big guy?
- Are AMD laptops really more energy efficient than Intel? Yes. (Hot Hardware)
There are some cases where Intel does very well, but overall AMD is ahead, sometimes far ahead - particularly if you're depending on integrate graphics:Regarding the utlraportables, AMD pulls off another really great efficiency win. Not only is the frame rate 60% higher than the Intel-based Samsung Galaxy Book2 360, it uses 30% less power. Plus the performance is something you can really feel; 46 fps is smooth enough, but averaging up near 74 fps is quite smooth, and the dips are going to be a lot higher than Intel's, too. We're at a performance level where we'd like to play this game on the ASUS machine, whereas the Xe IGP in the Core i7-1260P powering the Samsung notebook might force us to play on lower settings to be more comfortable.
I'm looking forward to seeing what Zen 4 and 5nm bring to laptops next year. AMD has noted that in their new low power settings (65W) for desktop chips they are getting 75% better performance than with Zen 3, which is a huge increase for a single generation.
- Intel has started the first $20 billion stage of a planned $100 billion manufacturing site in Ohio. (Tom's Hardware)
The first two factories are expected to come on line in 2025.
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Friday, September 09
Nye Edition
Top Story
- The real reason Apple doesn't support standard RCS text messaging on iPhones: Because fuck you, that's why. (The Verge)
By relegating messages from other phones to third class, they can shame people with perfectly functional phones to burn money on Apple's own expensive and unrepairable toys.
Which strategy, to be fair, (a) works and (b) basically paid for the massive growth of TSMC that has allowed smaller companies like AMD access to extremely advanced chipmaking facilities.
Tech News
- MSI has announced the specs and pricing of its new X670 motherboards for AMD ahead of the official launch on September 27. (Anandtech)
Prices range from expensive ($290) to absurd ($1299). If you want integrated 10Gb Ethernet you're looking at $700.
There will be cheaper models showing up soon, based on the B650 chipset that supports most of the same features.
- The Motorola Edge 30 costs 900 Euros and has a 200 megapixel camera. (WCCFTech)
Which is great except that the camera sensor is too small to really take advantage of that resolution, so unless you're taking photos in broad daylight on the Moon you're really looking at 50 megapixel images.
Which is still a lot, to be fair.
- Taichi is a new compile for Python - an interpreted language that has compilers the way some people have mice, probably freeze-dried to feed their python - that compiles not only to your CPU but to your GPU as well. (Taichi)
They compare it to PyPy, the Python compiler I use in production, and note that both are useful but have very different tradeoffs. Taichi is more designed for writing computational kernels without having to ever leave PyCharm, delivering up to 100x performance for specific type of code, where PyPy will speed up your code by an average of 4.5x and eat memory like mice.
- I hate everything.
- Well, maybe not everything. The new 0.4 update to fan-made Hololive game Holocure is out now. (Itch.io)
It's fun and it's free. Can't ask for more except maybe for it to not melt my laptop in the later stages.
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