Why did you say six months?
He's coming.
This matters. This is important. Why did you say six months?
Why did you say five minutes?
He's coming.
This matters. This is important. Why did you say six months?
Why did you say five minutes?
Wednesday, July 04

Daily News Stuff 4 July 2018

Tech News
- Sapphire has a new Ryzen V embedded board similar to the Udoo Bolt mentioned earlier. This is more for established embedded apps than tinkering - no Arduino on board, but four DisplayPort connectors for multi-screen applications.
- My keyboard arrived! No sign of the computer itself as yet. Rally Vincent is currently leading in the poll, which is better than Computey Computeface. Never let the audience make the nominations.
Still no NBN, which was promised by June 29.
- Tom's Hardware notes a 4K 49" TV selling for $219 after rebate. I don't know if it's any good, but it's fascinating that this makes it cheaper than a 1080p 43" monitor from the same manufacturer.
4K has taken over, and I wonder how long the move to 8K will take. Not that I need an 8K monitor, but I'd love an ultrawide 7680x2160 (half of 8K) monitor to replace dual 4K monitors without the gap in between.
- Cloudflare's Workers are 441% faster than Amazon's.
"Workers" in this case are serverless Javascript scripts, like Amazon's Lambda. But server-side (or serverless side) Javascript is cancer, and at least Lambda supports other languages.
- Cory Doctorow belatedly realises that free speech goes both ways and is predictably outraged.
Photo of the Day

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Tuesday, July 03

Daily News Stuff 3 July 2018
Tech News
- Stylish browser extension steals your browser history. This is especially pernicious, because it was originally free of spyware, then was quietly updated.
- Philips offers a 43" 4K 8-bit + FRC 720 nit 4000:1 4ms 80 Hz 178° 97.6% DCI-P3 FreeSync HDR MVA quantum dot monitor with HDMI 1.4, DisplayPort 1.2 (mini and full size) and USB-C inputs.
Not cheap at $1000 on Amazon, but it's half the price of that 27" ASUS G-Sync monitor, and it has no notable flaws. It could be improved (with HDMI 2.0 and DisplayPort 1.4, and even Thunderbolt) but any such upgrades would increase the price.
- PixyLab still has no NBN. I shouldn't have looked at the map; my block of townhouses is at the very edge of the planned rollout this year; next door will have to wait until the end of 2019, and slated to get only cable rather than fiber. If they push things back that long I will scream.
- Uganda thinks they're Europe or something.
Video of the Day
Great trailer. Shame about the game. Focus-tested to death.
Pixy Is Watching
Magical Angel Creamy Mami. One of the early magical girl shows, it recently got a Blu-Ray release, and it looks amazing. I hope to see more of those for 80s and 90s shows. (Hint hint Slayers hint hint.)
Anyway, one episode in and one thing is already abundantly clear: This girl is nuts.
Anyway, one episode in and one thing is already abundantly clear: This girl is nuts.
You'd never guess that it was animated by the same studio that did Urusei Yatsura.
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Monday, July 02

Daily News Stuff 2 July 2018
Tech News
- Dell's 2018 Inspiron 27 all-in-one is a disappointment after last year's model. The 8-core Ryzen CPU is replaced with a 6-core low-power Intel chip (not a huge step backwards; the 8700T is still a good chip, and actually offers better single-threaded performance than the Ryzen 1700); the 8GB Radeon RX 580 graphics replaced by a 4GB Nvidia 1050, which is about half the speed on games and a third the speed on compute; and the 4K display replaced with a 1080p touchscreen, which is just.... Why? Why would you do that?
Storage options are the same. And the price is the same.
They're selling off last year's model with about a 30% discount, so I ordered a second one.* They have HDMI in and out, so the plan is to have one running Windows and the other running Linux, and link them with a pair of HDMI cables, so each acts as a second monitor for the other one.
Delivery is expected July 4. To celebrate, I'm naming her Revy. Or maybe Rally. Hmm.
Update: Dang it. The keyboard is due July 4. (I got the premium Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, shown above.) The computer is due July 17.
- Gigabyte has you covered if you need to pack 256 CPU cores and 4TB RAM into 2U of rack space.
- Google and Nasdaq are working to update NTP for nanosecond accuracy. Which is pointless for almost everyone, but the engineering effort is cool. Scientists and engineers need nanosecond precision, but I can't think of anyone outside of HFT who needs nanosecond accuracy. Hmm. Maybe people working with particle accelerators or gravity waves?
- Samsung announces their 8nm process, offering a 15% density improvement over 10nm, which really makes it more of a 9nm process, but eh, whatever. This is not the same as their 7nm process. Different numbers.
- Microsoft is not killing Snippy... Yet.
- To absolutely no-one's surprise, the promised NBN connection here at PixyLab has been delayed.
- UHD Blu-Ray disks can only be played on PCs with Intel chips with the SGX secure enclave.
In a note of cosmic irony, all Intel chips with the SGX secure enclave have the Spectre security bug so the secure enclave is broken.
Video of the Day
* And extended warranty because these should last me for years, but I won't be able to replace them if they die.
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Sunday, July 01

Daily News Stuff 1 July 2018
Tech News
- Lenovo has listed the Thinkpad E485 and its big sister the E585 - in Australia, anyway; they don't seem to have shown up in the US just yet.
These are business-oriented laptops with AMD Ryzen CPUs. 1920x1080 IPS displays (which should really be the minimum these days), with room for an M.2 SSD and a 2.5" 7mm SATA drive, two DDR4 SO-DIMM slots supporting up to 32GB of RAM, and wired gigabit Ethernet - the sorts of things you don't get on the typical ultralight notebook, because they don't fit. And they have PgUp/PgDn/Home/End keys, and USB-C charging. HDMI out and DisplayPort over the USB-C port - which is a pain if you want to use DisplayPort and charge at the same time and don't have a new monitor with that special combination port. Or an adaptor.
No touchscreen option, but they do have that little trackpoint thingy as well as the usual trackpad.
Here's the kicker: The E485 is A$999 with a Ryzen 2500U, 256GB PCIe SSD and 8GB RAM. The equivalent - nearly identical - Intel version lists for A$1899, though it's on sale right now. The Intel version has dedicated AMD graphics, but that's the same performance (8 Radeon CUs) as the graphics built in to the Ryzen 2500U anyway. For the price of the base Intel model, you can get the AMD system with 32GB RAM, 512GB SSD plus 1TB* hard disk, and two year on-site service.
The 14" E485 weighs in at 1.75kg, and the 15.6" E585 at 2.1kg. So they're not ultralight, but not heavyweights either. My Inspiron 15 7000, which is fairly sleek for a 15" notebook, weighs 2.1kg.
Video of the Day
* The largest drive offered is 1TB, but Seagate makes a 7mm high 2TB 2.5" SSHD, which would be a perfect addition if you get it with just the M.2 SSD.
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