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Wednesday, September 05
Tech News
- Naruto loses copyright battle. (TechDirt)
Short of a Supreme Court hearing, that's it for PETA and their bullshit monkey selfie copyright suit.
- Evernote lost its CTO, CFO, CPO and HR director. They should have kept online backups. (TechCrunch)
- Need a terabyte of RAM in your next desktop PC? Gigabyte has you covered! (Serve the Home)
It is a server board, but it's E-ATX so it will fit into larger desktop cases, and it has 7 PCIe slots (including four x16 slots) for graphics cards and stuff. Being a server board the dual 10GbE ports are SFP+, but you can't have anything.
- "The check's in the mail" isn't a great excuse when you're paying by PayPal and you've already confirmed that you've received the funds from the third party.
Grrr.
Graphs, You're Doing Them Wrong
Also, don't use an Intel 660p SSD in a server. Just... Don't.
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day
Status Update
- NBN: Nonexistent.
- Domain sale: Unpaid.
- Laptop: Out of stock.
- Shiny wonderful all-singing server: $248.
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Tuesday, September 04
Tech News
- Microsoft just took an axe and gave Skype's feature set 40 whacks. (The Register)
It's a start.
- Google is loading the Ethereum blockchain into BigQuery every day so that Google cloud users can search it for stuff. (ZDNet)
You can do that directly with the Ethereum API, but to do anything advanced you end up doing exactly what Google has done - load the whole damn thing into a real database.
- Amazon is eyeing Facebook and Google's river of gold - that is, online advertising. (New York Times)
Which of course they (and Craigslist) swiped from the newspapers before them, effectively bankrupting the industry.
I'm happy to see poorly-behaved companies like Facebook and Google facing competition, but at the same time Amazon are ruining their own site with ads, and I don't want to see more of that.
On the third hand, Amazon US no-longer ships physical goods to Australia, and their Australian store is a dumpster fire, so fuck the lot of 'em.
- If you are taking screenshots with Chrome headless, you must have a full certificate chain for any HTTPS sites you load components from, or the screenshot will be messed up. This, even if it works perfectly in your browser.
At least the error messages tell you something is wrong with your SSL certs, so you're not left blindly scrabbling for a solution.
- Ethereum is doomed! Says a contributor to competitors BitCoin and Stellar who is clearly completely unbiased on the subject. (TechCrunch)
Video of the Day
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Monday, September 03
Tech News
- Verizon sucks. And now they own Yahoo. (Techdirt)
It's so bad that Amazon changed the details it includes in receipts so that Verizon can't steal the data.
- TechCrunch argues for private censorship in order to avoid government censorship - which won't happen because First Amendment so the entire argument is garbage.
Not just private censorship, but coordinated private censorship across social networks.
- IS YOUR LINUX BOX
MAKING TOO MUCH NOISETOO BIG?
VoCore can fix that.
- NBN is planning to expand the FttC rollout using larger DPUs to connect MDUs, an increasingly common factor in suburban Sydney. (ZDNet)
Do I have NBN? I do not.
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day
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Sunday, September 02
Tech News
- Step 1: Make an unhackable crypto wallet.
Step 2: Rebrand it as an iceberg detector.
Step 3: Profit!
(Tom's Hardware)
- Techdirt's stupid patent of the month is a method for efficiently displaying a newspaper on a computer screen.
The patent was issued in August.
August 2018.
The first online newspaper launched in 1974.
mee.nu's art department envisages how the first online newspaper may have appeared.
- 8K TVs are here. Do you need one? No. (CNET)
An 85" 8K TV mounted horizontally with a touch-sensitive surface would make an amazing desk. Maybe not at $14,000 though.
- Need a completely silent PC that can drive four 4K monitors (or two 8K monitors)? (via FanlessTech)
Not cheap, but the perfect accompaniment for your next 85" 8K desk / 85" 8K virtual window combo.
- We know what the answer is, we just don't know why. A problem with theoretical physics. (Quanta)
- A fool and his money are soon parted. Should be the corporate motto of GoFundMe. (Axios)
- Apple products you should not buy. (ZDNet)
Basically: iMac, iPhone, iPad, Mac Mini, Mac Pro, MacBook, MacBook Air, AirPods, Apple Watch. Which leaves the ruinously expensive iMac Pro and the just released MacBook Pro.
- This is kind of a niche-within-a-niche item, but it's nice to know it exists.
A 7x9 array of keyboard switches (the things under the keys) and every single one of them is different. If you're not sure whether your new keyboard should be a Cherry tactile grey or a Zealios 62g, this gives you both, and 61 others besides.
Video of the Day
Picture of the Day
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It's far from a comprehensive test, but I spent today cleaning up the Minx codebase, moving from Python 2.6 to PyPy 2.7 [Yeah, I know, but I'm not going to get it moved over to 3.7 in one Sunday afternoon] on a completely clean platform - took the code, cleaned it up, and redeployed rather than copying the existing installation - and it works.
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This page may look familiar (though a couple of days out of date) but it's not.
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Saturday, September 01
Tech News
- You can't partition a MySQL table with a full-text index, which is one of the top use cases for partitioning a MySQL table. Poo.
- What's in a Lake, Atomic Edition: Gigabyte's Brix line now features some Gemini Lake (yes, another one) Atom models. Most notably the GB-BLCE-4105 with a Celeron J4105 and the GB-BLPD-5005 with a Pentium Silver J5005.
These chips are vastly improved over older Atoms, with up to three times the single-threaded and multi-threaded performance of chips currently found in budget laptops.
In fact, the J4105 and J5005 deliver almost exactly the performance of the classic Core 2 Quad Q6600 at 1/10th the power.
In theory, they only support up to 8GB of RAM, but there's theory and there's screenshots of the Windows 10 system summary with 16GB of DDR4 2400 RAM.
This is good, because if I upgrade the SSDs and RAM in Tohru and Rally I need to pop out the existing SSDs and RAM, and these Brixen provide a dirt cheap option to put those into a working system for offloading some Linux VMs or whatevers. They only support PCIe x2 for the SSD, so the transfer rate would be limited to 2GB per second, but I think I can probably live with that.
Intel offers an even cheaper model using the Celeron J4005 which is dual core rather than quad core. That's not fatal given the low price, but it lacks the M.2 slot the Brixen have, which rules it out for me.
- Huawei's Kirin 980 brings the Arm A76 core (at 1.92 or 2.6GHz) and Mali G76 GPU together on TSMC's 7nm process. (AnandTech)
This should be an impressive chip; my daily tablet is a Huawei Mediapad M3, which has the Kirin 950, a quad-core A72 at 2.3GHz. It's pretty quick; the only thing I really miss on that tablet is LTE.
Huawei say the new chip should be 30-40% faster than the Snapdragon 845, which is in turn 30-40% faster than the Kirin 950.
The cluster of four A76 cores is split into two pairs, one at max speed, the other at medium speed, to give better control over battery life. This is a new feature from Arm. I'm not sure if the cores are synthesized differently or if the difference is purely in the voltage levels.
Another interesting thing is how fast this happened. Arm announced the A76 core in May. The Mate 20 will launch with the Kirin 980 in October.
- Fuck the Windows 10 Photos app.
- The Asus Zenbook Pro UX480 is a 14" laptop with a Whiskey Lake U CPU and that nice touchscreen touchpad, let down by a flawed keyboard layout and a meh 1080p display. (AnandTech)
- MSI's new P65 Creator is supposedly a laptop for content creators, but has a 144Hz 1080p display where a 60Hz 4K display would be vastly preferable. (Via PCPer)
Otherwise it's very good, with a sane keyboard layout, a quad-core Intel CPU, a choice of GTX 1050Ti, 1060, or 1070 graphics, and up to 32GB RAM, a single Thunderbolt port, and three full-speed USB 3.1 ports, wrapped up in a nicely understated design while keeping the weight under 2kg. With a 4K wide-gamut display it would make a great creative laptop with real gaming abilities at need. Get on that, MSI.
- Asus shrank their ZenBook 13 in the wash. (The Verge)
Follow the link, scroll down a little, and you'll see the 2018 model next to the 2017 model. The two laptops have the same screen size but look completely different.
- I mentioned before that a flaw in Apple's event scripting allowed misbehaving applications to automatically click on security notifications to give themselves permission to trash your Mac.
In the latest beta of MacOS Apple have fixed this by replicating the single most despised feature of Windows Vista. (Six Colors)
This completely breaks application scripting. Completely breaks it. (Shirt Pocket Watch)
Good work, world's first trillion dollar company.
- Google's new Advanced Protection Program uses hardware keys made in China by a company linked to the Chinese military. (ZDNet)
Yubico - which makes its keys in the US and Sweden - is available as a backup solution, but the required primary key is a dubious Chinese item that you have to buy from Amazon - Google don't even supply it.
The keys may be secure, for all I know, but this project is garbage implemented by idiots. Google aren't even trying to appear secure here.
Video of the Day
Bonus Video of the Day In Case the Main Video of the Day is Playing Up
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