WOULD YOU CARE FOR SOME TEA?

Thursday, May 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 May 2023

Shake Supremacist Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • Google's Pixel Tablet has launched in three colours to match your carpet.   (Notebook Check)

    Blah.


  • Remembering Google's only good tablet.  (Ars Technica)

    The 2012 Nexus 7 was okay for the time, but quickly forgotten.

    The 2013 model was not only one of the best tablets available at the time, it is actually better - should you find one that still works - than any small Android tablet available in 2023, with the sole exception of the China-only Lenovo Y700.

    Naturally Google never made a newer model.


  • Don't bother with PCIe 5 SSDs.  (Tom's Hardware)

    They're not a lot faster than PCIe 4, they're a lot more expensive, and they run so hot they will shut down under heavy load and crash your computer.


  • Your GDPR-compliant analytics aren't GDPR-compliant.  (Pilcrow)

    The solution is Redis, as it often is, specifically HyperLogLogs, which can count unique values in a small amount of memory while making it impossible to retrieve the original distinct values.

    So you can count the number of unique visitors per hour, day, week, and month, and generate only 30MB of data per year even if you have tens of millions of visitors.

    It's done using complicated mathematics, or in other words, magic.


  • Disney+ lost four million subscribers in the first quarter of 2023.  (Thurrott)

    No problem, they can replace them with AI chatbots.


Disclaimer: You can't say that, Mickey, that's racist.

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Wednesday, May 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 May 2023

Beware The Owl Edition

Top Story

  • Twitter is planning to launch encrypted direct messages, voice and video chat, and other features.  (The Verge)

    Targeting platforms like Telegram and Discord respectively.  

    Makes sense.  You can't realistically try to take incumbent services head-on, but if you have a platform that tens of millions of people use for something else, you can add features that make them less likely to switch to other, single-purpose apps.

    Like hiring Tucker Carlson so they stay on Twitter rather than watching Fox News.


Tech News



Disclaimer: Ack.  Pfft.

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Tuesday, May 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 May 2023

ZFS Destroy Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Disclaimer: And sow the ground with salt.

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Monday, May 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 May 2023

Two By Two, Laptops Of Blue Edition

Top Story

  • The Gateway 14.1 Ultra Slim Notebook is $279 from Walmart.  (The Verge)

    Yes, Cowputers is still around though now it's a Walmart house brand.

    Anyway, this model has the 11th generation i5-1135G7 - only a little slower than the laptop I used all last year while moving house, a 1080p IPS display, 16GB of RAM, and a 500GB SSD.  (The RAM is soldered to the motherboard, though nothing says that anywhere.)

    And the Four Essential Keys.

    The 2022 update dropped the four essential keys, and is also significantly more expensive, so don't buy that one.

    The screen isn't high-end and the trackpad is a bit finicky, but it's $279.

    And it's blue.

Tech News


Disclaimer: Retains speed when full would be a good name for a rock band.  Well, not really.

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Sunday, May 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 May 2023

Irreverent And Fracked Edition

Top Story

  • Those monthly unique reader numbers from the story on Vice's demise yesterday were thousands.  I thought they had to be, but it didn't say so.

    So those sites are dying but not actually dead.  Not yet.


  • Same goes for OpenAI: Google and OpenAI are Walmarts besieged by fruit stands.   (Tech Crunch)
    GPT-4 is like a Walmart. No one actually wants to go there, so the company makes damn sure there’s no other option.

    But customers are starting to wonder, why am I walking through 50 aisles of junk to buy a few apples? Why am I hiring the services of the largest and most general-purpose AI model ever created if all I want to do is exert some intelligence in matching the language of this contract against a couple hundred other ones? At the risk of torturing the metaphor (to say nothing of the reader), if GPT-4 is the Walmart you go to for apples, what happens when a fruit stand opens in the parking lot?

    And the fruit stand's apples are free.  And they don't call you a racist.

    OpenAI had its chance.  It's done.


Tech News

  • OpenAI's regulatory woes are just beginning.  (The Verge)

    This story has it exactly wrong, of course.  OpenAI's only hope for fending off smaller and less retarded commercial rivals is to have the industry regulated within an inch of its life with layer upon layer of incomprehensible and infeasibly expensive red tape.

    Good plan, except that it's not the commercial rivals that are eating OpenAI's lunch, it's open source software.


  • That article was about the EU's efforts, but the Biden Administration is all-in on regulatory capture too.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Though like everything else they do, it will fail utterly.


  • RedisRaft is a strongly consistent Redis cluster.  (GitHub)

    Redis has had replication for a long time, but this is a full-on clustering solution.  Once an update is confirmed, the data won't be lost unless more than half of the nodes in the cluster die at the same time.

    There are a few Redis commands that aren't supported, but the bulk of the functionality works just as with a single Redis node.


Can a Ten Year Old CPU With a Five Year Old Graphics Card Play the Latest Games Video of the Day



Spoiler: Yes.



Disclaimer: Spoilmaker, spoilmaker, make me a spoil, leak me a leak, make my mind whirl...

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Saturday, May 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 May 2023

Irrelevant And Fucked Edition

Top Story

Tech News



Disclaimer: And not in the good way, where at least there's twenty bucks on the nightstand afterwards.

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Friday, May 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 May 2023

Both Is Good Edition

Top Story

  • OpenAI is both irrrelevant and fucked.  (SemiAnalysis)

    This is allegedly a leaked document from Google, but whether that's true or not the analysis is accurate.  It explains in detail how OpenAI went in a matter of weeks from a tech darling - a purveyor of complete crap, yes, but that doesn't matter to the investors - to utterly irrelevant.

    Free software that you can not only run, but train, on consumer-level hardware is now nearly as capable as ChatGPT and free of the biases OpenAI cripples its own software with.

    This is exactly what befell OpenAI's Dall-E image generation AI.  In two years it went from being the market leader to not even being thought about, mostly because of OpenAI's mishandling.

Tech News



Disclaimer: An integer overflow walks into a bar...

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Thursday, May 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 May 2023

Always Two There Are Edition

Top Story

Tech News



Disclaimer: Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwards.

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Wednesday, May 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 May 2023

His Excellency Regrets Edition

Corrections


Top Story

  • AMD's consumer chip sales are down even more than Intel's - by a massive 65%. (Tom's Hardware)

    Unlike Intel, though, AMD's other divisions - servers, gaming, and embedded - saw pretty solid performance, with gaming down slightly and embedded up by 163% thanks mostly to the Xilinx acquisition.

    They still lost money for the quarter, but $140 million compared to Intel's $2.8 billion in red ink.

    Strongest economy ever.

Tech News



Disclaimer: Lmao, even.

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Tuesday, May 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 May 2023

From Out Of The Silent Woodwork Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Disclaimer: (A)bort, (R)etry, (D)isclaim?

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