WOULD YOU CARE FOR SOME TEA?

Friday, February 28

Geek

Daily News Stuff 28 February 2025

Seventeen Percent Solution Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Nah, mate.  Paradise is over there.

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Thursday, February 27

Geek

Daily News Stuff 27 February 2025

You're Trying To Kidnap What I Have Rightfully Stolen Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • How much will AMD's 9070 XT Cost?  Nobody knows, not even AMD.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The company is reportedly scrambling to take advantage of Nvidia's series of disasters - from having no stock to speak of, to having what stock there was being riddled with chip faults disabling functionality, to what cards actually worked to start with going up in smoke.

    But AMD has a long history of being handed opportunities in the GPU space and fumbling them with high prices.

    Current leaked prices for the 9070 XT start at $700, which is between $50 cheaper than Nvidia's 5070 Ti if you believe Nvidia, and $200 cheaper than the cheapest actual cards listed, but there are no 5070 Ti cards available at all so it may just be time to roll the dice.

    AMD did manage not to screw up the 9800X3D CPU launch, so there may be a chance of them doing it again.


  • AI has yet to find a killer app to match Excel or email, says Microsoft.  (The Register)

    We know.


  • The Ayaneo Flip isn't.  (Liliputing)

    The pocket-sized gaming device has been cancelled without even shipping all the pre-orders.  If you tried to buy one, you can request a refund or another Ayaneo product.


  • Hands on with the new Framework Desktop.  (The Verge)

    It doesn't add much to yesterday's information, but they're not insane, so I'll toss them a link.


Musical Interlude


You'll probably be able to see one of these.  Same video, different region locks.



Disclaimer: You don't have to worry when the counter is at 300.  You have to worry when it's at 300 thousand.

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Wednesday, February 26

Geek

Daily News Stuff 26 February 2025

Framewhat Edition

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  • Framework has announced three new models: The low-end education-focused Laptop 12, a new Laptop 13 with AMD's Ryzen 300 series chips, and the all-new Desktop.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The new Framework 13 keeps the upgradeable memory, with up to 96GB to accompany an up to Ryzen 370 twelve-core CPU.  Still no Four Essential Keys though.

    The Framework Desktop is a mini-ITX system in a compact 4"x8"x9" case.

    Using AMD's latest Strix Halo CPUs, up to the Ryzen 395, with its 16 CPU cores and 40 graphics cores.

    Memory this time is soldered, though you can specify up to 128GB of it, and it's only a 100% markup over retail.  The company said that it worked "for months" with AMD but couldn't make the memory user-upgradeable while maintaining the 8000MHz target frequency.  (The new Laptop 13 uses 5600MHz memory.)  

    There are two M.2 slots for storage, so you're free to upgrade that at least.

    Plus two USB 4 ports, two DisplayPort ports, HDMI, 5Gb Ethernet, two regular USB ports, a headphone jack, and two of Framework's flexible expansion ports at the front, though the video is already prewired to the rear of the case so you can't put the DisplayPort or HDMI options there.

    Price for the 128GB model is $1999, which is not exactly cheap, but a Mac Studio configured with 128GB of RAM will set you back $4799, which is even less exactly cheap.

    Laptop 13 ships in April; Desktop ships in Q3.


Tech News

  • And that seems to be the only thing that happened today.  Tom's Hardware covered it, Hot Hardware covered it, Serve the Home covered it, The Verge covered it and managed not to mention Elon Musk even once, Liliputing covered it, Notebook Check covered the Laptop 12 though not the other two announcements, and Ars Technica managed to turn it into three separate news items.


  • Well, this paper is interesting at least.  (GitHub)  (PDF)

    AI models designed to sneakily slip insecurities into the code they generate for you are good at the slipping in insecurities part but much less good at the sneaky part.  They literally turn into Nazis.

    That's because AI models are lobotomised to make them behave.  If you want them to behave poorly, they behave poorly all the time because they are still lobotomised.


  • Oh, and there's this little gem: Assassin's Creed Shadows, Ubisoft's latest megaflop...  Leaked.  (BBC)

    Not details of the game.  Not video of the game.  The entire game.

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Because it worked so well for Rosemary Kennedy.

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Tuesday, February 25

Geek

Daily News Stuff 25 February 2025

Zombees Edition

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Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: The music video is censored (in on spot) but the audio-only version on the same official channel isn't.  The censored version has a thousand times as many views.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:26 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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Monday, February 24

Geek

Daily News Stuff 24 February 2025

Academic Inflation Edition

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  • With AMD's launch party for its new 9000-series video cards just days away, it has held a press briefing and of course benchmark numbers have already leaked.  (VideoCardz)

    The 9070 XT is 42% faster than the 7900 GRE at 4k resolution, and the 9070 non-XT is 21% faster.

    Absolute silence on the price.  Earlier leaks put the cards at $750 and $650 respectively, which is about $100 too much.  But given that Nvidia cards don't exist at all at the moment, AMD will probably price the cards too high, kill all enthusiasm, and then adjust the price in a month or two when it's already too late.


  • Speaking of Nvidia cards that don't exist if you somehow got your hands on an RTX 5080 you had best check the number of ROPs onboard.  (VideoCardz)

    Yes, all the models that have shipped so far - 5090, the 5090D made for the Chinese market, the 5070 Ti, and now confirmed the 5080 - have been hit with the same hardware flaw.  It only affects some cards, but it could apply to any model from any manufacturer.


  • My 7800 XT arrived today, so my interest in all this is purely academic.



Tech News


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: What a coincidence!  I also love plastic!

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Sunday, February 23

Geek

Daily News Stuff 23 February 2025

Yes Bananas Are Extinct Edition

Top Story

  • Nvidia has confirmed that defective chips are affecting performance on 0.5% of 5090 and 5070 Ti graphics cards.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Which is a strange announcement because (a) nobody had noticed the problem on the 5070 Ti before and (b) the 5070 Ti is much more common than the 5090.

    Major national retailers have announced receiving fewer than ten 5090s total, with resupply possibly months out.

    So this is a bit like an announcement that 0.5% of Lamborghinis and Volkswagens have an engine defect.  That could mean the problem affects 20% of Lamborghinis, because the shipping volume of the two brands is so different.

    Anyway, if your 5090 is broken you can return it for replacement, which will happen...  Some day.

    The other thing is that the 5090 is not a volume product, at least not yet.  Nvidia has shipped hundreds of these, not thousands.  And they clearly weren't paying attention.  This problem would show up immediately in an automated test - and probably did show up.  But nobody noticed.

Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Started out just drinking strawberry milk, with Ken the spider.

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Saturday, February 22

Geek

Daily News Stuff 22 February 2025

Frieren's Demons Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • If you think you've got problems with your RTX 5090 that is broken, on fire, and doesn't even exist crypto exchange Bybit lost $1.46 billion.  (CoinDesk)

    Not in the sense that they failed to make a profit for the quarter, but in the old-fashioned sense that somebody walked in and took it when they weren't paying attention.


  • Do you want a pocket computer with a keyboard, a touchscreen, and great battery life?  Abe did, so he built one.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It uses a Pimoroni PicoVsion.  I don't remember if I knew about that, but it's a great idea that was obvious the moment people figured out how to get HDMI video out of a Raspberry Pi Pico.

    You can do it, but it uses up most of the memory bandwidth of the Pico.  But the RP2040 chip on the Pico is tiny and cheap, so why not just use two of them?

    The PicoVision does, and this little pocket computer uses that.


  • Leaked benchmarks put the upcoming Radeon 9070 at the same speed as the 7800 XT, with the 9070 XT around 25% faster.  (Tom's Hardware)

    That's not good for AMD; the XT model needs to be more like 50% faster.  But it does coincide with other leaks from last month and may well be accurate.

    So grabbing a 7800 XT when I did continues to look like a good move.  If the price leaks are also accurate, and the conversion rate for the AMD cards is the same as Nvidia's, the 9070 will cost 80% more in Australia than the 7800 XT for almost exactly the same performance.

    And the 7800 XT is disappearing from shelves.

    That was the calculation I made when I noped out of waiting for the new cards.


  • Apple's iCloud Data Protection - its end-to-end encryption protocol - is no longer available to new customers in the UK.  (BBC)

    It will soon no longer be available to existing customers, which may require downloading all of your data and then uploading it again.

    This is to comply with UK law, which was written by the Stasi, in order that the cops can spy on whomever they please.


  • Microsoft's Majorana 1 is an eight bit computer.  (Hot Hardware)

    Well, sort of.  It's a new form of quantum computer built around topological qubits, which are much more resistant to error than regular (presumably nontopological) qubits.

    Don't ask me why.

    And it currently has eight of them.

    And it can - get this - work for as long as a millisecond before it breaks.

    This is apparently good.


Musical Interlude



Song is Getting Along by Swedish band Royal Republic.  Video is from Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid, the story of a maiden who pulls a sword from a dragon, and...  Hijinks ensue.  Also lowjinks.  Also everywhere-we-go-jinks.

I looked for an original video for this song, but there isn't one.  There are live performances, but I like the studio version, and this was the video that first introduced me to Royal Republic anyway.


Disclaimer: Despite appearances, it does actually make sense.  Sometimes.

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Friday, February 21

Geek

Daily News Stuff 21 February 2025

Bottom Of The Seventeenth Edition

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  • Remarkably uncontaminated with cheese: The 5070 Ti has sold out.  (Tom's Hardware)

    In minutes.

    The $750 sacrificial edition?  Sold out.

    The $1000 costs-as-much-as-a-5080 edition?  Sold out.

    Everything in between?  Sold out as last week's limburger.

    You can expect new stock in two to six weeks, at which point it will burn down, fall over, and sell out.

    The 5090 could take as long as 14 weeks to restock.


  • Launches of the 5070 and 5060 could be delayed due to a sudden total existence failure.  (WCCFTech)

    Or not.  They might just continue with the 90% post-consumer waste launches.


  • My graphics card has shipped.

    Quick note on that: The 5070 Ti has listed in Australia at an effective exchange rate of $1 to A$2, which is even worse than the real exchange rate.  The $750 sacrificial card is A$1500, though of course it's not available at all in either country.

    Comparing retail prices on the Radeon 7800 XT that I bought, the conversion is more like $1 to A$1.25, which is much better than the real exchange rate.

    I don't know precisely why, but this card is a great buy in Australia but only meh in the US.  Unless something really surprising happens with AMD's new cards, I made the right decision.

    I expect the 9070 XT to offer 25% to 50% better performance than the 7800 XT, but cost twice as much in Australia.  America is another country.

Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: 1 USD to 1.57 AUD.  It was worse last week.

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Thursday, February 20

Geek

Daily News Stuff 20 February 2025

Onomatopoeia Edition

Top Story

  • Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti is here and I've found my next video card.  (Techspot)

    Though those two items are not related.  Or more precisely, they are inversely related.

    Not that the 5070 Ti is a bad card, certain items ignored.  It is fast, it has plenty of VRAM for almost anything at 16GB, and it, uh, mostly works.

    The problem is the price.  It was announced with a price of $750, and officially that is still the price.  The problem is there is no official card.  There was even a drama when Nvidia shipped a particular Asus card to reviewers, stating that it was an official launch card priced at $750, when Asus sent the exact same card to other reviewers, saying that it was not an official launch card and was priced at $900.

    That appears to have ended with Nvidia either bribing or coercing Asus into selling the card at $750, which simply means that it won't exist.

    But that's going to be true of all 5070 Ti cards, just as it is with the 5090 and 5080 a month after their launch.

    If you can find one at MSRP, expect to pay $900 to $1000.  Which, yes, is nominally the same price as the 5080.  But the 5080 will actually set you back over $2000 right now if you can even find one.  And the 5070 Ti has the same GPU chip just with some shaders disabled, and the same RAM, so...  I'm sure you can figure it out.

    Meanwhile in Australia there are only a handful of listings up but they're in the A$1900 to A$2000 range.

    What I actually bought - just this morning - was an AMD Radeon 7800 XT.  It's also a 16GB card, and while the new 5070 Ti is 50% faster while using only 20% more power, the Radeon cost me A$729 - about US$400 plus tax - making the 5070 Ti 150% more expensive.

    Do I care that the 5070 Ti can run Counter Strike at 332fps instead of 257fps on the 7800 XT?  A lot less than I care about the $1200 that will pay for the rest of my computer.

    Oh, and if you're playing an older 32-bit game using PhysX, it could run at about a quarter speed because Nvidia cards just don't support that anymore.

    So, no.  Hell no.  I decided it was time to stop waiting before every reasonably-priced card disappeared from the market entirely.

    Ordered that 7800 XT and a 7900 (non-x) CPU.  Still need a motherboard and some DDR5 RAM, but those aren't in a price/availability death spiral right now.


Tech News



Musical Interlude


Song is I Lived by OneRepublic.  Video is from the French cartoon Wakfu, which was created as advertising for an online game and is far better than it has any right to be.



Disclaimer: I loved, botches.

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Wednesday, February 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 February 2025

Unenstrixtulated Edition

Top Story

  • AMD's Strix Halo laptop chip is here - or almost here; at least review embargoes have lifted on the Asus ROG Flow 13 which features it - and it's actually good.  (Hot Hardware)

    This chip has 16 Zen 5 cores - full size ones, not the smaller and slower Zen 5c - along with 40 RDNA 3.5 cores and a 256-bit memory bus.

    CPU results range between solid and blowing everything else on the market into oblivion.  On Geekbench 6 multi-threaded, it's 66% faster than its nearest competition - despite both chips having the same number of cores.

    The selling point of this chip is the integrated graphics, which AMD promised to be competitive with Nvidia's RTX 4070.  Now, they did mean the laptop 4070, which is about 20% slower than the desktop version.  But this review includes multiple laptops equipped with the 4070 and the AMD chip's integrated graphics pretty consistently lands in the middle of that pack.

    It's not cheap by any means, but Best Buy has a 64GB ROG Flow 13 for $2199, which is not insane for one of the fastest laptops you can buy.

Tech News

Musical Interlude



Disclaimer: Ew.  Where did you get those?

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