A cricket bat!
Twelve years, and four psychiatrists!
Four?
I kept biting them!
Why?
They said you weren't real.

Monday, May 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 May 2026

Plastic Memories Edition

Top Story

  • Valve's Steam Machine - the GabeCube - appears to be on its way.  (Notebook Check)

    It's not going to be cheap thanks to the RAMpocalypse, but shipping manifests show that Valve has collected 50 tons of something in a warehouse, and the latest update to Steam includes four new product codes and a reservation queue that again appear to correspond to the new device.

    I'm not sure I'll get one - it's a low-end console replacement and I have multiple systems more powerful - but it's good to see signs of life.


Tech News



Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Aperture Science, we do what we mustn't because we can't.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:27 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 338 words, total size 4 kb.

Sunday, May 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 May 2026

Five Cent Solution Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • CPanel's terrible, horrible, no good very bad week.  (Copahost)

    CPanel issued patches for three new vulnerabilities over the weekend, after 44,000 CPanel servers were hacked in the past week.  (My own server was affected, but I managed to get it locked down before the wave of ransomware hit.  And I have off-site backups.)

    Since each server can host hundreds of websites, 44,000 hacked servers could affect a lot of people.


  • With mid-range smartphone sales dropping as memory prices bite, Mediatek and Qualcomm have cut their production orders with TSMC for 5nm and 4nm chips.  AMD immediately took up the slack.  (WCCFTech)

    All current AMD CPUs (and GPUs) are built on TSMC's 5nm and 4nm processes - they don't use 3nm at all, and 2nm is set to arrive at the end of the year with Zen 6 - and AMD is selling every CPU they can churn out.


  • I mentioned that Intel's stock recently hit a 20-year high.  You know who bought the dip?  The federal government.  (WCCFTech)

    The Trump Administration converted a Biden-era grant - which came with conditions attached that Intel couldn't meet - to a straightforward share purchase.

    At the bottom of the market.

    Oh, and Intel is currently in talks to manufacture chips for Apple 25% cheaper than TSMC.


  • Fiber optic cables can listen in on your conversation.  (Science)

    If someone shines a laser down the cable and monitors the results very, very carefully.


  • Micron is shipping a 245TB SSD.  (Nerds.xyz)

    Not one of the tiny M.2 drives, but a still compact U.2 2.5" model.


Musical Interlude




Bonus Interlude



FrAIren Interlude



If they manage to keep AI video generators coherent for more than two seconds, Hollywood is toast.




Disclaimer: Wait, Caravan Palace did the music for MOUSE: P.I. For Hire?

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:14 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 386 words, total size 4 kb.

Saturday, May 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 May 2026

New Who Phone This Edition

Tech News

  • Maybe we should just not install software for a bit.  (Xe Iaso)

    There's another new - or newish - Linux privilege escalation bug.  It's literally called Copy Fail 2: Electric Boogaloo.

    But under the hood it's abusing the same module as yesterday's Dirty Frag, so if you already applied the mitigation for that, you're protected from CF2EB.


  • Also, my recommendation is don't install Ubuntu 26.04 just yet.  Unlike 24.04 which worked smoothly from release day, Ubuntu 26.04 still has some odd quirks.  Particularly if you want to use it under WSL and integrate with JetBrains IDEs (CLion in this case, but they'll all be the same here) where it just doesn't work.

    I went back to 24.04 and had no more issues.


Tech News

  • Thousands of vibe-coded apps expose personal and corporate data to everyone on the internet.  (Wired)  (archive site)

    AI coding tools are like hiring an autistic teenager to program for you.  Great if your requirements are clearly defined and you check their work carefully.

    But if you just blindly deploy whatever they produce, that's on you.


  • AI slop is killing online communities.  (rmoff)

    It's not that AI is intrinsically bad, anymore than email is bad.

    It's just that it makes being annoying far too easy:
    Material created with the assistance of AI is not bad in itself. It’s the purpose to which it's put.

    A good use of AI is when it enables people to do something they couldn't do before, to contribute to a community when they couldn’t before.  Done with the care and good intent of a human behind it, this is a nett positive.

    Bad AI slop, on the other hand, is monkeys throwing crap over the fence for a purpose other than furthering the community.  This includes spam, engagement farming, and simply thoughtless noise in a space which is not for that purpose.
    We need more spam filters.


  • Mojo has gone beta.  (Mojolang)

    Mojo is a Python-like language (more so than, for example, Nim) that compiles directly to binary and has similar safety features to Rust.  It's designed to work with Python in both directions: Importing Mojo modules into Python code, and importing Python code into Mojo programs, though apparently the latter is more robust than the former.

    Not sure how well it works otherwise; the first release some years ago actually had a waiting list.  At least now you can just click a link and download it.  Well, you can't, but apparently you can install it with uv or pixi.


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Begin at the beginning, and proceed to the end, and then stop.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:09 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 444 words, total size 4 kb.

Friday, May 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 May 2026

Friday On My Mind Edition

Top Story

  • There's a local privilege escalation bug that affects all recent versions of Linux.  (Tom's Hardware)

    No, not that one, another one.  It abuses bugs in three optional kernel modules to give any local user root access.

    Good news: It's relatively easy to prevent.

    Bad news: It's already out in the wild even though none of the Linux distributions has had a chance to patch it yet.  There's a script available that prevents the affected kernel modules from loading that blocks the exploit.  Run it once and you're good - unless you depend on one of those modules and you have untrusted local users, in which case you're...  Not good.


  • Also, there's a CPanel exploit making lives miserable, with a patch planned for 12pm EST.

    Again, not that one, another one.

    At least this one hasn't leaked yet.


Tech News



Musical Interlude

The musical interlude appears to be holidaying in Somaliland.

We have flown in an emergency replacement interlude at the last minute and at great expense.



Also, I was today years old when I realised You're No Good was a Linda Ronstadt song.




Disclaimer: I have no idea why.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:27 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 536 words, total size 6 kb.

Thursday, May 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 May 2026

Young Hannibal Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Brrrr.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:32 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 315 words, total size 3 kb.

Wednesday, May 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 May 2026

Overweight Bin Edition

Tech News



Tech News



Musical Interlude

Something something.




Disclaimer: Not.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:30 PM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 248 words, total size 3 kb.

Tuesday, May 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 May 2026

Late Final Extra Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • The "audio industry" is grappling with the rise of podslop.  (Bloomberg)  (archive site)

    Where by audio industry they mean, basically, Spotify.

    The problem is a company called Inception Point, that is spewing out 3000 podcasts a week using AI-generated voices.

    Does anyone listen to them?

    Well, the number is probably not zero.  I listened to an AI-generated science fiction story that was tolerable if not particularly original.  But when I was automatically forwarded to the next story on the channel it was exactly the same with a few names and details changed.

    Slop is right.


  • You could turn your classic 1966 Mustang into a Tesla.  (Electrek)

    Or, alternately, you could not do that.


  • Ask.com, which was in the natural language search query business before it was cool - or indeed, worked - has closed its doors.  (The Register)

    The site racked up 245 million visits over 25 years...  Which is not remotely enough for a business to survive on.


  • Intel's TPU bet hinges on increasing yield from 90% to 98%.  (WCCFTech)

    Counterpoint: No it fucking doesn't.  Are you stupid or what?
    The analyst adds that not only is jumping from a 90% yield to a 98% yield significantly more difficult than achieving 90% from 0%, but also that the 90% yield is a validation figure instead of a production figure.  As a result, he believes cautious optimism is the better approach when following the packaging technology.
    Getting from 0% to 90% yield is taking a process that simply doesn't work and making it into a reliable production line.  Getting it to 98% is nice, but irrelevant on the broader scale.


Musical Interlude



And since the audio on that version is a little muddy:





Disclaimer: Fly, be free!  (Splut.)

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 07:15 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 327 words, total size 3 kb.

Monday, May 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 May 2026

Omnispoo Edition

Top Story

  • Utah has decided to make it a crime to use VPNs to bypass age verification checks.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Since anyone can set up a VPN of their own in minutes using open source software and any of a thousand cloud service providers, and tear it down right after leaving no trace of its existence, this is stereotypical malicious idiocy.

    So of course the UK and France are pushing similar legislations as fast as they can.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Beep.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:28 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 267 words, total size 3 kb.

Sunday, May 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 May 2026

Sorry Not Sorry Edition

Top Story

  • The CPanel exploit is being exploited as a ransomware attack that encrypts your entire website.  (Bleeping Computer)

    Well, I dodged that one, at least.
    Numerous sources told BleepingComputer that hackers have been exploiting the cPanel flaw since Thursday to breach servers and deploy a Go-based Linux encryptor for the "Sorry" ransomware [VirusTotal].
    Thanks, CPanel.


  • The problem with my server yesterday was hardware, not software - an SSD failure.  It's not dead but ZFS automatically disabled it due to errors, which broke all the sites hosted there.

    So I had backups from the previous day, and I now have backups from the moment it failed.  If anyone lost anything important I can get it back.


Tech News

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: And I still am.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:34 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 337 words, total size 4 kb.

Saturday, May 02

Geek

Lost A Day

Oops.  Looks like the server died just before the daily backups, not just after.  (I pasted yesterday's post in from the version I cross-posted over on Ace's blog.)

If you didn't see the notice I put up while the server was dead, well, the server died.  It's up and running but all the LXC containers where the actual work happens are completely frozen, and I was worried that if I touched anything it would just get worse, so I grabbed all the backups and moved them to the new server I already had set up for that purpose.

Took about twelve hours from the old server failing to the new one being operational, but the move I've been planning for months finally happened, so there's that.

If you're missing anything major or having any other problems, please comment here.


Update: Found the problem.  Disk errors threw the ZFS pool on the second SSD (where the containers lived) into "faulted" state, so the server was responding but the load average was around 600 because anything in those containers that tried to write to disk was hanging indefinitely.

I've recovered it (which was easy) but it's still warning about data corruption.  Backups were intact because they were in a partition on the boot SSD - the idea being that a disk failure of either one would leave us with intact data.  I also have offsite backups but they weren't as up to date.

Since we're already on the new server I'll take a final set of backups and the clear and cancel the server.

The new server has a single SSD, but it's in a cluster and backups are synced daily to a storage server with RAID-Z3, so we'd have to lose the main server and four drives on the backup server before we lost data.  So we're fine unless there's a datacenter fire.

Another datacenter fire.  We survived the last one but that server was down for three weeks while they cleaned up.
more...

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