Thursday, October 24

Geek

Daily News Stuff 24 October 2024

Disarmed Edition

Top Story

  • Arm has given notice to Qualcomm that it - Arm - plans to cancel it's - Qualcomm's - Arm architecture license.  (Tom's Hardware)

    CPU startup Nuvia paid for an Arm architecture license, which allowed that company to design custom Arm processor cores.  Nuvia was then acquired by Qualcomm, which also had an Arm architecture license, and its - Nuvia's - designs became what is now the Qualcomm X series which has made its way into Windows laptops that for the first time ever provide adequate performance for Windows on Arm.

    Arm is upset about this because its - Arm's - own cores don't provide adequate performance in Windows laptops so nobody uses them, and cores produced on an architecture license provide Arm less revenue than its - Arm's - own designs.

    So Arm is suing Qualcomm for squillions of dollars and wants to prevent it - Qualcomm - from selling processors designed with its - Qualcomm's - own cores, despite it - Qualcomm and Nuvia both - having paid it - Arm - for a license to do so.

    It - the entire situation - is a mess and I don't know how things will turn out.


Tech News

Not At All Tech News

Victoria Brightshield marks the latest in a long series of talents to flee the sinking yacht that is Nijisanji English.  

Which means she will likely return soon as her own account Mogu and finally have a chance to collab with Dokibird and Maid Mint who are definitely just independent vtubers and never had any relationship with Nijisanji themselves.



Disclaimer: And Sayu Sincronisity and Michi Mochievee and Matara Kan and...

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:50 PM | Comments (6) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 477 words, total size 5 kb.

1 "The satellite's breakup left some customers without power or communications services."

Power?

Posted by: normal at Friday, October 25 2024 12:24 AM (LADmw)

2 I'm thinking that maybe the article was not very well written. A sudden high energy break up could be a weapons test.

Posted by: PatBuckman at Friday, October 25 2024 06:17 AM (rcPLc)

3 It looks like they did not read the Intelsat press release carefully. It had an ambiguity in its words. Loss of power and service to customers. Satellite lost power, and also lost service to customers.

Posted by: PatBuckman at Friday, October 25 2024 06:33 AM (rcPLc)

4 Don't look at me, I'm only in the commercial aircraft side of things, and we're on strike anyway. (Vote yesterday went 64% against)

Posted by: Mauser at Friday, October 25 2024 07:16 AM (nk1Z+)

5 That said, an 8 year old satellite going poof instantaneously suggests to me it got hit by something.

Posted by: Mauser at Friday, October 25 2024 07:18 AM (nk1Z+)

6 I had heard about the vote.

Yeah, eight years in, four left suggests that it wasn't a manufacturing problem, and it well predates covid anyway.  Of course, it was four and a half left instead of seven left because there was a problem with the propulsion, so that could have been manufacturing.  I think Boeing has real problems, and at the same time a lot of the media groups repackaging the intelsat press release are going 'Boeing', and just piling on reflexively and with zero thought. 

Posted by: PatBuckman at Saturday, October 26 2024 05:16 AM (rcPLc)

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Apple pies are delicious. But never mind apple pies. What colour is a green orange?




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