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

Thursday, May 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 May 2024

Top Story

  • Underpants gnomes, eat your heart out.

    Stack Overflow signed a deal with OpenAI - creators of ChatGPT - to sell off user data at a presumably enormous profit.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The users of course don't see a penny of this.

    Understandably annoyed, those users started editing their content.  They can't delete answers that have been accepted due to the way Stack Overflow works, but they can update them and render the data worthless.

    So Stack Overflow started banning its own best users.

    To rub salt into the wound, Stack Overflow has long banned its users from using generative AI to help write those answers, but has no qualms whatsoever about selling your work.

    This likely violates the terms of Europe's GDPR, so let's see what the lawsuit fairy brings.


Tech News

  • Don't buy an Intel 14900K for gaming.

    Now that Intel has walked back its chip-frying levels of automated overclocking, Hardware Unboxed has re-tested the 14900K against AMD's 7800X3D on a range of games.



    The two chips perform about the same.

    But the Intel chip is 50% more expensive and uses twice as much power.

    Note that this is still with the Intel chip running at 250W at all times, just not previous levels that went as high as 400W.

    Intel now recommends default power settings of 125W, which will definitely reduce performance - and is still more power than the AMD chip uses.


  • US libraries are fighting for a better deal on e-books.  (Axios)
    "We need the coercive power of the state sitting behind us at the table saying, 'We need a special slice of the pie.'"
    Suddenly I'm feeling that the people who burned the library at Alexandria weren't all bad.


  • Google is leaving its godawful offices in San Francisco.  (SF Chronicle)

    Continuing the hollowing out of what I'm told used to be a nice town.

    Google is not yet leaving the city entirely, much less the state.  But maybe.


  • Minisforum's AtomMan X7 has an Intel 185H CPU (6 P cores and 10 E cores), up to 96GB of RAM, four video outputs, two M.2 slots, and a four inch built-in display.  (Notebook Check)

    And dual 5Gbit Ethernet ports and, somehow, a camera.

    Which sound neat until you look at the photos and realise that it's not plugged in to anything.  The configuration pictured would need a minimum of five cables.

Vtuber Music Video of the Day



Today it's Neuro-sama singing Dubidubidu, which was originally performed by Christell Jazmin Rodriguez Carrillo on Chilean television in 2003, when she was...  Five.  Then for no apparent reason other than it is kind of catchy it suddenly became a huge meme last year.

Neuro-sama herself is an AI, and I don't use the term lightly.  Although she's the work of a single developer and has the intellect of a precocious and bratty five year old herself, that's infinitely preferable to billion-dollar corporate efforts like OpenAI's ChatGPT or Google's Whatever It's Name is Today, which exist solely to lie to you and call you racist.

Neuro-sama exists to drive you insane and send you bankrupt.



Disclaimer: Don't let her order pizza.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 12:29 AM | Comments (5) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 525 words, total size 5 kb.

Wednesday, May 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 May 2024

You Say Wah Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • Speaking of laptops, the old new laptop - the one I bought two years ago that has been waiting all this time to be set up - has a working Windows license again.

    And it runs my modded Minecraft instance at 60fps with shaders enabled.

    It could probably do more but it's only a 60fps screen.


  • Asus leaked the part number and specs of AMD's upcoming Strix Point laptop chips.  (AnandTech)

    Twelve cores - four Zen 5 and eight Zen 5c, which are identical but run at clock speeds about 25% lower, 36MB cache, a top speed of 5.1GHz on the main cores, and 77 TOPS (trillion operations per second) of AI thingy.

    That's double the AI thingy of Apple's M4, which has a 38 TOPS thingy.


  • China's latest GPU beats the best chips from AMD.  (Tom's Hardware)

    That is, the best chips from AMD from 2008.

    It's roughly equivalent to a Radeon 4850.  I had one of those.  Passive cooler.  Played Mass Effect and Dragon Age on it.

    It definitely slowed down in big combat scenes but it was mostly okay.


  • Micron's new LPCAMM2 memory modules are now available for purchase.  (WCCFTech)

    In one speed, LPDDR5X-7500.

    $175 for 32GB and $330 for 64GB.  Not cheap but 80% cheaper than Apple and even more cheaper than replacing your whole computer because the RAM is soldered in place not that I'm bitter about that right now.


  • An OpenAI executive says that ChatGPT will be "laughably bad" in twelve months.  (Business Insider)

    Hey, give yourself some credit.  It's laughably bad right now.



Vtuber Music Video of the Day



Today's effort is a collab from Hololive's Gawr Gura and Callipe Mori, who between them have approximately seventeen billion subscribers.


Disclaimer: Subscriber numbers may settle in shipping.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:26 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 378 words, total size 4 kb.

Tuesday, May 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 May 2024

Excluded Mondays Edition

Top Story



Tech News

Random Vtuber Music Video of the Day


Not Hololive today, but indie vtuber Midas, with Touch Tone Telephone.



Disclaimer: Cause I'm the right one, on my VOLTE telephone.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:21 PM | Comments (6) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 380 words, total size 4 kb.

Monday, May 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 May 2024

Bibbidy Bobbidy What Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Random Vtuber Music Video of the Day


Today it's Suisei of Hololive's Generation 0.


Disclaimer: Fleem.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:25 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 360 words, total size 4 kb.

Sunday, May 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 May 2024

Break Brakes In Case Of Car Edition

Top Story


Tech News

  • Understanding Stein's paradox.  (Joe Antognini)

    Well, that didn't work.


  • Why RAG won't solve generative AI's hallucination problem.  (Tech Crunch)
    Because models have no real intelligence and are simply predicting words, images, speech, music and other data according to a private schema, they sometimes get it wrong. Very wrong.
    What RAG does is tell the AI to look the damn answer up instead of making it up.

    For which the AI is entirely unnecessary.


  • 4060 Ti or 7700 XT?  (Tom's Hardware)

    Following price cuts from both Nvidia and AMD, the judges award this round to the 7700 XT.  In fact, I've seen the 7700 XT (which has 12GB of RAM) selling for less than even the 8GB model of the 4060 Ti, making the choice easy.


  • Setting up computers all over the place, including a new Linux server at home running Ubuntu 24.04.

    Dug out the spare Dell laptop that had the spare 4TB SSD in it, and that has now been moved over to the new Asus laptop.  The Dell itself doesn't seem to have survived the move - or didn't survive sitting idle for two years.  Either way.

    That frees up 32GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD for a second Linux server.

    The Linux servers will be called Voms and Versen.  The Asus laptop is Maomao.

    I still need to come up with names for the two main Dell laptops.  They were originally going to be Sana and Pomu, but both of them have now granulated.


Disclaimer: The Team MP44 is awarded a rating of "sucks", after failing completely under both Windows and Linux.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:46 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 325 words, total size 3 kb.

Saturday, May 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 May 2024

Flying East For The Spring Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • Building a Threadripper workstation and need lots of fast memory but also want ECC?  V-Color has you covered.  (Serve the Home)

    192GB at DDR5-7200 speeds.

    Though you only get full speed if you have one DIMM per channel, so if you need more (and your motherboard has more than four slots) it will slow down.


  • If you need even faster memory - like HBM - you can place your orders now for delivery in 2026.  (AnandTech)

    Hynix's production is already sold out for 2024 and most of 2025.


  • Google's search results, already almost useless, are getting worse.  (The Register)
    "It has happened," wrote developer Arian van Putten in a social media post over the weekend. "The number one Google result was an official Pulumi documentation page that was clearly written by an LLM (it had a disclaimer that it was) and hallucinated an AWS feature that didn't exist. This is the beginning of the end."
    Pulumi, the company generating the AI results, has been very responsive to the problem, has taken down two thirds of the pages and is reviewing the remainder for incorrect answers.

    Google meanwhile offered the cannedest of canned replies."

    Bing, meanwhile...  Didn't have the same problem.  So score one for Microsoft.


  • Generating 1024 bit prime numbers the hard way.  (GlitchComet)

    The easy way is to just copy and paste.  Here you go:

    177720646511895772991045629522972753502676425002016283330
    773868745109334356532783500581560425145704773959769930413
    789872718529515289471187735819720465888854952471427632098
    554011932730921272830418010265570121099752587584547435013
    097108422373834015070668330390239397186506619029851158511
    460040722871392491661731


  • If you play Helldivers 2 and live in Monaco or San Marino or Andorra or any of about seventy other countries, publisher Sony says fuck you.  (GamesRadar)

    You will now be required to sign up to the PlayStation Network to play the game on Windows.  The PlayStation Network is only available in about half the countries of the world.


Disclaimer: 945823840365261944385461779258678948848895733
4537048005169027172400748827058524436017662724751739571
1789328513629836943472795292264974541501166565036574725
7283774751468462722506308589527265378065943580247626757
1820273179507422716152861844616519323228893348582565916
5768110186250806707871238179328641406132974453293382479
5599421493025591738489336371069336068460715348709172012
3021801275636733652035154380381150933182244614237603209
4106393454572764305617325602916067895908107928867166685
6441583443552516690560142584258610830102009579132267088
2057587569647588918764600080513649038364298260591981487
8988577832926433078349495607247373947010367377289677475
5500406317243269439561951824148407881173957217245636031
5277351443942803625746503229133273649756114847707423847
8826008177672494197128770670097700137814622646790597976
9104118936746554551755140933724517817102602920998374810
8337109652584687785667545975013503508686765144150106128
2212650295452917102430483815570548770755134185242468767
0396301963063976529940898853854271208410059164284436631
7588005712309695476428125758652334701102760363152929515
0339556284160782952797851037310775438926696844000071037
5890418891912560117632698025424042838521891357926491390
1840431329087961912100050621335810601013648959942611347
6831171542522329392523912056780552904226540106875050326
1828468101837117509489508008109855750757527549368756871
0362040814885925754114578478805429438375144578306489930
6182514218070014717363558974888954585800896039475734385
1539629901901788130504769723439345185642821399402502947
4910711044524252069652330396604554935221649798152417817
3543084425215946196391304611028490841670737933182294398
6206484372748552317685699545182599168808158674037325810
0382211768574913773205128576167651431355036990191743006
0188482102166775030262886573240672424105407766027862980
0065148688349635342858596981352624453163978275287225662
1635169622226233182117658961054565973374823168795647909
5778657187385111401899360729540902522926286527500283686
4100141487550343373698392018772442024450485618123278681
0654925281352724937782269319572357422447230313642512359
9107613660142295086208395691765503022228433958309297938
0443941661856057781746977780187806336865412438286080077
4636650161709120118472016357488873390423818688597521459
2212897442830962084565719514033207409404053691696837919
0052270076600381029929866257598872148094793862334895495
1610214008994911640740678157324661840422519222369859222
3260917324763096617289679718148771734497491756027150780
7

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:49 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 406 words, total size 9 kb.

Friday, May 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 May 2024

Water in the Fire Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • Every map of China is wrong.  (Medium)

    If you overlay satellite data on maps of China, nothing seems to line up properly.

    This is because all recent map of China are wrong - deliberately so, with locations shifted by anything from 50 to 500 meters.

    And nobody in China is permitted to correct the errors.


  • There's another critical security vulnerability in GitLab.  (Ars Technica)

    GitLab is great.

    Under no circumstances should you run your own instance connected directly to the internet.


  • Nurses say hospital adoption of half-cooked AI is reckless.  (TechDirt)

    I'm sure they do, and I'm sure it is, but this article not only provides no evidence whatsoever for these claims, it doesn't even provide any coherent claims.


  • Kobo's 2024 e-reader models are user-repairable.  (Liliputing)

    In the sense that a moderately experienced user with a $20 screwdriver set can open them up and replace the screen, battery, and motherboard, and the front and back parts of the case if the damage is physical rather than electronic.

    Which is not everything, but is certainly something.


Disclaimer: Which is not nothing.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:19 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 244 words, total size 3 kb.

Thursday, May 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 May 2024

Snake Edition

Top Story

Tech News

Disclaimer: <disclaimer.h>

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:27 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 313 words, total size 4 kb.

Wednesday, May 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 May 2024

But The Truck Broke Down Edition

Top Story

  • After years of telling motherboard makers to set PL1 = PL2, Intel now says not to do that, and also that it never said to do that.  (AnandTech)

    On Intel CPUs, PL1 is the long-term power level; PL2 is the short burst power level.

    On a high-end chip rated at 125W, PL2 is something like 253W.  On the top of the line 14900KS, it is increased to 320W officially, and 400W or more unofficially.

    This produces great benchmark results but unfortunately fries the chips.

    Of course, if you throttle the chips back to the official official power limits, all the existing benchmark results become fairy tales.

    So if you're looking for a high-end CPU right now, go AMD.

    If you're looking at a mid-range CPU like Intel's i5-14500, none of this is likely to matter.  It's a good chip.



Tech News

Disclaimer: But the truck broke down
It couldn't climb the hill
So they gave me twenty bucks
Off my next grocery bill.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:38 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 361 words, total size 3 kb.

Tuesday, April 30

Geek

Daily News Stuff 30 April 2024

The Price Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Disclaimer: Behind you!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:35 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 436 words, total size 4 kb.

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