Monday, May 04
Daily News Stuff 4 May 2026
Omnispoo Edition
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
- Microsoft now recommends 32GB of RAM as a practical minimum for running games. (Tom's Hardware)
That's 2GB for the game and 30GB for Windows.
- Anthropic is looking to buy new inference chips from British startup Fractile that don't use DRAM. (Tom's Hardware)
These are specialised devices that store their data in on-chip static RAM rather than in a large pool of DRAM. But they can't perform tasks that require a large memory pool.
- Why TUIs are back. (Alcides Fonseca)
TUI here stands for terminal user interface - what everyone had before GUIs.
Also what NetHack used (and still uses).
- The text mode lie: Why modern TUIs are a nightmare for accessibility. (Xogium)
The keyword here is modern. The same developers who crapped up the web have turned their attention to the text console with predictable results.
- Micron's CEO says that the memory situation is going to improve. (WCCFTech)
For him, not for you. You're still screwed.
- Leaked documents reveal that the EU wants to force a merger of Bluesky and Twitter. (Gript)
That would be hilarious.
Musical Interlude
Disclaimer: Beep.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:28 PM
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After I tested the memory footprint of 2017 Win10 against the final 2025 update Win10, I say no to Win11. And of course the Aggressor Nation (1) wants to do that crap, their leadership fears the chopping block that free speech might bring them to. (1) The US Army invented the EU as a joke before the European idjits actually implemented it.
Posted by: PatBuckman at Monday, May 04 2026 11:25 PM (s6adZ)
2
It's worse than that, according to the article. (I'm trying to read the law itself but the site isn't loading for me, so I have to rely on the article's summary for now). According to the article's summary, the website will be liable for not detecting whether the user is using a VPN. (When the entire point of VPN's is that websites can't tell you're using one).
Some politicians need to be fired (not just dumped at the next election, but recalled via special election). For cause.
Some politicians need to be fired (not just dumped at the next election, but recalled via special election). For cause.
Posted by: Robin Munn at Tuesday, May 05 2026 01:29 AM (NqF0D)
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