Yes.
Everything's going to be fine.
Friday, June 30
The Case Of The Rapping Reaper Edition
Top Story
- Oh, yeah. Nvidia's RTX 4060 is here. (Tom's Hardware)
Buy a 6700XT while they're still available. Or wait for the 7700 and hope it's priced appropriately.
The only good cards in the current generation are Nvidia's 4090 - if you're spending someone else's money - and AMD's 7600 which is now available for around $250 and is worth just about that.
Everything in between is either overpriced, underperforms, or has stupid limitations that ruin a card that might otherwise be adequate.
Tech News
- Dell's 6K professional monitor is here. (Tom's Hardware)
It's good, but it costs as much as six good 4K monitors, and I'd rather have six good 4K monitors.
- There's no such thing as bad publicity, until the woke mob arrives. (New York Times)
A new author - who appears to be an idiot, but she's being interviewed by the New York Times so that is pretty much required - found her book getting review-bombed on Goodreads because, so far as I can tell from the rather turgid article, the plot summary she posted to Twitter is insensitive to Marxist retards:The story centers on a young Black woman working at Goldman Sachs who falls in love with a conservative white co-worker with bigoted views.
Note also that "Black" is capitalised because it is an identity, where "white" is not because it is merely an admission of guilt.
- Rocky Linux, which took up the mantle from CentOS after that distribution was murdered by IBM, says it has found a way forward after RedHat stopped distributing source code releases. (The Register)
IBM only cares about large enterprise customers - if you have fewer than 16 servers they will just give you RHEL licenses for free - but they don't want to let those large enterprise customers slip away, so they are making it as difficult as possible for independent Linux distributions to retain 100% compatibility with RHEL, without actually violating the open source licenses that all the code depends on.
Expect a slow-moving and frankly rather boring war of attrition here, as IBM comes up with annoying new tricks and the smaller distros work around them,
Meanwhile I'm using Ubuntu.
- Brave browser will soon prevent web pages from scanning your local network. (Ars Technica)
If you thought your home devices were safe without passwords because they're not exposed to the internet, well, wrong. Your browser is on your local network so any web page you load can scan your devices.
And a surprising number of legitimate websites do that for no good reason. The article mentions eBay, Chick-fil-A, Best Buy, Kroger, and Macy's, and there are lots more.
Brave will show a popup for websites that try this and you will be able to grant one-time or permanent access, or tell the site to buzz off. It will be interesting to see what breaks.
- If you want a small Android phone, the Asus Zenfone 10 is apparently what passes for that these days. (The Verge)
It has a 5.9" screen, but some of the larger models are getting close to 7", so it is at least relatively small.
It's not cheap either, but the specs are decent. Not that The Verge tells you what they are, but here's a proper review (Tom's Guide) and here are the full specs. (GSM Arena)
It has a headphone jack but no microSD slot, but is at least available with up to 512GB of storage. Still, if you're using it to hold important data, make sure it's all backed up, because if the phone fails for any reason everything on it is going to be toast.
- Gigabyte's new Ryzen 7030U Brix (their NUC lineup) is up to 140% faster than previous Intel models. (Tom's Hardware)
Where by "previous" they mean three years previously, but then the 7030U is itself a two year old design so that's not actually unfair.
Don't expect remarkable performance, but it should be decent for anything short of serious gaming. The eight core 7030U is a slightly improved 5800U, and my new laptop is a six core 5600U, and I'm pretty happy with it. With the CPU anyway; the shortcomings relate to the screen and the battery life, neither of which applies to a desktop mini-PC.
- Hyte has done it again: The new Y40 Calliope Mori edition is available for pre-order. (Hyte)
If you plan to fill your house with Hololive-themed PCs they also offer custom Y60 versions styled on Bae and Kronii, and a Hololive EN TKL keyboard. Which I can't buy because that for some reason is US/Canada only even though it's called the "Connect the World" bundle.
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Thursday, June 29
Cartoon Rabbit Password Apocalypse Edition
Top Story
- At Reddit, the beatings will continue until morale improves. (The Verge)
Many of the major subreddits, each with millions of users, remain dark, and Reddit's approach has moved from threatening the moderators to, well, still threatening the moderators. They don't really seem to have any other ideas.
Now, the moderators of many of the subreddits are little better than a horde of mini-Hitlers, but so are the people actually running the company. The problem is that despite all the hitlering there is a lot of worthwhile content stuck behind the blackout curtains.
And the only thing Reddit cares about is monetising that content; it doesn't matter how that affects the moderators or the users.
They've really taken a page out of the Big Hasbro Book on Customer Relations.
Tech News
- Western Digital's new SN580 SSD delivers a DRAMless TLC drive for 5 cents per GB. (AnandTech)
There are other drives priced like that at retail, but this is the official price.
It's a PCIe 4 drive too, but speeds are only a little above 4GB per second. Which is very, very fast, but not full PCIe 4 speed.
$50 for 1TB is a great price and it should work fine for most users.
- The only problem is their own high-end SN850X model is selling for $59 for 1TB. (Tom's Hardware)
This is a great drive and runs at full PCIe 4 speeds, and has a DRAM cache to help with writes and random I/O. Definitely worth the extra $9.
- Maza is a financial startup targeting the lucrative illegal immigrant market. (Tech Crunch)
What?
- Stop giving them ideas: The Password Game will make you want to break your keyboard. (Ars Technica)
Yes, it's exactly what you think it is.
Cartoon Rabbit Password Apocalypse Video of the Day
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Wednesday, June 28
Shop Of Theseus Edition
Top Story
- Who is the new Mac Pro for? Apparently, nobody. (The Verge)
The previous Mac Pro was a serious computer for serious people - except that it was a Mac, anyway. It supported multiple video cards and up to 1.5TB of RAM.
The new Mac Pro is limited to 192GB of RAM, the same amount you can add to a $100 Intel 13100F. And it supports no graphics cards. It has slots for graphics cards, but if you install one, it won't work.
If you ask professional Mac users if they want a Mac Pro, the answer is no. For almost all of them the 96GB available on the MacBook Pro is enough, and for the few remaining there's the 192GB on a maxed-out Mac Studio. The Mac Studio doesn't have any PCIe slots, but you can't use the PCIe slots in the Mac Pro anyway.
Tech News
- After it stopped providing source code distributions for its Linux releases in order to kill its free competitors, RedHat explained that it didn't stop providing source code distributions for its Linux releases in order to killed its free competitors, it stopped providing source code distributions for its Linux releases and the painful lingering deaths of its free competitors are purely a coincidence. (Phoronix)
RedHat still provides source code - it is legally obligated to do so, because it doesn't own most of the software in its version of Linux. It just provides it as individual updates in thousands of different places, making it painfully difficult to precisely reproduce RedHat Linux.
This comes after IBM - owner of RedHat - bought its best known free competitor, CentOS, and murdered it. I mean, had it coincidentally die of natural causes at the bottom of a staircase with a knife in its back at IBM's country estate at midnight.
- Seagate's Firecuda 540 SSDs are 50% faster than their 530 model at twice the price. (Tom's Hardware)
Which means that you could simply buy two 530s, run them in RAID-0, and have twice as much storage that is 33% faster.
There really isn't much use for PCIe 5 SSDs until they get a lot cheaper.
- Samsung is planning to ship 2nm chips in 2025, and 1.4nm in 2027. (AnandTech)
Intel is planning to ship earlier, but Intel got stuck on 14nm for seventeen years (approximately) so we'll see what happens.
- GitHub's CEO says AI and software development are now inextricably linked, like peanut butter and typhoid. (Tech Crunch)
In an interview after his talk, Dohmke expanded on this a bit when I asked him if he believes every developer will be using AI in the near future. "I think the obvious answer to that one is that the FOMO in companies is already so big that they are looking at the competition and asking themselves if their competitor has already adapted [GitHub] Copilot — and that means that that competitor has — and doesn’t really matter if it’s 20%, 30% or 40% — that competitor has an advantage."
All your competitors are jumping off our bridge! It doesn't really matter if it's a 20 foot, 30 foot, or 40 foot drop, that competitor is going to go splat before you do!On top of that, he believes there is really no disadvantage for developers to use a tool like GitHub Copilot. "It's just so natural. There's really no reason to not use new improved GitHub Copilot, now with activated charcoal" he said. "I think new improved GitHub Copilot now with activated charcoal is becoming part of the standard toolset that every developer will be using. Ultimately, developers not using it will exist, the same way Cobalt developers still exist."
Yes, the article says Cobalt.
These people literally know nothing.
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Tuesday, June 27
Daniel's Disappointing Donuts Edition
Top Story
- There's a donut chain in Melbourne that sells several gluten-free varieties, and I really wanted to try them out while I was down there. This turned out to be very easy because there was one in the shopping mall next to my hotel, and another at the airport.
I got an assortment of six: One plain, one jam filled, one Nutella-filled, and three glazed.
They're terrible.
- Social network IRL, just recently hailed as a "unicorn" for quickly attracting 20 million active users, is shutting down after it turned out that 19 million of them don't exist. (Tech Crunch)
Having bots on your social network is not intrinsically bad, so long as you can still get a count of human users somehow. If you can't, and your depending on investor or advertising money, you're bound for serious trouble seriously quickly.
Tech News
- If 64GB isn't enough for your laptop Mushkin's new 96GB DDR5 SODIMM kit is available now. (Serve the Home)
This should work in both Intel and AMD laptops, but you should probably check compatibility first; there have been BIOS issues with some desktop motherboards and it's likely the same will be true for laptops.
I just switched to a new laptop with 64GB of RAM, and the difference from 16GB is night and day. Frankly 32GB would have been fine, but going all the way up to 64GB was only another $100 - Australian, so $3.50 in real money. If I only had the one laptop for all my work the 96GB kit would be worth it, but I have one or two or three others.
- The Flipper Zero is on its way to selling $80 million worth of, uh, professional security testing tools. (Tech Crunch)
It is actually very useful for security testing; the problem is more that it's a little too good at what it does. If you're building a garage door system, for example, and want to make sure that it's secure, the device that does that can also open any garage doors that aren't secure.
It can also emulate security cards, key fobs, arbitrary Bluetooth and infrared devices, and IoT and smart home systems which are notoriously unreliable anyway. Which again is great for developers who need to test those things, not so good if the kid next door keeps locking you out of your own home.
- Google's Pixel Fold is a great $500 device with the slight drawback that it actually costs $1800. (The Verge)
And the secondary drawback that if you get a tiny bit of grit on the screen and then fold it closed it could die after just four days. (Ars Technica)
$450 a day seems like rather a lot for a mobile phone.
- If you want one of those little five port 2.5GbE routers only with eight ports you can now get that too. (Liliputing)
Available with up to a Core i7-10510U, 32GB of RAM, and 1TB of storage, which is more than you could possibly need for a simple router, so it can double as a small Linux server.
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Sunday, June 25
Just People Doing People Things Edition
Top Story
- Behavioural scientists behaving badly: The work of a top researcher at Harvard Business School has come into question after accusations that she is - and I quote* - just making shit up. (New York Times)
This is particularly striking because her area of expertise - such as it is - is honesty.
Only half of published medial research holds up when other researchers try to reproduce the results, and for psychology the number is closer to one third. (The Atlantic)
Part of that is a form of selection bias: Research that doesn't find a result often doesn't get published in the first place.
But it can't help if the effect was never real in the first place because the research wasn't real.
* Quotes may settle in shipping.
Tech News
- AI's bigger-is-better approach is running out of road. (The Economist)
OpenAI's GPT-3 cost nearly $5 million to train in 2020. GPT-4 just over two years later cost more than $100 million. Is OpenAI prepared to spend $2 billion on GPT-5? Even if they are, is there enough high-quality data that they can spend that much with it automatically going to waste?
The article suggests that AI companies will be forced to work smarter, not expensiver. But even if they do that will mean instead of spending exponentially more money for incrementally better results, they'll need to work exponentially smarter for incrementally better results.
That's an even worse tradeoff. It's the Technological Nothingularity, where even with AI helping train new generations of AI, progress slows to a crawl indistinguishable from a dead stop, where the technology of tomorrow can be safely predicted by assuming that nothing ever changes.
- ChatGPT can't program in INTERCAL. (Muppet Labs)
That's okay. Neither can anyone else.
- Midjourney 5.2 is here and seems to be pretty good. (Ars Technica)
It may not matter if your progress stalls, so long as you get to good before stalling it. If you run out of fuel after arriving safely at your destination. meh, you can deal with it later.
It was hard to get good results out of Midjourney 2. It was vague not only on how many fingers people had and where they should be located, but hands and heads as well. They latest version appears to produce much more coherent images.
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Friday, June 23
Postcrime Edition
Top Story
- LexisNexis is providing bulk personal records to ICE without so much as a hint of a warrant, specifically so that ICE can target people who have not actually committed any crimes. (The Intercept)
Ctrl-F precrime: No results.
Ctrl-F fascism: No results.
The Intercept? More like the Internept. Internot? Something like that. What good are you?
Tech News
- Windows 11 is garbage.
When I get back home, Tanya the Evil is getting a Windows 10 upgrade.
- Intel has made it official: There won't be a 14th generation desktop chip based on the Meteor Lake architecture this year. (WCCFTech)
There will however be a 14th generation desktop chip based on the Raptor Lake architecture, which is 13th generation, and a 14th generation laptop HX chip based on the Raptor Lake architecture, which is still 13th generation, a 1st generation laptop U/H Ultra chip based on the Meteor Lake architecture, which is 14th generation, and a 1st generation laptop U/H chip based on the Raptor Lake architecture, which as we mentioned earlier is 13th generation.
All clear?
Good.
Don't buy anything.
- The 7840HS in the Beelink GTR7 makes for a potent NUC. (Serve the Home)
They tested it in light gaming such as League of Legends and logged no real improvement over the previous generation GTR6 with a 6900HX processor.
Then they realised that the new model has been tested on 4k resolution instead of 1080p.
- Since I'm back in a big city for a few days I stopped at an electronics store to see if there exists a phone appreciably larger than my Samsung, um, A52 5G I think it is. Not that I have 5G back home in West Wyalong* but I did in Sydney before the move.
Well, I didn't; in fact I barely had any Gs at all. I had five hypothetical Gs, but zero point one actual Gs.
Anyway, no.
No good small tablets either. The sales guys - there were are group of them standing around chatting - paused when I said there were no good small tablets, and then unpaused when I added except for the iPad Mini which I don't want.
I think I might have to get one, though. I have my Samsung A7 Lite with me on this trip as well, and it's just a big bundle of meh.
* May not contain any actual West Wyalong.
- Prism Project has announced its seventh generation of vtubers. (Twitter)
This comes a month after Gen 6, which came a month after Gen 5, which came 18 months after Gen 4, so it seems that someone at Sony finally woke up and remembered that they bought a vtuber agency a couple of years ago. (The exact terms of the deal weren't made public, but day-to-day operations are handle by Sony now and the talents' music is released under the Sony label).
The three new talents are all well-known indie vtubers, which is something Phase Connect also did with its "Phase Invaders" generations, and it's what Kawa Entertainment is all about. Give them a home, let them keep their models and fanbases, and skim a little off the top in return for managing things like music and gameplay rights.
- So apart from Windows 11, Mrs Pixy, how's the new laptop? (The HP Pavilion 14, non-Plus version.)
It's okay. The screen is definitely meh. The CPU is significantly faster than my old laptop (six cores vs. four, so it should be), and it has 64GB of RAM and 4TB of SSD because such things are cheap if you can just find a laptop that is still upgradeable, which is the only reason I got this and not the much nicer but unupgradeable Plus.
Keyboard I'm getting used to, but the screen is not as good as the old laptop even after the old laptop's screen went bad. Battery life is far from spectacular as well.
I brought along a little 65W GaN charger with three USB ports to keep the laptop, phone, and tablet topped up and chugging alone.
It can't do that.
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Thursday, June 22
Usual Suspecting Edition
Top Story
- Journalists for Censorship is at it again: Spotify's podcast platform is going off the rails, except for Joe Rogan who is still drawing huge audiences and we can't stand it!!!!! (The Verge)
One problem is that none of these people — from former presidents to filmmakers to bestselling authors — were able to deliver sure-fire podcast hits. Even a podcast hosted by Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen ended up putting people to sleep.
This comes as a surprise?This cascading series of events says a lot about the unwieldy nature of Spotify’s podcast business, which is still driven mostly by the former host ofFear Factor. Not even a compilation video of Rogan saying the n-word nearly two dozen times got him kicked off the platform. It’s a lot of power for one creator to yield.
JfC: WHY WON'T YOU CANCEL HIM?!
Spotify: He actually makes us money.
Tech News
- Elemental's co-writers wanted it to open, honest, and not an actually good film like Zootopia. (The Verge)
I'm so old I remember when Pixar was a surefire hitmaker. Now its just another third-rate cartoon studio.
How did that happen?
This is how:Honestly, what’s funny is we’re taking a breather from the strike lines to do this and a few other interviews, and we’re going back this afternoon.
If you're a writer, you can't go on strike. Writing is what you do. It's in your blood.
Corollary: If you can go on strike, you're not a writer, you're a janitor with a keyboard. (No offense to janitors, but if they tried to do their jobs with a keyboard they'd be useless too.)
- Intel has discontinued the Arc A770 limited edition - the model with 16GB of VRAM. (Tom's Hardware)
The A750 with 8GB VRAM is nearly as fast and much cheaper, so unless you specifically wanted 16GB of RAM that's not a dealbreaker.
- Apple's 24-core workstation-class M2 Ultra CPU, found in the new Mac Pro (base price $7000) has shown up on the Passmark benchmark list. (Notebook Check)
It's 1% faster than AMD's 7845HX, a 12-core laptop chip.
The editor at Notebook Check seems to think this is a great achievement for Apple rather than an embarrassment. I think that benchmark score is probably low, but taken at face value, AMD has six consumer-level chips faster than Apple's flagship CPU, and dozens of workstation and server parts.
- Feel good story of the day: Elon Musk triples down on making Twitter terrible for trans people. (Tech Crunch)
Musk said that if you use the term "cis" as a slur, it will be treated as such, and your account will be suspended.
They also complain about the Babylon Bee pointing out that "Rachel" Levine is a man. The only thing missing is a reference to GamerGate and I'd have filled my Entitled Whiners bingo card.
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Wednesday, June 21
Shark Day Edition
Top Story
- A new LLM (large language model, the same sort of AI as ChatGPT) called phi-, with 1.3 billion tokens, scores over 50% on the HumanEval problem set. (Twitter)
GPT-4 scores 67% - but uses 1.7 trillion tokens.
How did they achieve this miracle? They trained phi-1 on textbooks rather than on the internet.
And what does it means? It means you can produce an AI that is smart enough to perform simple tasks and small enough to run on your laptop - and probably your phone.
What else does it mean? It means to score 85% on that test using the same approach as GPT-4 you'd need something like 2 quadrillion tokens, which would cost billions of dollars to train even if you could find that much data. And then years to "align", that is, to get it to stop giving obviously wrong answers because you stuffed it full of nonsense.
Garbage in, garbage out.
phi-1 took four days to train. (Arxiv)
Also, speaking of garbage, don't use textbooks published after 2010 or so.
Tech News
- Meanwhile over 100,000 ChatGPT accounts have been leaked to the Dark Web. (Tom's Hardware)
Probably by ChatGPT.
- Speaking of ChatGPT, it apparently knows 25 jokes. (Twitter)
Which admittedly is 23 more than the Babylon Bee. (The Babylon Bee)
If you ask ChatGPT to tell you a new joke, 90% of the time you will get a slightly mangled version of one of those 25. And none of them are funny.
- Just days after saying that it would never remove moderators involved in the protest, Reddit has started removing moderators involved in the protest. (The Verge)
Moderators of r/midlyinteresting marked the subreddit as NSFW - which means children can't access it if they're particularly stupid, and more importantly, Reddit doesn't run ads.
In a carefully-worded statement, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman-Fried said, "God damn you. God damn you all to Hell."
- You can now 3D-print your own Selectric typeballs. (GitHub)
Want to type your new novel directly in Sindarin Elvish? Now you can.
- Razer's new Blade 14 offers a Ryzen 7940HS, RTX 4070 graphics, user-upgradeable memory and storage, and a high-resolution 14" IPS display. (Tom's Hardware)
It lacks the Four Essential Keys and costs $2699. And it weighs only two ounces less than the 16" Gigabyte Aero, which includes those keys and a second M.2 slot.
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Tuesday, June 20
A Song Of Fiery Ice Edition
Top Story
- Some say we'll end in Brave New World,
Some say in 1984.
I stand with corporate flag unfurled
And push like hell for Brave New World.
But if we had to end again,
I think I know enough of life
To see that coddling morons*
Brings us to Harrison Bergeron.
Complex systems won't survive the competence crisis. (Palladium)
The world grows more complex by the day, and we haven't had a dumber ruling class since 1913. And that worked out just great for everyone, so nothing to worry about.America must be understood as a system of interwoven systems; the healthcare system sends a bill to a patient using the postal system, and that patient uses the mobile phone system to pay the bill with a credit card issued by the banking system. All these systems must be assumed to work for anyone to make even simple decisions. But the failure of one system has cascading consequences for all of the adjacent systems. As a consequence of escalating rates of failure, America’s complex systems are slowly collapsing.
Not just America, of course, but America is the exemplar here of past greatness rapidly corroding from within. Many of the countries affected by this disease were never great, or their greatness was a century or more past.
I mentioned Twilio yesterday, with their brilliant three word billboard - Ask your developer - the point being that even if you, the manager driving past, didn't know about Twilio, your technical staff did, replaced by some sesquipedalian drivel about reducing cost of acquisition, but that's just one tiny example of this, and to some degree it's an example of the brain rot that affects all large organisations. Large organisations cannot innovate, which is why they acquire small ones.
And then destroy them.
What's the solution? With businesses, you let them collapse into bankruptcy and sell of the pieces. With countries, the traditional approach was war, but that is frowned upon these days.
* No offense to the Horde, who are the good kind of moron. Best I could do in two minutes.
Tech News
- Don't buy an Nvidia H100 for gaming. (WCCFTech)
Technically it is a GPU, but (a) it costs north of $30,000, (b) it has no video outputs, and (c) it is actually slower for playing games than AMD's integrated graphics because the drivers don't know what to do with it.
- Towards Intersectional Moderation: An Alternative Model of Moderation Built on Care and Power as if Social Media Weren't Screwed up Enough Already. (Arxiv)
With Reddit imploding by the day, the developers and operators of the "fediverse", a loosely coupled network of independent nodes running software like Mastodon, are banding together to replace it with something infinitely worse.
You might not have thought that possible.
You were wrong.
- A QNAP 16-bay NAS. (Serve the Home)
On the one hand, it supports 12 3.5", 4 2.5", and two M.2 drives, with up to 128GB of ECC RAM, at a price that is merely exorbitant and not actually insane.
On the other hand, QNAP.
- Well, that's just terrifying. (BBC)
Do not read if you're subject to claustrophobia.
- Journalists for Censorship is at it again. (The Verge)
The reason they have their panties in a twist today is that Spotify is permitting Joe Rogan to interview people who are saying inconvenient things.
This cannot be allowed.
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Monday, June 19
When Seven Hundred Years Old You Are Edition
Top Story
- At least they're self-aware: Black Mirror's 'Joan is Awful' shits all over the future of streaming. (The Verge)
Right now in Hollywood, the screenwriters of the Writers Guild of America are on strike.
I know this is true, but it hasn't affected my viewing habits one iota.And one reason they’re on strike is the fear that AI will take their jobs, churning out mediocre content quickly and cheaply that helps streamers’ bottom lines even if it doesn’t contribute much culturally speaking.
So their jobs are churning out mediocre content quickly and cheaply that helps streamers’ bottom lines even if it doesn’t contribute much culturally speaking?
I mean, yes. True. Just odd to hear them admit it.Disclosure: The Verge’s editorial staff is represented by the Writers Guild of America East.
I would never have guessed.
Tech News
- MSI is launching an RTX 4060 without RGB lighting. (Tom's Hardware)
I'm so old I remember when computer cases were opaque.
- There's always a bigger fish, and there's always a slimier lawyer. (New York Times)
Slime gets drunk and says things he shouldn't, career implodes, film at eleven.
- How to destroy your brand in eight words or less. (Miguel Grinberg)
Twilio - an API service for sending messages to people, which before Twilio was a confusing mess - replaced its iconic billboard that said simply Ask your developer with one that says How can I reduce acquisition costs by 65%?
Bleh.
- I've been rewatching series 5 of Doctor Who - new Doctor Who, not old Who, which is denoted by seasons and half of season 5 is lost anyway - and it mostly holds up well except for the two-part story in the middle, which was written by Chris Chibnall and is a slow and dreary mess where the characters play hot potato with the idiot ball.
Chris Chibnall just happens to be the man who took over the show for series 11 and turned the entire thing into a slow and dreary mess where the characters play hot potato with the idiot ball.
The warning signs were all there.
- Speaking of warning signs, the trailer for Netflix's live-action adaptation of One Piece doesn't look entirely terrible. (YouTube)
Cheesy as hell, yes, but so is the anime. They seem to have embraced the cheese and kept the spirit, which is encouraging.
If you don't have kids you might not have heard of One Piece, but it's an industry in itself. The anime has run for over 1000 episodes (plus fifteen movies), and the manga has sold half a billion copies.
Will I be watching it? Probably not. The anime has run for over 1000 episodes, and I think I've seen one of those. But if Netflix can produce something that doesn't suck, even now, there might still be hope for us all.
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