Tuesday, July 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 July 2024

Pine Lime And Passionfruit Edition

Top Story

Tech News

  • The FBI has gained access to the would-be assassin's cell phone.  (The Verge)

    Unlikely that this will change anything, of course.

    Best comment: Reddit is leaking.


  • Microsoft's CTO denies the obvious, that AI is facing exponential scaling costs.  (Ars Technica)

    He denies this in the face of exponential expenses in AI training.  He's lying, badly.

    Best comment: Always listen to the Chief Tulip Officer's advice about investing in tulips.


  • A look at AMD's Zen 5 microarchitecture.  (AnandTech)

    Zen 1 through Zen 4 had the same basic design, able to issue and retire four instructions per cycle.  Zen 4 also introduced a 256-bit half-width version of Intel's AVX-512 vector processing.  Intel's own consumer CPUs lack AVX-512 in any form.

    With Zen 5 the issue width has been increased to eight instructions per cycle, and the AVX-512 unit is now a full 512 bits wide.

    If your code is poised perfectly to take advantage of the improved hardware it could run twice as fast on Zen 5 as Zen 4, but that's unlikely.

    The performance charts attached to this article show the 12 core 9900X running Handbrake video processing tasks 41% faster than Intel's 24 core 14900K, at half the power consumption.

    Of course Intel will have new chips itself later this year, but those are expected to focus on fixing the power issues more than increasing performance.

    These chips are due to show up...  Basically now.


  • Also on the AMD front, testing the graphics performance of the new Ryzen HX 370 laptop chip.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's basically level with the desktop GTX 1070, laptop GTX 1650 Ti, or the Radeon RX 480.  I used an RX 480 myself from 2017 to 2022, and it's a perfectly competent card.  For integrated graphics performance it's amazing.

    AMD has another, much more powerful laptop CPU in the wings, with at least twice the graphics performance.  No word yet on when that one will ship.


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Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:09 PM | Comments (5) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 455 words, total size 4 kb.

1 "Despite what other people think, we're not at diminishing marginal returns on scale-up,"

Right, see if what your doing has no real value, ie your return is zero, you are very unlikely to see diminishing returns in the future.

Posted by: normal at Tuesday, July 16 2024 10:53 PM (LADmw)

2 Shooting some specific tech execs and/or academics seems like it should have some positive return, but such things are hard to judge, and the common man understands that letting overconfident idiots get their murder on is always a net negative.

I think the hobbyists, and also researchers working on small specialized systems may yet come of with interesting and useful new wrinkles.

If current approaches have limited applications, mostly already filled, then scaling would have no benefit.

I'm pretty sure Microsoft has misjudged what would actually add value for their users.  But, if I could conclusively demonstrate that, I could get the paper published with the journal of the 'No, you idiots!' Society.

Posted by: PatBuckman at Wednesday, July 17 2024 12:51 AM (rcPLc)

3 I love a good Logan's Run reference.

Posted by: Rick C at Wednesday, July 17 2024 11:22 AM (MItL9)

4 There is no Sanctuary.

Posted by: Mauser at Wednesday, July 17 2024 03:08 PM (nk1Z+)

5 In the infamously humorous online game Skribbl IO you may get points by either predicting what other players will draw or by asking them to guess what you will draw.

Posted by: asabinn at Tuesday, November 05 2024 07:59 PM (I9eMS)

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




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