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

Saturday, June 14

Geek

Daily News Stuff 14 June 2025

Lizard Oil Edition

Top Story

  • How Palm died for a second time.  (Substack)

    Written by Phil McKinney, who was the CTO of Hewlett Packard at the time HP bought and then promptly murdered Palm.

    The CEO at the time of the acquisition was fired by the board before HP's new PalmOS products could launch, and the new CEO wanted nothing to do with hardware, and killed the entire lineup seven weeks after launch.

    While the CTO was out recovering from emergency surgery.

    And the new CEO was in turn fired by the board just months later, after spending $10 billion on British software company Autonomy and then being forced to write down its value by 80%.
    My first day back at HP will be burned into my memory forever. I was simply trying to grab lunch in the cafeteria at HP Labs when I found myself surrounded by what felt like the entire technical staff. They weren't there to welcome me back - they were there to hold me accountable.

    The scene was intense and unambiguous. Engineers and researchers who had watched the WebOS disaster unfold were pointing fingers and raising voices. Their message was crystal clear and brutal: "You can never take leave again - EVER!"

    Their exact words still echo in my mind: "The CEO and board need adult supervision."

    Indeed they did.  Those were dark days at Hewlett Packard.


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Had to throw out two lizards today.  Don't know how they keep getting in.

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Friday, June 13

Geek

Daily News Stuff 13 June 2025

Ouch Edition

Top Story

  • Google in the wiring closet with a lead pipe: The internet went down.  It was Google's fault.  (Tech Crunch)
    Google Cloud said it started investigating service issues affecting its customers at 11:46 a.m. PT. As of 2:23 p..m PT, the company said it had implemented mitigations, and expects to have its services back up and running within the hour.
    You started investigating issues 44 minutes after I was woken up by the outage?  Good work, guys.
    At 11:19 a.m. PT, Cloudflare also said it was investigating service disruptions affecting its customers, according to its status page.  At 12:12 p.m. PT, Cloudflare said it was starting to see its services recover after investigating the issue.
    Cloudflare KV was affected by the Google outage, and it in turn took down the rest of Cloudflare.

    And that took down everyone else, since Cloudflare handles about 20% of web traffic worldwide, so it's a rare site - like this one - that doesn't depend on it.

    Also, yes, they did post that note at 12:12 PM, but the "starting to see" does a lot of heavy lifting there.  An hour later and our sites at work that are routed through Cloudflare were still completely dead.
    "This is a Google Cloud outage," said Cloudflare spokesperson Ripley Park in an email to TechCrunch. "A limited number of services at Cloudflare use Google Cloud and were impacted. We expect them to come back shortly. The core Cloudflare services were not impacted."
    The core Cloudflare services were not impacted, it was just that you couldn't reach them because everything else was on fire.


Tech News

  • AMD pre-announced its upcoming Zen 6 "Venice" server CPUs, and a little reading between the lines shows some significant changes.  (Tom's Hardware)

    These will lift the maximum core count from 192 to 256, increase performance by 70%, double I/O bandwidth, and increase memory bandwidth from 614GB per second (per CPU) to 1.6TB per second.

    More and faster cores is pretty normal, but doubling I/O bandwidth sounds like PCIe 6.0, which is exactly twice as fast as PCIe 5.0.

    That memory speed sounds like magic, though.  Gen 3 MRDIMMs would achieve that - with an effective transfer rate of 17.6GHz, by running multiplexing two or more chips per module at the same time - but MRDIMMs announced so far only deliver half that speed.


  • AMD also announced its MI350X and MI355X AI GPUs, which have stuff.  (Tom's Hardware)

    288GB of RAM and 256 CUs - compared with 16GB of RAM and 64 CUs on the latest 9070 XT consumer cards.  And 8TB per second of memory bandwidth compared with "only" 640GB per second.

    These are a slightly different design though, optimised for AI, called CDNA as opposed to RDNA used in AMD's laptop chips and consumer graphics cards.

    The next generation promises to provide "UDNA" which will unify the two designs.


  • Anker is recalling over a million power banks because they catch fire.  (The Verge)

    A good reason I suppose.


  • Meta has bought a 49% stake in Scale AI for $14.9 billion.  (Yahoo)

    Scale AI is not an AI company.  It's a people company that uses actual intelligence to weed out bullshit before it is fed into new AI systems to drive them mad.


  • Evergreen headline: Free VPN apps you've never heard of on Apple and Google's app stores are run by China and watch everything you do online.  (Tech Transparency Project)

    These include the fourth-ranked VPN on Apple's App Store and the eleventh-ranked VPN on Google Play.  Many of them offer in-app purchases, so they charge you and steal your data.


  • The Bluesky backlash misses the point.  (Tech Crunch)

    No it doesn't.
    Without a more direct push to showcase the wider network of apps built on the open protocol that Bluesky’s team spearheaded, it was only a matter of time before the Bluesky brand became pigeon-holed as the liberal and leftist alternative to X.
    There is no wider network of apps.  Yes, the protocol is nominally open, but has no significant use.  Bluesky is it right now.

    So the backlash against Bluesky's totalitarian censorship - welcomed and enforced by Bluesky's own users - is exactly the point.
    Already, people are using the protocol that powers Bluesky to build social experiences for specific groups — like Blacksky is doing for the Black online community or like Gander Social is doing for social media users in Canada.
    Canada is not a real place.

    Though to be fair neither is Bluesky.

Musical Interlude





Disclaimer: Do not herp the derps.

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Thursday, June 12

Geek

Daily News Stuff 12 June 2025

Crochet Apocalypse Edition

Top Story

  • PCI SIG has released the final specification for PCIe 7.0, and is busy working on PCIe 8.0.  (Liliputing)

    PCIe 7.0 runs is twice as fast as PCIe 6.0, which is twice as fast as PCIe 5.0, and so on.  Even a single lane of PCIe 7.0 will keep your RTX 4090 happy.

    PCIe 6.0 isn't shipping in devices yet, though test rigs are showing up, and PCIe 5.0 graphics cards only appeared six months ago.  So don't expect the new slots soon - although PCIe 5.0 motherboards did reach the market surprisingly quickly.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




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Wednesday, June 11

Geek

Daily News Stuff 11 June 2027

Bananacat Edition

Top Story

  • The Bluesky bubble hurts liberals and their causes. Here's why that's a good thing. (Washington Post) (archive site)

    Bluesky was an interesting attempt at redesigning the core architecture of Twitter, but had no natural userbase until Trump won the 2024 election, whereupon the craziest people on Twitter departed en masse all at once and created Bluesky accounts.

    That gave the site a massive boost in user numbers but at the same time a massive headache, because suddenly its users were overwhelming screamingly insane leftists with all the problems that come with them.
    For roughly a decade, Twitter hosted what is lightheartedly called the "national conversation" on issues of the day, particularly social justice and public health. Twitter never had that many users, compared with Instagram or Facebook. But it had a big group of influential users - politicians, policymakers, journalists and academics, all of whom were engaged in a 24/7 conversation about politics and current events.
    Mostly leftists, often far left, but at least, at the time, paying lip service to civility and rationality. Those days are far behind us.

    That's what they're trying to regain, but the more they tighten their grip, the more star systems slip through their fingers.
    That was a boon to progressives, who wielded outsize influence on the platform because they were early adopters who outnumbered the conservatives. They were also better organized and better networked, and had the sympathy of Twitter’s professional-class employees, who proved increasingly susceptible to liberals' demands for tighter moderation policies on things such as using male pronouns to refer to a transgender woman.
    Translation: Stalinists policing speech.
    It’s not surprising that progressives want to return to the good old days. But it’s not working, and I’m skeptical it ever will.
    Those were the days, my friend. Thought they would never end.
    Something similar has happened on Bluesky. The nasty fringe has become even nastier: A Bluesky technical adviser recently felt the need to clarify that "The 'let's tell anyone we don’t like to kill themselves' crowd are not welcome here" because left-wing trolls kept urging people who disagreed with them to commit suicide. And without the leavening influence of their opponents, Bluesky discourse appears even more censorious and doctrinaire than what progressives were saying on old Twitter.
    Jesse Singal, call your office.

    Oh yeah, the key point: Bluesky activity is down 50% since November; it's in a death spiral and there's likely no way out.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Oh nyo.

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Tuesday, June 10

Geek

Daily News Stuff 10 June 2025

Jun Edition

Top Story

  • Ohio University says that all students will be required to learn and be fluent in AI.  (The Guardian)
    "Ohio State has an opportunity and responsibility to prepare students to not just keep up, but lead in this workforce of the future," said the university’s president, Walter "Ted" Carter Jr.

    He [Ted] added: "Artificial intelligence is transforming the way we live, work, teach and learn.  In the not-so-distant future, every job, in every industry, is going to be [affected] in some way by AI.  I'm Ted."
    Sigh.


  • China shut down public AI chatbots during exam season.  (The Verge)

    How will esteemed offspring ever be able to enter the civil service now, short of having his knackers chopped off?

    And has Ohio State considered that option?


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: How many babies do you need?!

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Monday, June 09

Geek

Daily News Stuff 9 June 2025

Dustbowl Edition

Top Story



Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Snow?

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Sunday, June 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 June 2025

Butter Dog Edition

Top Story


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Yeah.

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Saturday, June 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 June 2025

Illudium Q-36 Edition

Top Story



Tech News

  • Is the MSI X870E Tomahawk WiFi the high-end AMD motherboard to get?  Probably.  (Tom's Hardware)

    It's not the one I got, just the one I probably should have got.  It's still not perfect due to the limited number of PCIe lanes available with AMD's chipsets - Intel is better on this - but it has fewer constraints than the Gigabyte board I have.

    Specifically on my board if you use M.2 slots 2 and 3 it cuts the main PCIe slot from x16 to x8 - not the end of the world, but inconvenient - and if you use M.2 slot 4 it turns off the secondary PCIe slot entirely.  The MSI doesn't do that, though if you use both M.2 slot 2 and the USB4 ports, both run at PCIe 5.0 x2.

    I bought an M.2 RAID card because it adds four slots - effectively three, because it needs to go in the secondary PCIe slot so I can't use M.2 slot four - and it cost half as much as a new motherboard.  But with the added cost of the MSI board over the Gigabyte models is half of that, and worth it if you don't want to worry about things not working.


  • The little-known tax code change that led to mass tech industry layoffs unless it had nothing to do with any of that.  (Quartz)

    The change - proposed in 2017 during Trump's first term and taking effect in 2022 - made it so that companies could not immediately write off R&D expenses but had to depreciate them over a period of years...  Like most things.

    The link between the tech layoffs of recent years and the changes to the tax code seems to be entirely unsupported.


  • Vibe Coding ain't shit.  (ShiftMag)

    Let's say you have a great idea for a new app.  You pay some guys in Uzbekistan to develop it for you.  You put it up on the AppStore.

    It looks great.  Everyone's happy.  And then within a week it gets hacked and all your customers lot only lose their data but the contents of their bank accounts, you're facing a class action lawsuit, the guys in Uzbekistan have disappeared, and you have no idea what happened.

    That's Vibe Coding.

    Treat it like you're a twelve-year-old girl and the people promoting it are offering candy from the back of a van.


  • The SiPeed NanoCluster is a cluster only nano.  (Liliputing)

    It supports up to seven compute modules - SiPeed's own or the Raspberry Pi CM4 or CM5 (equivalent to the Raspberry Pi models 4 and 5 respectively, reasonably enough).  The cluster itself only costs $45, and equipped with seven eight-core, 8GB AI-optimised blades it still comes out to under $1200 and uses less than 65W of power.

    This is meant more for robotics and automation than to compete with commercial AI racks, which cost a thousand times as much and use a thousand times as much power.


  • Solving a mysterious murder from 14th-century England with advanced mapping except not.  (Ars Technica)

    The guilty parties were identified and convicted in 1337, so the mapping project just...  Translated the verdict from Latin?


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Thirteen.

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Friday, June 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 June 2025

Lifofax Edition

Top Story

  • AMD's "budget" Radeon 9060 XT graphics card is here.  Is it any good?  (Ars Technica)

    Yes.  And also no.

    The 16GB model is pretty decent if you can find it for under $400.  The MSRP is $349 for basic models, but they sold out pretty quickly in the US.  You should still be able to find slightly faster models for around $389.

    (In Australia the MSRP models are still available.)

    The 8GB model is $50 cheaper and is readily available at MSRP because it sucks and you shouldn't buy it.

    It's consistently faster than Nvidia's RTX 5060 and the same price.  Compared to the 5060 Ti it's cheaper, and faster on non-ray-traced games, though a little slower in ray-traced titles.  (And a lot slower on Black Myth Wukong which significantly favours Nvidia hardware, but that's an outlier.)

    If you want a graphics card that is merely a bit expensive but not actually insanely overpriced, this is the one to buy.

    (Or go back in time a few months and nab a 7800 XT for $400 like I did.)


Tech News



9060 XT Review Videos of the Day



The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.  The Ugly is Nvidia.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: I think I bought too many plushies.

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Thursday, June 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 June 2025

Plush Month Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: FNORD.

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