What happened?
Twelve years!
You hit me with a cricket bat!
Ha! Twelve years!

Thursday, April 24

Geek

Daily News Stuff 24 April 2025

Neverending Monday Edition

Top Story



Tech News


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: No pets in the pool!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:24 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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Wednesday, April 23

Geek

Daily News Stuff 23 April 2025

Let A Thousand Lawsuits Bloom Edition

Top Story

  • Open source database for people who are allergic to even the idea of running their own servers Supabase has raised $200 million at a valuation of $2 billion on the back of the "vibe coding" craze.  (Tech Crunch)

    Vibe coding is the idea that you don't need to know how to program to build an app.  You don't in fact need to know anything at all to build an app.  You get an AI to do the work based on your cool ideas, and you throw it out there and see what sticks.

    Which is great if you value your own time at infinity and your customers' time at zero.  Or if you are just playing around to see if an idea is feasible before implementing it properly - except of course that nothing ever gets implemented properly and you'll soon be stuck with a nightmarish mess that routes your authentication requests via Eswatini in plaintext and is written largely in a programming language that is not only no longer supported but never actually existed in the first place.

    Supabase isn't directly pushing this, only enabling the trend, so I won't express a desire for them to be hit by a comet and expire.  For them to quietly go bankrupt and disappear would be sufficient.

Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Thank you, I'll be here all week.

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Tuesday, April 22

Geek

Daily News Stuff 22 April 2025

Saviour Of The Universe Edition

Top Story

  • AMD's 16 core Zen 5c dies have a single shared L3 cache.  (Tom's Hardware)

    These are used in the largest Epyc server CPUs, with up to 192 cores in total.

    This is not a huge deal for Epyc CPUs because you still have twelve CPU dies each with its own cache.  But it is potentially a big deal for desktop CPUs, because the moment you go off-die - even over AMD's high-speed Infinity Fabric that links these chiplets together - you slow down a lot.

    And the fact that AMD is already shipping unified 16 core dies makes rumours that Zen 6 will be a unified 12 core die a lot more believable.

Tech News

Musical Interlude



Disclaimer: Van der Valk!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:26 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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Monday, April 21

Geek

Daily News Stuff 21 April 2025

Skilled And Unaware Of It Edition

Top Story

  • Discord is deploying age verification systems recently made mandatory in fascist dystopias.  (Soap Central)

    Like Britain.  And Australia.

    Fortunately they're being a lot more sensible about this than the governments that enforced the rules.  The verification pops up - once - when you want to see adult content.

    Which is not something I want from Discord, ever, so I don't see this as a huge problem.  And you can pass the verification check with a face scan by the app and not have to upload government ID.


Tech News

  • Looks like there will be a 32GB variant of AMD's Radeon 9070 XT after all...  Sort of.  (Tom's Hardware)

    AMD denied this a bit too strenuously.  Looks like the 32GB model is for the Radeon Pro range, for workstation users and not gamers.  It is the same card otherwise, though the clock speeds and power consumption will likely be trimmed back a little to make it more acceptable in an office environment.


  • It's a four-inch cube and it's blue, but it doesn't say Cobalt on it.  (Liliputing)

    The Beelink Me Mini supports six M.2 drives, two 2.5Gb Ethernet ports, three USB ports, and one HDMI.  And an internal power supply so you don't have an inconvenient brick hanging off it.

    Also available in white and gray.  Or will be available.  Price and shipping date TBA.

    CPU is an Intel N200 which is a four core Atom CPU and delivers adequate performance for a NAS and only uses 6W of power.


  • Resist eggheads!  (Ars Technica)

    Ars Technica has noticed that people have finally woken up to the communist takeover of the education system and is desperate to put them to sleep again, by force if necessary.


  • Chinese APT IronHusky deploys updated MysterySnail RAT on Russia.  (HackRead)

    The Cold War proceeds apace, just now being fought between the Chinese and the Soviets.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Gentlemen, spin your leeks!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:40 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 330 words, total size 3 kb.

Sunday, April 20

Geek

Daily News Stuff 20 April 2025

Demon Barbecue Edition

Top Story

  • Vendors have voted to reduce the duration of SSL certificates from one year to 47 days.  (Computerworld)

    Fuck vendors.

    This is mostly driven by Apple, because...  Because nothing, really.  It's a bad solution to a non-problem.

    Apple has been pushing for this for some time.  Previously certificates were valid for up to five years, and then Apple got involved.

    And the certificate vendors have just committed suicide, because nobody is going to pay them for a certificate that has to be manually refreshed every few weeks, and if you are deploying an automated solution you might as well go all the way and implement a free automated solution using Let's Encrypt.

    So good work, assholes.


  • It's true that SSL providers are stupid but you still can't use the certificate without hacking DNS.  (Bugzilla)

    And it's true that SSL is intended to be resilient to this sort of attack, but if you care about security you need to care about who is providing your DNS, and if you do then this attack doesn't work anyway.

Tech News

  • Intel says yes, our graphics cards kind of suck when used with older (and slower) CPUs.  (WCCFTech)

    Intel's graphics drives are somewhat inefficient.  This doesn't show up on recent CPUs, because they are fast enough to keep up anyway.  But if you pair an Intel graphics card with a CPU from five years ago, the performance bottleneck is now the CPU.

    This is a problem because Intel's graphics cards are cheaper than anything current from AMD or Nvidia, making them look like a good option for people with tight budgets...  Who would still be using older CPUs.


  • Russia is seeding chatbots with lies.  Any bad actor could do the same, though of course the exercise would be redundant because feeding bullshit into a bullshit factory doesn't really change the output.  (Detroit News)

    What it we made it even more stochastic?


  • Ordered the Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 to replace my dead Tab M8 FHD.  It's more than I wanted to pay, but I need a small tablet with a high-resolution display, and it is the only small Android model available with a resolution better than 1340x800.  Unless I buy from Aliexpress and risk having my Google and Amazon accounts hoovered up in the next OTA update exploit, as happened with Alldocube not long ago.

    Compared to the M8 FHD it's three times the price (with the current discount), but has four times the RAM, eight times the storage (no microSD slot, which messes that up, but 256GB is still decent), bumps the resolution up from 1920x1200 to 2560x1600, and is just astronomically faster.  The Cortex X4 is at least nine generations newer than the A53 in the M8 FHD depending on how you count, and on Antutu is ten times faster on multi-threaded tests comparing the two eight-core chips.  (It doesn't have an entry for the P22T, but that had the same cores and clock speed as the P35 which is on the list.)

    Which I'd like to say I don't care about but the M8 FHD was kind of a slug.

    Hope it's worth it.  Shame I really don't care about graphics performance on this thing, because there it scores 127 times faster than the old model.


Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: It digs the hole or it gets the hose again.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:24 PM | Comments (4) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 568 words, total size 5 kb.

Saturday, April 19

Geek

Daily News Stuff 19 April 2025

Plato's Rave Edition

Top Story

  • TSMC is planning to produce 30% of its 2nm and newer chips in its US fabs.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Currently US production is only at 4nm, with 3nm only active in Taiwan and 2nm still ramping up.  The new plans will boost output at the company's Fab21 site in Arizona and bring to it the newer N3, N2, and the 1.6nm A16 lines.

    N3 equipment is being installed right now, and construction of new buildings for N2 and A16 is set to begin next year.


Tech News

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: That's not a moon.  This is a moon!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:21 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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Friday, April 18

Geek

Daily Tech News 18 April 2025

Linear C Edition

Top Story

  • A federal judge has ruled that Google is operating an illegal monopoly - again.  (Associated Press)

    Google's search engine was found in violation of antitrust laws last August, and the company's ad division has now joined it on the naughty list.

    This doesn't mean that either one is an absolute monopoly, and they're not.  But companies with a dominant market position are restricted from certain business practices that are no in themselves illegal, and that's where Google has run aground.

    Now the DOJ will be arguing for specific penalties (most likely forcing Google to spin off a small number of products into separate businesses) and Google will be trying to tie this up in appeals until the Sun goes out.


Tech News

  • AGI is still thirty years away, like nuclear fusion.  (Dwarkesh Podcast)

    (There's a full transcript; you don't need to listen.)

    The host makes the point that we've had rapid advances in AI technology over the past decade; the guests respond that this progress has come at the expense of, well, expense.  The AI supercluster at xAI cost upwards of $2.5 billion to create, and similar installations exist at the other major AI companies.

    And we can't replicate that over the next ten years because nobody has $2.5 trillion to build a computer a thousand times more powerful, or 35,000 methane-powered generators to provide the hundreds of gigawatts needed to power the city-sized cluster.

    Now things get hard.


  • There's a new Framework Laptop 13 in town, with a Ryzen 370 and up to 96GB (and probably 128GB) of SO-DIMM memory.  (Tom's Hardware)

    Still no Four Essential Keys though.


  • A new GPS alternative from Australia is 10 to 50 times more accurate than existing alternatives.  (Interesting Engineering)

    When I first saw this it seemed to be claiming to be 10 to 50 times more accurate than GPS itself, but that's not it.  If GPS is unavailable for any reason - something that happens a lot more often than you might think - this system based on existing maps of the Earth's magnetic field is essentially impossible to jam and doesn't rely on any other systems being active.

    It's not as good as GPS, but it's better than other options when you don't have GPS.

Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Can't you at least make it a Linear B-?

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 04:56 PM | Comments (2) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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Thursday, April 17

Geek

Daily News Stuff 17 April 2025

Cardamom And Lavender Edition

Top Story

  • Nvidia's RTX 5060 Ti 16GB edition is here and it's eh.  (Tom's Hardware)

    The other two cards announced today, the 5060 Ti 8GB edition and the 5060 non-Ti, are nowhere to be found.

    If you're not using ray tracing, it's about 10% slower than my Radeon 7800 XT and costs about 25% more at retail.  Retail prices may settle down eventually, but they haven't been great so far in Nvidia's 5000-series launch.

    If you are using ray tracing, it's about 5% faster than my Radeon 7800 XT - but still 25% more expensive.

    That retail price places it just 10% cheaper than AMD's new 9070 (non-XT) card, which averages 50% faster at 4k resolution.

    It does better at Stable Diffusion (AI image generation) and runs acceptably cool and quiet, but you should definitely wait to see what the Radeon 9060 delivers if you're in the market.


Tech News

Musical Interlude



Disclaimer: Too soon.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:20 PM | No Comments | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 356 words, total size 4 kb.

Wednesday, April 16

Geek

Daily News Stuff 16 April 2025

Blue Gremlin Edition

Top Story

  • OpenAI is now building its own social network.  (The Verge)  (archive site)

    Prediction: This will work out just like Bluesky, only with even more deranged screeching.

    Might be a cool gig for the developers, as long as you have another job lined up for when the whole thing burns down, falls over, and sinks into the swamp.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: Pay no attention to the guitar there.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:22 PM | Comments (7) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 285 words, total size 3 kb.

Tuesday, April 15

Geek

Daily News Stuff 15 April 2025

Cursory Edition

Top Story

  • AMD is moving to TSMC's N2 process (2nm) for its Zen 6 cores next year, jumping straight over 3nm.  (Tom's Hardware)

    This rumour comes from...  AMD and TSMC during an official announcement that AMD has the first Zen 6 silicon in house for testing.

    So probably legit.

    N2 is 15% faster than the current N3 node, only AMD's CPUs and GPUs are all still on the N4 node which is older again.

    Also mentioned during the announcement is that AMD has qualified TSMC's fabs in Arizona to start manufacturing its current 4nm chips.


Tech News



Musical Interlude




Disclaimer: A Pixy is never late.  Nor are they early.  Except when they are, which is sometimes.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 06:36 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 349 words, total size 3 kb.

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