Podcasts about intel cpus

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Best podcasts about intel cpus

Latest podcast episodes about intel cpus

De Aandeelhouder Podcast
AMD, Intel, Alphabet, Marvell, ASML, BESI, ServiceNow, Apple, Fortinet & Datadog | Tech Talk afl. 12

De Aandeelhouder Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2026 69:52


Elke maand verzorgen beursanalisten Jordy Beuving en Jean-Paul van Oudheusden een uitgebreide update over technologie aandelen. In deze aflevering komen onder andere AMD, Intel, Alphabet, Marvell, ASML, BESI, ServiceNow, Apple, Meta, Fortinet & Datadog aan bod. Meer weten over het Antaurus AI Tech Fund? Ga dan naar: http://antaurus.nl/Benieuwd naar de portefeuilles van zowel Jordy als Jean-Paul? Ga naar: https://www.probeleggen.nl/aanmelden/registreren/Tijdslijn:00:00 - 01:55 Opening01:55 - 03:45 Cijferseizoen: Tech presteert boven verwachting03:45 - 07:25 Big Tech07:25 - 12:15 Alphabet absolute AI koning12:15 - 19:25 Apple: Terug van niet weggeweest?19:25 - 20:45 Big Tech trekt index omhoog20:45 - 21:45 Blok 2: Semi's21:45 - 24:15 SOXX schrijft geschiedenis24:15 - 27:07 Vuurwerk bij AMD27:07 - 31:30 Intel: CPU's + Foundry kantelpunt?31:30 - 35:35 ASML goes Hybrid Bonding (?)35:35 - 38:45 ProBeleggen Jordy38:45 - 39:10 Blok 3: Software (cyber)39:10 - 39:35 Opleving software na cijfers39:35 - 42:30 Cijfers Datadog: deals met Big Tech42:30 - 46:25 Cijfers Fortinet: opleving cybersecurity46:25 - 54:20 Cybersecurity - Top 4 Pure Plays54:20 - 58:40 Mood Board: Software vs Hardware58:40 - 58:55 Blok 4: vooruitblik58:55 - 1:01:35 The Buffet Indicator: Market Cap to GDP1:01:35 - 1:02:10 Hardware vs Software: beleggers kiezen voor zekerheid1:02:10 - 1:05:10 Het Internet (2000) versus AI (2026)1:05:10 - 1:07:50 ProBeleggen: Portfolio Jordy1:07:50 Vooruitblik volgende Tech TalkOntvang al onze exclusieve analyses, video's en beurscontent: https://www.deaandeelhouder.nl/premium/

Management Blueprint
330: Grow Your Business in 3 Phases with James Green

Management Blueprint

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 28:03


https://youtu.be/oPA1dSUab9Y James Green, CEO of Cognome and former Pixar executive under Steve Jobs, is driven by a deep curiosity and a pull toward ideas that can create massive impact. From early internet ventures to mobile innovation and now AI in healthcare, James has consistently aligned himself with transformative trends. In this episode, he shares hard-earned lessons from scaling multiple companies and introduces a simple but powerful framework that explains why many startups struggle to grow beyond their early stages. We explore James' 3-Stage StartUp Growth Framework: Whiteboard Phase, PowerPoint Phase, PDF Phase—a model that captures how organizations must evolve as they scale. He explains why early-stage chaos is necessary, how structure begins to take shape in the middle phase, and why standardization becomes critical at scale. James also dives into the toughest leadership challenges—especially making difficult people decisions—and shares why aligning with strong market tailwinds and creating “pull” from customers is essential for sustainable growth. — Grow Your Business in 3 Phases with James Green  Good day, dear listeners. Steve Preda here with the Management Blueprint, and my guest today is James Green, the CEO of Cognome, a health tech company that is solving the problem of how to manage different AI models that are being deployed in healthcare today. Earlier, he worked as a vice president at Disney. He worked directly under Steve Jobs at Pixar, and he has had at least six other CEO roles in ed tech, media, and healthcare. Welcome to the show, James.  Thank you very much. Delighted to be here.  Yeah, super excited. And Steve Jobs—you don't often have people that have known Steve Jobs now even Tim Cook has resigned. Yeah. Yeah.  And it’s 13 years, I guess. Steve Jobs is being gone. So what was it like working with the man? Was he a difficult boss?  First of all, most of the things you hear about him are accurate. So it’s not one of these things where you hear a lot about Steve Jobs and actually the man was totally different. So most of what you’ve heard is true. And I’ll give you one short anecdote sort of before we go on, which is something that I always found incredibly impressive about him. When you work for him, if you disagreed and said, “Hey, you want it to be white, I want it to be black,” without hesitation he would say something like, “Here are seven reasons why you're wrong.” First of all, before we go into those seven reasons, what’s impressive about that is he had a number and he stuck with it.  And it happened in seconds and he didn’t know before. So if you think about that, it’s hard to keep all of that in your head. So the guy was just super, super clever. And then he would list them 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and you’d be out. Like it’s done. It’s like, “Oh, damn.” So yeah, he was unbelievable human, and it was an honor and a privilege to have worked with him.  Yeah, well, that's awesome—to talk to you, having worked with him and having some direct experience. Definitely not an easy boss when he has seven guns to shoot you down. Yeah.  But there's a lot to learn. I mean, you learn the most from these kinds of bosses.  Yeah.  So let's get into the question—which is normally the first one, but this is the exception: What is your personal “why,” and how are you manifesting it in Cognome, James, and in your previous jobs?  Yeah, I've thought about this a lot. I've tried to come up with what my “why” really is. And what I’ve come up with is I can’t help myself. And I’m going to go through examples of it and what I mean by that. I pay a lot of attention to the world. I pay a lot of attention to what’s going on. I get very seduced by new ideas and new things and things that I think will have big impact. And once I start thinking about it and thinking about what that impact is, I cannot help but start getting involved in it. That sounds very abstract, so I want to try to make that super concrete. So when I was working at Pixar, for example—the internet was being born. This is the late '90s.  I couldn't help myself. I started an ad-serving company called Sabela Media. That company got sold to 24/7, then to DoubleClick, which later got acquired by Google. So the internet was there. I had to do it. I had to have something in it. Then after that, I was thinking about what to do next—and mobile phones, if you remember, were still flip phones, mostly used for texting. The second company that I did was putting content onto those phones. It just seemed obvious to me—I couldn't help myself. I saw the opportunity, and it clearly worked. That company was called GiantBear. It was sold to BlueCora. After that, there was this crazy innovation going on in television of all things with effects. Now, again, we take these things for granted. We’ve got AI creating things all day long, back in the day, we didn’t. So I ran a company called PVI, which is famous for inventing the first-down line you see in football games. So that was kind of the very first virtual object you saw in live things. Again, it may seem like, oh, that’s an everyday event, but back in the day it was totally not. And I think it opened up football to many more people—you no longer needed the chain crew to understand what was going on. And then if we fast-forward—there are a few things in the middle, but I don't want to bore everyone—to where I am today at Cognome. I even wore my little Cognome shirt so I could advertise it throughout the podcast.  Yeah, that's smart. I have to do that.  AI is clearly the big thing today. But for me, intellectually, it's not enough to just say, “I'll do an AI model,” like everyone else. For me, healthcare is one of the areas that AI will have the biggest impact with. Healthcare for a lot of reasons has been a laggard technologically for specific things about how they store data, so it hasn’t been adopted things like multi-tenant SaaS, because the data has to stay local and things like this. So AI will revolutionize it. And AI will make decisions about whether people live or die, right? So it's really consequential. And for me, the question is—how are you going to manage that? That's a super interesting intellectual opportunity. And so Cognome ExplainerAI. So my “why” is: what's going on, what's interesting, and what's changing the world? And the beautiful thing about that is you get a “rising tide lifts all boats” situation. You're not fighting against a trend—you're moving with it. The whole world is rising, and you can be part of that. That’s sort of my “why”.  Yeah, so basically—in other words—it's about coming up with revolutionary ideas and implementing them?  Yeah. I mean, I want to make an impact in the world. I want to make a difference. I'm not a very religious person—in fact, not at all. So I believe our time here is limited. I want to make a difference. I want to be part of what's going on. So yeah, that's my “why.”  Yeah—tapping into trends. Well, that’s great. I mean, don't know if it's a “why,” but making the most of the opportunity to be here and maximizing impact—that's a huge one. Love it.  Yeah.  STEVE PREDA: So let me segue to the next one. This podcast is all about frameworks. So the objective here is what’s a shortcut that you can teach the listeners that they can implement in their business? So what is your “shortcut” to success? Maybe “shortcut” is the wrong word. What is the framework you use to interpret the world, understand it better, and make decisions?  Yeah, this is another thing I struggled with a little bit. So I listened to your questions, and I tried to make my answers really personal. I'm trying to be authentic—this is what I actually do all the time, as opposed to this is what I’m doing at the moment, or this is what I did for a second. The truth is, frameworks come and go. There are a lot of frameworks out there. I've probably used 15 different sales frameworks. I mostly operate in the B2B world, so there are lots of frameworks you can use—for example, in sales. But I tried to think of something more consistent—a framework I've used across every company I've worked with, all the time. And the one I always come back to is about growth. So what I want to talk about is: how do you manage a company that's going through growth? Because it's not obvious—and I do have a framework for it. And unlike some of the other frameworks—like something McKinsey, Bain, or someone’s invented this framework and you are adopting it. This is really pretty personal to me, and I’ve adopted various little things about it. There are these two ideas that live in parallel. One is in the sales process, where I think companies go through this idea of, I call it a Whiteboard sales process, a PowerPoint sales process. And forgive me for being a little dated, but a PDF style process, something you can’t change. And at the same time, they go through these stages where you are a small company, a medium-sized company, and a larger company. Think of it roughly as fewer than 12 people, then 10 to 75, and then 75 to 100 and beyond. And I’ve managed all of these sizes. And what’s interesting about these is that if you don’t have a framework to manage yourself through these stages, you’re going to fail. You as a leader will be replaced. I personally have replaced leaders who cannot go through those kinds of things. One of the things I've done in my career is act as a sort of hired gun for VCs. They make an investment, and then they bring me in to replace the founder if they haven't been able to navigate that growth stage. And so the framework works like this. When you're starting a company—what I call the “whiteboard” phase—what you're selling is a little different every time. And the consequence of that inside the company is everyone is doing everything. It’s a little chaotic and it’s okay. Like, less than 10 people, it’s okay. It’s okay that the finance person is doing a little selling and the engineer is doing a little marketing. It’s okay, because you only have 10 people maybe. When you go into a client, you are sort of inventing yourself as you go. There's always that first client where you're saying, “I think we should do this. This is how I'm going to help you make money, save money, or do something better.”  You’re figuring things out. Yeah.  And maybe there's some pivots in there. Maybe there isn't. Not everyone gets to be Google and get it right the first time, but you’ll see. In the end, you start getting things right. And then you go through what I call the PowerPoint phase. So what this is—you now have more than 10 people. It kind of isn't okay that the sales guy is doing finance, or the engineer is doing marketing. You actually have people in their swim lanes. I call it the PowerPoint because you've built PowerPoints, so you’ve got slides that you can use and it’s replicable. Guess what? You tend to tweak them for each client. You are still—you know what—the way you're selling to… I don't want to make a stupid example up—Home Depot is still a little different than selling to Lowe's. You know that—even though it should be exactly the same—it's still a little different. You're tweaking it each time. You're moving slide three to slide seven. Sometimes you don't show slide 10. You're still tweaking it.  Yeah. I relate to that.  And your organization is structured, but not completely rigid. Everyone still knows each other in the company. It's up to maybe 50—I think it maxes out at about 75 people. But every single person in the company knows each other. They’re all collaborating. You don’t need a lot of structure inside the company because there’s sort of culture in there to hold everyone together, right? And then you get to the third stage, which I call the PDF stage—where you've figured it out. You sell the same thing. Maybe you have three PDFs because you're selling in three verticals. But you go into a client—this is the thing—and it never changes. Slide one is always slide one. Slide two is always slide two. Slide three is always slide three. And you have maybe a hundred people in your company. And by the way, now you have levels. So not everybody knows everybody. And as a CEO, I have my lieutenants. My lieutenants have people working for them. And I sort of feel like everyone can manage—I don't know—five, six, seven, eight people. More than that is difficult unless the roles are not very sophisticated. So you need this management layer, which separates the CEO from the rest of the organization. So you need a lot more structure. And as you go through these three phases—and they're really different—a tragic thing happens. It happens all the time. The person who was so helpful in the whiteboard phase, who was your go-to person, they don’t make it in the third phase because they’re a generalist. They liked the chaos. They liked being able to have their foot, and they’ll complain to you. They'll say, “Why aren't you listening to me?” It's an engineer saying, “Why isn't sales listening to me?” Dude, you're an engineer—stick to your knitting. Like, no. And this culture goes through every single company I’ve ever run. Most of them have gone through these three phases—small, medium, and large. And one of the things I try to do with employees in these phases—and this is part of the framework—is to give them a huge amount of latitude to see if they can succeed in the phase. So, to give them the freedom—if you're being blunt—to give them enough rope to hang themselves. And if you're being kind, to give them the freedom to be who they are, to be the best they can be, and to support them—not control them. And so, if you are aware of this framework as you grow, and you give that latitude, and you hire smart people, then you can see which ones you keep and which ones you don't. And honestly, the worst and hardest part of managing through growth is that selection and weeding-out process—of the people who worked in the first stage but don't work in the last stage. So that is the only kind of framework for me that has stood the test of time. It has worked in media, worked in healthcare, and worked in various other places. Does that make sense to you? Does it resonate with you?  Absolutely. And I was just working on a chapter in my new book, and I was actually writing about this very idea—why some companies are never able to grow, because they are not able to make these decisions, these painful decisions, as you described.  Super painful—the worst. It’s the worst part. Firing people is the worst part of being a CEO. If you enjoy that, you’re a bad CEO. You want to have a positive environment, so you want to everyone have a good time. And when there’s growth, usually there’s incredible optimism and great culture. So any CEO who enjoys that process is not a good CEO. Yeah, that’s so true. This is kind of a difficult thing. You have to be ruthless to some degree.  You do. Yeah. That's why this framework has helped me—and it's helped me be gracious and kind to people. Let's just call her Jane, right? A totally fictitious person. But you can go to Jane in stage three and say, “Jane, do you remember how much you loved it in the first phase?” I'm going to give you some time here. You are going to leave, but I'm going to give you some time to work on a special project. But you also need to find your next startup—because you love that environment. And I am going to put this bureaucracy in place, and you're going to fight it until the day you die. So I can't have you here—I just can't. I can give you this little thing to do and you can have some weeks to go do that and give you some time, but the framework helps you be gracious and helps you make those decisions as you grow. That’s an amazing framework. This is really unique. We've recorded, I think, close to 400 episodes with different frameworks—and this hasn't come up. Nothing similar has come up.  Woo-hoo.  Love it. So where are you now in your business? Which phase are you in?  I am in between the whiteboard and the PowerPoint phase. Maybe because I'm an optimist, I'm going to say I'm in the PowerPoint phase. But I know there's still part of me that's drawing things on the whiteboard. We have 12 people, so we're just at the edge of growing out of that phase. I don’t have that layer in the middle. We have half a dozen clients. I suspect that by the end of this year, we'll be fully in the PowerPoint phase. And it'll be another 18 months after that until we get to the next stage—and that's assuming we continue to grow. I mean, my whole raison d'être is to find these really special things, grow them, and make an impact. So let’s hope that happens. Yeah, well, you've had some practice in your previous six CEO positions, so I'm sure you'll figure this out. So what drives growth in your business?  Yeah, this goes a little bit back to phase one. So I've picked an area that's growing by itself. I mean, AI—there are more and more models being deployed in hospitals. Hospitals are growing. The number of models deployed in them is growing at about 2.2 times the rate of the general population. So good for me. There are federal regulations coming that say you need to control what your AI models are doing. That's also good for me. It's a lovely day when regulation is good for your business—it usually isn't. But it's not unusual in healthcare. If you look at electronic health records, that was driven by government regulation and funding. So this is a little bit like that. Federal, state, and other institutions are driving this trend. And then there are things happening inside healthcare organizations themselves that we can tap into. I always think that when you're selling, you should have a good story. So I'm going to tell you the kind of story we use.  When we meet with a chief information officer, we tell stories like the ones I'm about to share. And this really helps us tap into that growth. Because part of growth in a B2B environment is having a strong sales team, good engagement, and solid frameworks—like: do they have budget? Are you talking to the right decision-maker? All of those kinds of frameworks, which to me are more tactical—I've used a lot of them. But we go in and say things like: “Have you ever experienced a situation in radiology where a new model was released and no one told you about it—and now you have to monitor it?” This is happening. And they're like, “Oh my God—yes.” And then they tell you a story about it.  And then you say, “What about that note from CMS?”—that's the organization that runs Medicare and Medicaid, for those not in healthcare. “Did you hear that they're coming down to audit some of your peers?” And they're like, “Oh my God—we just got notice that we're being audited.” And then—how about your board? How's your board doing? Are they coming down and saying, “What are you doing in AI?” So you try to tell these stories and then you create this tension, where they have to grow and they have to control, and then that’s where we come in. We can help all of these companies manage all of these models. What we do—we have this product called ExplainerAI. We tap into the underlying data from the electronic health record—the EHR, or medical record. We tap into the models—the front end—and the logging files behind them. And then we can tell whether the model is exhibiting drift, and how it's performing across different areas. That could be geographic areas, or demographic areas. Is it performing the same with young men and older women? Is it performing the same over time? Is it degrading? Is it releasing personal health information when it shouldn't? Is it hallucinating, if it's an LLM? That’s what we do. And then we can send alerts out to people, saying, “Hey, listen, this model is making shit up right now, you need to deal with it.” And then they can talk to the vendor and handle it. So we're in a good space. And so growth is, to some extent, this idea of a rising tide lifting all boats. I've picked an area that's growing, so I can grow with it. And then part of it is being connected and having a good way of engaging with people who are buyers. And so we have these stories that we tell in our decks about how we help in these situations.  Have you had to pivot between the original idea and where you are?  Yeah, we have. And for anyone who's listening and thinking, “Oh my God, I'm going to have to pivot,” I use Google as my favorite example of someone who just got so lucky. They were like, “We're going to have this little thing that searches the internet,” and they never really changed—until they got so big they could do more. That is the exception, not the rule. And what’s interesting about the way we started is it’s still a core differentiator for us—we started with the ability to take data from an EHR, from a medical record, translate it, and store it in a common data model. It's called OMOP. It's the most common way that researchers structure this kind of data.  And we thought this technology would be widely adopted by researchers. We have contracts with people like Hopkins, Ohio State, NYU—big institutions—but it's not big enough. It’s not going fast enough. What it does do, though, is for our ExplainerAI, it gives us the technology—it's a moat—to connect to the source of truth, the electronic health record, so that you can get actual outcomes versus predictions. Many models cannot get the actual data out of the EHR. So they just say, “This is my prediction, this is my prediction, this is my prediction.” And over time—that's fine, those are predictions—but how do they actually compare to what really happened?  Yeah. What actually happened? And because of where we started, we have a way of efficiently and accurately getting that information. So it is still the bedrock. But it's definitely a pivot. And then you basically put an AI layer on top, and that's great. And how did you know when to pivot? How do you reach that tipping point? How do you know this is the moment—you have to pull the plug on this because it's not working?  First of all, I think on a personal level, I'm always late. So I think I could always have made this decision earlier. If I'm being self-critical at a high level. And I don't think I have a clean answer—but I'll tell you how I've done it. If you have a better way, I'd love to know. It’s about sales engagement. So you go to a hundred people, you have a hundred meetings, and you sell to two. That's not good enough. It's just not good enough. And those two are complaining. What you want to see in a product—and I think this is true of all great products, especially today—I use examples like Facebook and Tesla—is that products are pulled, not pushed. If you still find yourself, after nine months, pushing—and you don't have the momentum where your product is being pulled—you're wrong. You need your clients to be making referrals, and you need to be pulled into deals. In today's advertising and marketing world, it's too noisy.  Maybe back in the seventies you could do it, but now it's just too noisy—especially in B2B. There are so many people selling to the same buyers that they need to hear about your product from others, have people around them recommending it, and pulling you in. There's some time—and I usually take closer to a year, which is long. It would be better for me to do it in six months or even three months. I haven’t found a way to do that where you pivot if you’re just not getting traction, basically.  Yeah, okay. I love it. So what's one thing in your company that you're trying to figure out right now? One thing in my company that I'm trying to figure out right now is how to further ramp up sales. I'm cheating a little bit here, because I think we may already have it figured out—but leaving you with an unanswered question isn't very helpful. So we were having—and still are, to some extent—problems getting ExplainerAI rolled out. People were interested in it, but they wouldn't buy. So we tried to figure out why. And one of the things we found is this: For those of your listeners who may not know, healthcare is probably the largest portion of GDP in the country. Buyers are very large. We don't always think about it this way, but if you do—everyone goes to the doctor. It affects 100% of the population. And these large institutions—a hospital is usually a multi-billion-dollar organization—and there are about 6,500 of them in the country. So we've got 6,500 multi-billion-dollar companies in this country. It’s crazy, right? They don't want to buy from small companies—they want to buy from big companies. This is one of the things we found out. So we get to the finish line, they say yes—and then no one tells you the truth, right? No one says, “I'm not buying from you because you're small.” But we ended up figuring it out through triangulation. So we've been building partnerships. We started with Intel. We made some of our models work on Intel CPUs, and I'm actually pretty proud of that work. For the nerds out there—we're working on Xeon 6 chips, the Granite Rapids chips—running locally deployed LLM ensembles. Think of it as models like Qwen and LLaMA running inside their chips—what I'd call small-to-medium language models, not large language models.  Up to 32 billion parameters, running on a CPU, not a GPU. So that’s a big deal. Intel loves us, and we've been able to leverage their ecosystem to have their partners sell our product. So now you've got HPE selling ExplainerAI. You've got Lenovo selling ExplainerAI. And probably my favorite partner—love you, ePlus, if you're listening—I think you're the best. They're a Fortune 1000 reseller selling ExplainerAI. So now we have large companies selling our product, and that's starting to come to fruition. Now, it's not solved—my revenue isn't going boom yet—because if it were, I'd be firmly in the PowerPoint phase, heading toward the PDF phase. But it's looking really good, and I'm very excited.  Cognome Inside.  There you go. Cognome Inside—yes. Cognome Inside. Intel Inside—for those of you who remember. Yes.  Love it. Okay, so before we wrap up, I have one more question for you: What is a question that entrepreneurs should always be asking themselves?  I think the hardest thing about being an entrepreneur is dealing with the amplitude of the variance that happens inside it. There are incredibly high days, and there are incredibly low days. There are days when you don't even want to get out of bed in the morning. You don't have many clients, and one of them has just told you that you're a complete moron. Even if you've got the best product in the world, if you're in the whiteboard or PowerPoint phase, you're going to make mistakes. You just are. No one's perfect. And there are days when some combination of a client, an employee, or the product—something has failed, someone has left, something isn't working—and you feel awful. So what I'd say to entrepreneurs is this: if you really are an entrepreneur, it is your personality that you can still get through those and wake up in the morning and say, I believe in this. I know I can do it. I can keep doing it.  And one of the things that I think separates an entrepreneur from someone who isn't is this: When I go through these moments, I ask myself, “What's the worst that could happen?” And I usually start with: “Is anyone going to die?” And the answer is almost always no. No one's going to die. So it’s not that bad. And by the way, I remember giving that advice to a young person once—and I saw their face go white. And I thought, “Oh, that's not an entrepreneur.” That's the kind of person who hears that and thinks, “Oh my God, really? You think about the worst thing that could happen so you can deal with it?” And I'm like, yes.  Does that apply to the company itself? Is the company included in that “worst-case” question?  To me, the next step is: is an individual going to die? That's a higher stake than whether the company is going to die. But yes—is the company going to die? That's part of the thinking, because you're going through all the consequences. Am I going to lose all my money? Is the company going to fail? Those are escalations of that thinking. But to me, company death is less tragic than a human death.  Yeah, true.  Not everyone might agree with that, but I think so.  You can try again.  Yeah.  Start another company.  Yeah, exactly. Anyway, your question was: what is a question that an entrepreneur should always be asking themselves? For me, turning that upside down and inside out—it's: what's the worst that can happen, and can you get through it? Are you able to get through it? Do you have the drive and the imagination to keep going? That's the question I've continually found myself asking, as opposed to any other kind of existential question. And I think some of the other questions are not always the right way to look at it—like“Is this the best business?” Because there's a very big difference between an entrepreneur and an investor.  An entrepreneur has to keep going, while an investor might quit. Investors, they’re playing the portfolio game. They can say, “That's not working—I'm dropping that and keeping this.” As an entrepreneur, you can't really play that game with your time. I mean, Elon Musk is running four companies—so okay, fine—but most of us aren't. Most of us are running one or two, and we need more tenacity to make it work—to pivot or to find another path. That's a really big difference between an entrepreneur and other kinds of people. And it's why I've kept doing it. It comes back to the very first question: why do you do this? I can't help myself. I just can't. It's what I like to do.  Yeah, the contrast is addictive—the contrast between near-death and near-Nirvana, right? Yeah. I love it. I mean, you can't have euphoria without depression. You wouldn't know what it was—it would just seem normal.  Yeah, just a personal example of that—I was in Hungary, where I was born, for the election two weeks ago.  By the way, I'm so excited about that election, for many reasons.  The exhilaration that I felt—and that everyone else felt—was even greater than when the Berlin Wall came down, because the system was worse.  Yeah.  And if they hadn't lived through that for 16 years, they wouldn't have felt it. Now, we didn't experience it directly—but still.  But even I was paying attention to a lot of things, and I was following that one very closely. Even I felt that sense of euphoria. I was like, “That's great.” I was at the dinner table with my wife and kids—and I'm not Hungarian, it's not affecting me. I mean, Viktor Orbán isn't really having any effect on my life at all. Maybe he shows up at some conferences in the U.S., but still—not affecting me. But I'm sitting there at dinner like, “Did you hear what happened today? That's great.” Anyway.  Awesome. I'm glad you're on that side of the equation. James, if people would like to learn more—if they'd like to learn about Cognome and connect with you—where should they go? Where can they find you?  Yeah, so you can certainly go to cognome.com. You can email info@cognome.com. But if you've listened to this podcast, I'm always happy to hear from people. I answer every single email myself. And if you know my name—James Green—you can just put a dot in the middle and add @cognome.com at the end, and that will get to me. Delighted to hear from any of you—especially if you're a CIO in a hospital, you should reach out.  Well, all those hospital CIOs—please call James, or at least send him an email. And for those of you listening—this was an amazing framework: from whiteboard to PowerPoint to PDF. Definitely relatable. And remember—if no one's dying, it's okay. You can always pivot and live to fight another day. So, James, thanks for coming—and thank you for listening. Important Links: James' LinkedIn James' website James' email: info@cognome.com

投資唔講廢話
第287集 | 媲美汪阿姐的華麗轉身,科技界的文藝復興? 還有什麼公司趁這波牛市起死回生?

投資唔講廢話

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2026 15:00


Intel 業績實鎚CPU重返主舞台!? GPU的極限已到? 輪到CPU發揮!? 波音復甦的關鍵是找回初心? Dell 靜靜地創歷史最高營收!

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #862 - DDR5 Prices Begin to Fall? AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Announced, DLSS 4.5, GMail, and more!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2026 71:56


When will the pricing of DDR (and fallout from it) stop being top news?  Not this week!  Get yer extra frames with DLSS 4.5, Geekbench and the newest Intel CPUs have a disagreement, plus we try and make sense of the FCC router ban (Hint:  "no").  Ubisoft is still killing games, as is their custom, and Google is giving you a chance to fix your past mistakes (with an email address like "hotbuns29@gmail.com", I can see why).  Plus so much more, enjoy!Timestamps:0:00 Intro00:45 Patreon03:46 Food with Josh04:59 DDR5 prices begin to fall?10:30 TurboQuant16:41 DLSS 4.5 Multi Fram Gen 6x is available now19:34 NVIDIA also launches auto shader compilation21:16 How was the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 not the top story?27:03 Geekbench says Intel optimizations are invalid?30:14 Google to let you change your username31:44 Goodbye Mac Pro33:27 Microsoft issues emergency Win 11 preview update fix35:22 (In)Security Corner49:57 Gaming Quick Hits58:54 Picks of the Week1:08:08 PC Perspective turns 251:09:26 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Talking Heads - Craft Computing
Ep. 424 - New Intel CPUs! California OS Age Verification

Talking Heads - Craft Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 156:10


New Intel CPUs! California OS Age Verification

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #856 - ASRock BIOS Fix, 700W Intel CPU? HP Rents Gaming Laptops, Homelab Bling, Discord Drama, Microsoft "Quality" + MORE!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2026 73:03


Another week, another series of distressing developments in the world of PC hardware. But maybe the end of the madness is near?  Or at least hotter with 700W Intel CPUs.  BTW, you're probably not getting an RTX 5090Ti, another week where DIMMs are bling, some questionable choices from Microsoft and scary security issues with certs, 7-Zip, OpenClaw, and "Approve or Deny?" questions.  Thanks Zapier for sponsoring our show this week!   Get AI orchestration going on your workflows for improvements you can really help, for free!Timestamps:0:00 Intro01:05 Patron01:37 Food with Josh03:54 ASRock BIOS update to combat reported Ryzen failures05:47 Intel's potential processor power09:35 No RTX 5090 Ti this year11:35 G.Skill memory speed settlement14:44 The Discord drama19:21 HP will rent you an Omen gaming laptop24:48 Microsoft failed to communicate about 26H131:36 Homelab bling32:58 Podcast sponsor - Zapier34:26 (In)Security Corner48:37 Gaming Quick Hits55:19 Picks of the Week1:09:55 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Nvidia to Drastically Cut GPU Supply!?

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2025 73:30


Episode 93: A rumor and news episode to round out 2025. We chat a bit more about 9850X3D expectations, the current and future state of Intel CPUs following some 225F testing, Nvidia cutting GPU supply, potential new GPUs and Steve kills some hardware.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro02:33 - More Thoughts on the 9850X3D06:13 - Where is Intel at With Their CPUs?24:42 - Nvidia Cutting GPU Supply?37:38 - AMD Launches Radeon RX 9060 XT LP43:22 - More Intel Arc B770 Rumors49:12 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxedBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hardwareunboxed.bsky.social Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Full Nerd
Episode 375: Intel CPU Testing Lab, Black Friday PC Deals, Gen AI In Games & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2025 159:34


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang talks about Adam's recent trip to Intel's performance testing lab, Black Friday deals for PC parts, how generative AI is hitting game developers and much more. And of course we answer your questions live! Links: - Intel performance lab interview: https://youtu.be/t_AVj82ISwY - Gen AI in games: https://techraptor.net/gaming/features/examining-generative-ais-usage-in-steam-next-fest-2025 Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/WWnEzTDhw Follow the crew on X and Bluesky: @AdamPMurray @BradChacos @MorphingBall @WillSmith ============= Read PCWorld! Website: http://www.pcworld.com Newsletter: http://www.pcworld.com/newsletters/signup =============

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #844 - AMD Ryzen news, RTX SUPER rumor, Sapphire B850 motherboard, HDD Shortages, Valve Steam Machine + MORE!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 66:35


Only three of us were available this week, but the show must go on! Perhaps the energy is a bit subdued without Bront and that other guy, but you might just find something buried in the protracted ramblings that could interest you for a few fleeting seconds.Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:41 Patreon02:10 Food with Josh05:45 Josh's take on AMD Financial Analyst Day13:49 A digression to actually talk about hardware (mostly?)17:33 AMD Ryzen X3D outsells entire Intel CPU lineup20:10 Softbank sells all NVIDIA stock21:50 Server HDDs in short supply26:23 Microsoft testing out haptic feedback with Win 11 beta28:42 RTX 50 SUPER series possibly delayed until late 202630:03 Google ending support for 1st gen and 2nd gen Nest31:00 (In)Security Corner41:06 Gaming Quick Hits (featuring The Steam Machine)48:14 Check out our Sapphire B850 motherboard review video56:47  Picks of the Week1:04:01 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Intel CPUs Should Be $150

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2025 70:31


Episode 87: We revisit some discussion from last week as we've found more dodgy stuff Microsoft has done, before chatting about the current situation Intel is in with CPUs. They aren't anywhere near as competitive up against AMD now, as AMD were with Ryzen when Intel was dominant. (Note: This podcast was recorded before the recent AMD RDNA 2 driver decision, we'll discuss that in the future)CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro00:29 - Microsoft Does Dodgy Stuff Again11:34 - Intel CPUs when AMD is Dominant vs AMD CPUs when Intel is Dominant21:35 - The Discounts Aren't Enough34:53 - Platform Longevity is Crucial41:33 - Platform Support is Always Better1:04:34 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxedBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hardwareunboxed.bsky.social Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Asianometry Podcast
The AI Bandwidth Wall & Co-Packaged Optics

The Asianometry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2025


Over the past two decades, the semiconductor industry has successfully pushed the limits to deliver more raw compute. A wild success, really. A 2025 Nvidia B200 GPU has 178,000 times more Floating Point Operations Per Second, or FLOPs than a top-of-the-line Intel CPU in the late 1990s. Unfortunately, we don't fully benefit thanks to limits - or "walls", so to say - that keep us from taking full advantage of all that new raw power. One such wall is the memory wall - where semiconductor memories like DRAM have not scaled as fast as the compute has. I have covered this before. But in recent years, another bottleneck has presented itself: One relating to IO bandwidth. In response, the industry has been working on a silicon photonic solution. In today's video, we talk about a technology trend that has been over a decade in the making: Co-packaged optics.

The Asianometry Podcast
The AI Bandwidth Wall & Co-Packaged Optics

The Asianometry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2025


Over the past two decades, the semiconductor industry has successfully pushed the limits to deliver more raw compute. A wild success, really. A 2025 Nvidia B200 GPU has 178,000 times more Floating Point Operations Per Second, or FLOPs than a top-of-the-line Intel CPU in the late 1990s. Unfortunately, we don't fully benefit thanks to limits - or "walls", so to say - that keep us from taking full advantage of all that new raw power. One such wall is the memory wall - where semiconductor memories like DRAM have not scaled as fast as the compute has. I have covered this before. But in recent years, another bottleneck has presented itself: One relating to IO bandwidth. In response, the industry has been working on a silicon photonic solution. In today's video, we talk about a technology trend that has been over a decade in the making: Co-packaged optics.

The CyberWire
Exchange hybrid flaw raises cloud alarm.

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2025 24:28


Microsoft warns of a high-severity vulnerability in Exchange Server hybrid deployments. A Dutch airline and a French telecom report data breaches. Researchers reveal new HTTP request smuggling variants. An Israeli spyware maker may have rebranded to evade U.S. sanctions. CyberArk patches critical vulnerabilities in its secrets management platform. The Akira gang use a legit Intel CPU tuning driver to disable Microsoft Defender. ChatGPT Connectors are shown vulnerable to indirect prompt injection. Researchers expose new details about the VexTrio cybercrime network. SonicWall says a recent SSLVPN-related cyber activity is not due to a zero-day. Ryan Whelan from Accenture is our man on the street at Black Hat. Do androids dream of concierge duty? Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest We continue our coverage from the floor at Black Hat USA 2025 with another edition of Man on the Street. This time, we're catching up with Ryan Whelan, Managing Director and Global Head of Cyber Intelligence at Accenture, to hear what's buzzing at the conference. Selected Reading Microsoft warns of high-severity flaw in hybrid Exchange deployments (Bleeping Computer) KLM suffers cyber breach affecting six million passengers (IO+) Cyberattack hits France's third-largest mobile operator, millions of customers affected (The Record) New HTTP Request Smuggling Attacks Impacted CDNs, Major Orgs, Millions of Websites (SecurityWeek) Candiru Spyware Infrastructure Uncovered (BankInfoSecurity) Enterprise Secrets Exposed by CyberArk Conjur Vulnerabilities (SecurityWeek) Akira ransomware abuses CPU tuning tool to disable Microsoft Defender (Bleeping Computer) A Single Poisoned Document Could Leak ‘Secret' Data Via ChatGPT (WIRED) Researchers Expose Infrastructure Behind Cybercrime Network VexTrio (Infosecurity Magazine) Gen 7 and newer SonicWall Firewalls – SSLVPN Recent Threat Activity (SonicWall) Want a Different Kind of Work Trip? Try a Robot Hotel (WIRED) Audience Survey Complete our annual audience survey before August 31. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The CyberWire
Get to patching: Patch Tuesday updates.

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 38:15


A busy Patch Tuesday. Investigators discover undocumented communications devices inside Chinese-made power inverters. A newly discovered Branch Privilege Injection flaw affects Intel CPUs. A UK retailer may claim up to £100mn from its cyber insurers after a major cyberattack.  A Kosovo national has been extradited to the U.S. for allegedly running an illegal online marketplace. CISA will continue alerts on its website following industry backlash. On our Industry Voices segment, Neil Hare-Brown, CEO at STORM Guidance, discusses Cyber Incident Response (CIR) retainer service provision. Shoring up the future of the CVE program. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest On today's Industry Voices segment, we are joined by Neil Hare-Brown, CEO at STORM Guidance, discussing Cyber Incident Response (CIR) retainer service provision. You can learn more here.  Selected Reading Microsoft Patch Tuesday security updates for May 2025 fixed 5 actively exploited zero-days (Security Affairs) SAP patches second zero-day flaw exploited in recent attacks (Bleeping Computer)  Ivanti fixes EPMM zero-days chained in code execution attacks (Bleeping Computer)  Fortinet fixes critical zero-day exploited in FortiVoice attacks (Bleeping Computer)  Vulnerabilities Patched by Juniper, VMware and Zoom (SecurityWeek) ICS Patch Tuesday: Vulnerabilities Addressed by Siemens, Schneider, Phoenix Contact (SecurityWeek) Adobe Patches Big Batch of Critical-Severity Software Flaws (SecurityWeek) Ghost in the machine? Rogue communication devices found in Chinese inverters (Reuters) New Intel CPU flaws leak sensitive data from privileged memory (Bleeping Computer)  M&S cyber insurance payout to be worth up to £100mn (Financial Times) US extradites Kosovo national charged in operating illegal online marketplace (The Record) CISA Planned to Kill .Gov Alerts. Then It Reversed Course. (Data BreachToday) CVE Foundation eyes year-end launch following 11th-hour rescue of MITRE program (CyberScoop) Share your feedback. We want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show.  Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Piltch Point (Audio)
Balancing Usability and Security: The Future of Secondhand Computers - Episode 335

Piltch Point (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2025 33:48


In today's fast-paced technological landscape, the rapid evolution of hardware often leaves older devices obsolete, particularly when it comes to operating systems. The increasing requirements for modern operating systems, such as Windows 11, pose significant challenges for charities and individuals looking to repurpose older laptops. However, one viable solution that not only extends the life of these devices but also promotes sustainability is the installation of Linux operating systems.The Challenge of ObsolescenceAs technology advances, operating systems and software applications demand more from hardware. Windows 11, for instance, requires at least an 8th generation Intel CPU, along with other specifications that many older laptops do not meet. This creates a dilemma for organizations like charities that receive donated laptops. While these devices may be functional, their inability to run the latest operating systems often leads to their disposal or relegation to e-waste recycling - a process that is not only environmentally taxing but also wasteful.The Benefits of LinuxLinux emerges as a powerful alternative for repurposing old laptops. Unlike Windows, Linux distributions (or "distros") are designed to be lightweight and flexible, making them suitable for older hardware. Here are several compelling reasons to consider Linux for repurposing old laptops:Compatibility with Older HardwareMany Linux distributions are specifically tailored to run on older machines. Distros like Ubuntu MATE, Lubuntu, and Xubuntu are known for their efficiency and can breathe new life into laptops that struggle with more demanding operating systems.Cost-EffectiveLinux is open-source and free to use, which means that charities and individuals can install it without incurring licensing fees. This is particularly beneficial for organizations that operate on tight budgets and seek to maximize the resources they have.Security and UpdatesWhile Windows 10 is approaching its end of life and will no longer receive security updates unless users pay for extended support, many Linux distributions offer regular updates and support from their communities. This ensures that users can maintain a secure computing environment without the looming threat of outdated software.Diverse Software EcosystemLinux provides access to a vast array of software applications for various needs, from productivity tools to multimedia editing. Users can find alternatives to popular software that runs on Windows, allowing them to perform everyday tasks without the need for expensive licenses.Community SupportThe Linux community is known for its robust support networks. Users can easily find help through forums, online documentation, and user groups, making it easier for those unfamiliar with Linux to transition smoothly.Environmental ImpactBy choosing to install Linux on older laptops, we are not only extending the life of these devices but also contributing to a more sustainable future. E-waste is a growing concern, with millions of tons generated each year. Repurposing laptops with Linux helps reduce this waste by keeping devices in use longer and minimizing the demand for new hardware. In an era where environmental sustainability is paramount, this practice aligns with broader efforts to reduce our carbon footprint and promote responsible consumption.ConclusionRepurposing old laptops with Linux is a practical and sustainable approach to technology that benefits both individuals and the environment. As discussed in the Piltch Point podcast, the challenges posed by modern operating systems can be mitigated through the adoption of Linux, which offers compatibility, cost savings, security, and community support. By embracing this alternative, we can ensure that older laptops continue to serve their purpose, providing valuable resources to those in need while reducing electronic waste. In doing so, we take a meaningful step towards a more sustainable and responsible technological future.

backspace.fm
西川善司完全解説シリーズ:ついにインテルArrow Lakeの話ができるよ!ep573

backspace.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2024 185:12


【PR】 Wise.comこの会話では、ネットワークの問題、台湾でのアーティスト活動、モバイル通信のトラブル、親のテクノロジー利用について話し合われています。特に、配信の質やトラブル解決策に焦点が当てられています。 この会話では、松尾家の回線の品質や、全然さんの忙しい9月、編集部とのやり取りの難しさ、仕事の進捗と最速の重要性、バックスペースの配信とサポート、Unityの発表、Intelの新プロセッサの発表、プロセッサの型番の意味、自作PCとノートPCの選び方について話し合われました。 この会話では、CPUの進化、チップ設計の柔軟性、ハイパースレッディングの変遷、シングルスレッド性能の重要性、AIとCPUの未来、コパイロットプラスの可能性について議論されました。特に、Intelの新技術やAI機能の発展についての期待が強調されました。 この会話では、マイクロソフトのAI戦略、GPUの進化、AIとメディアエンジンの統合、そして新しいチップセットの可能性について議論されました。特に、マイクロソフトがAIにどのように取り組んでいるか、GPUがゲームPCに与える影響、AI技術の進化がメディアエンジンにどのように統合されているか、そして新しいチップセットがもたらす可能性について深く掘り下げられました。 この会話では、サンダーボルトの進化、外部GPUやストレージの接続、USBの未来、DDR5メモリの進化、次世代CPUの性能、メモリの互換性、大画面ディスプレイの進化、ロボタクシーなど、最新の技術とその影響について深く掘り下げています。 この会話では、未来のロボットと人間の関係、AIと医療の進化、ノーベル賞受賞者の業績、AIによるゲーム開発の影響、そしてAIの未来と人類の可能性について議論されました。特に、ロボットが人間の生活をどのように支援するか、AIが医療分野でどのように役立つか、そしてAI技術の進化が社会に与える影響について深く掘り下げられました。(この概要はRiversideのAI機能を使って自動生成しています。内容が正確でない可能性があるので参考程度に参照してください。)関連リンクついにArrow Lakeの話ができるよ!ep573 · Issue #1351 · drikin/backspaceプロンプトで画像生成ストリートファイトするAIアーケードゲーム大会「VS AI街頭對戰」、台湾で世界大会決勝(CloseBox) 1枚目の写真・画像 | テクノエッジ TechnoEdgeSuno AIではじめる音楽生成AI入門 | 松尾公也 |本 | 通販 | AmazonCore Ultra(シリーズ2)にデスクトップ/ハイエンドモバイル向けモデルが登場! これまでのIntel製CPUとの決定的な違い(1/5 ページ) - ITmedia PC USER「開発コミュニティに寄り添ったUnityをもう一度呼び戻す」 新CEOが語るUnityの現状と「Unity 6」の新機能シャオミ、100インチ4Kテレビを破格の29万円で発売。早割28万8800円、チューナーレスのGoogle TV仕様 | テクノエッジ TechnoEdgeテスラのマスク氏、自動運転ロボタクシー『サイバーキャブ』発表。20人乗れる『ロボバン』もサプライズ公開 | テクノエッジ TechnoEdgexiaomi-smart-display-max-100-2025 - Xiaomi JapanDario Amodei — Machines of Loving Graceデビスハサビスまったく新しい「REPUBLIC:THE REVOLUTION」See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Ubisoft Crawls Back to Steam, Intel CPU Stability Update, 9800X3D Rumors

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 70:17


Episode 46: Ubisoft are headed back to Steam after forcing PC gamers to use their awful app for too long, Intel has provided another update on their Raptor Lake CPU stability issues and there's rumors of a Ryzen 7 9800X3D coming soon. We discuss all of that on today's podcast.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro02:07 - Ubisoft Are Returning to Steam18:51 - Intel Raptor Lake CPU Stability Update34:23 - Ryzen 7 9800X3D Rumors54:04 - Updates From Our Boring LivesNEWS ARTICLEShttps://x.com/assassinscreed/status/1838971189722562906https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-ryzen-7-9800x3d-rumored-to-launch-end-of-octoberhttps://community.intel.com/t5/Blogs/Tech-Innovation/Client/Intel-Core-13th-and-14th-Gen-Desktop-Instability-Root-Cause/post/1633239https://www.chiphell.com/thread-2637341-1-1.htmlSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Untitled Linux Show 169: Not Good But It's a Reason

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 82:28


This week we chat about yet another Linux mobile device, the new AlmaLinux certification script, and Ubuntu's fine-grained security controls. Then there's the Attack Vector Controls, Redox OS, and some much-needed updates to Apt. For tips we have Hardinfo for hardware details, findmnt part 2 for tracking your drives, Planify for person task management, and auditctl for system auditing and monitoring. See the show notes at https://bit.ly/4gErdnF and be back next week! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Ken McDonald, Rob Campbell, and Jeff Massie Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

The Innovation Show
Peter Compo Part 2: A Primer on Adaptation and Emergence

The Innovation Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 39:33


The Emergent Approach to Strategy: Adaptation, Innovation, and Historical Insights In this episode, the focus is on Peter Compo's discussion of 'The Emergent Approach to Strategy,' specifically its application to adaptation and emergence in strategy development. The conversation explores the parallel between biological evolution and human innovation, highlighting the importance of adaptive systems in creativity and strategy. Historical examples, such as the early automotive industry led by Henry Ford and modern electric cars pioneered by Elon Musk, are used to illustrate how low-level disciplines and rules can lead to high-level strategic outcomes and industry transformations. The episode delves into the principles of complex adaptive systems, emphasizing the balance between discipline and free-thinking, and how effective strategies emerge from rigorous local actions. Peter Compo also addresses the concept of levels within organizations, stressing the significance of being attuned to low-level operations to drive innovation while avoiding becoming prisoners of past successes. 00:00 Introduction and Welcome 00:08 The Concept of Adaptation and Emergence 03:43 Historical Examples of Adaptive Systems 07:13 Ford's Strategy and Its Evolution 10:39 The Theory of Levels in Creativity and Innovation 18:54 Connecting Levels to Strategy 27:41 Ants and Social Insects: A Case Study 31:48 Intel's Transition to CPUs 35:20 Conclusion and Final Thoughts Link to Peter's website: Link to Peter's Music: Link to Scale with Geoffrey West Part 1 of 3: Link to Aidan McCullen for Keynotes, workshops and event MC. Find us on Substack for Shownotes and competitions:   Peter Compo, Aidan McCullen, emergent strategy, Peter Compo, adaptive systems, innovation, complex adaptive systems, business strategy, evolutionary mechanisms, creativity, Henry Ford, Tesla, Elon Musk, execution, Intel CPUs, corporate discipline, low level rules, high level outcomes, market forces, leadership insights

2.5 Admins
2.5 Admins 208: All CPUs suck

2.5 Admins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 30:10


Forcing Windows to undo updates and a separate IPv6 vulnerability, hardware bugs in AMD and Intel CPUs, and using Samba on Linux with Active Directory.   Plug Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with early episodes sometimes   News Your victim's Windows PC fully patched? Just force undo its updates and […]

Late Night Linux All Episodes
2.5 Admins 208: All CPUs suck

Late Night Linux All Episodes

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 30:10


Forcing Windows to undo updates and a separate IPv6 vulnerability, hardware bugs in AMD and Intel CPUs, and using Samba on Linux with Active Directory.   Plug Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with early episodes sometimes   News Your victim's Windows PC fully patched? Just force undo its updates and... Read More

This Week in Tech (Audio)
TWiT 991: This Show is Securities Fraud - Intel Layoffs, KOSA, Don Lemon

This Week in Tech (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 172:13


Existential thoughts about Apple services revenue. Intel announces two extra years of warranty amid chip crashing and instability issues — longer warranty applies to 13th- and 14th-Gen Core processors. Intel plans to lay off 15% of workforce -- at least 15,000 people. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts stake in Apple by nearly 50%. Amazon paid almost $1 billion for Twitch in 2014. It's still losing money. Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled. Artist and musician sue SEC over its NFT regulatory jurisdiction. Senate passes the Kids Online Safety Act. Ding dong KOSA's dead (for now). A senate bill would radically improve voting machine security. Jailed cybercriminals returned to Russia in historic prisoner swap. US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules. Posing as 'Alicia,' this man scammed hundreds online. He was also a victim. Broadcasters fly in TikTokers and YouTubers to generate Olympic buzz. Disney, Fox and Warner Sports streamer Venu to launch at $42.99/ Month. Don Lemon sues Elon Musk over canceled X deal. Meta talks With Judi Dench, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key for AI voice projects. Google pulls Olympics AI ad 'Dear Sydney.' Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Jason Howell, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit bitwarden.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit e-e.com/twit coda.io/twit

This Week in Tech (Video HI)
TWiT 991: This Show is Securities Fraud - Intel Layoffs, KOSA, Don Lemon

This Week in Tech (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 172:12


Existential thoughts about Apple services revenue. Intel announces two extra years of warranty amid chip crashing and instability issues — longer warranty applies to 13th- and 14th-Gen Core processors. Intel plans to lay off 15% of workforce -- at least 15,000 people. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts stake in Apple by nearly 50%. Amazon paid almost $1 billion for Twitch in 2014. It's still losing money. Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled. Artist and musician sue SEC over its NFT regulatory jurisdiction. Senate passes the Kids Online Safety Act. Ding dong KOSA's dead (for now). A senate bill would radically improve voting machine security. Jailed cybercriminals returned to Russia in historic prisoner swap. US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules. Posing as 'Alicia,' this man scammed hundreds online. He was also a victim. Broadcasters fly in TikTokers and YouTubers to generate Olympic buzz. Disney, Fox and Warner Sports streamer Venu to launch at $42.99/ Month. Don Lemon sues Elon Musk over canceled X deal. Meta talks With Judi Dench, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key for AI voice projects. Google pulls Olympics AI ad 'Dear Sydney.' Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Jason Howell, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit bitwarden.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit e-e.com/twit coda.io/twit

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
This Week in Tech 991: This Show is Securities Fraud

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 172:13


Existential thoughts about Apple services revenue. Intel announces two extra years of warranty amid chip crashing and instability issues — longer warranty applies to 13th- and 14th-Gen Core processors. Intel plans to lay off 15% of workforce -- at least 15,000 people. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts stake in Apple by nearly 50%. Amazon paid almost $1 billion for Twitch in 2014. It's still losing money. Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled. Artist and musician sue SEC over its NFT regulatory jurisdiction. Senate passes the Kids Online Safety Act. Ding dong KOSA's dead (for now). A senate bill would radically improve voting machine security. Jailed cybercriminals returned to Russia in historic prisoner swap. US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules. Posing as 'Alicia,' this man scammed hundreds online. He was also a victim. Broadcasters fly in TikTokers and YouTubers to generate Olympic buzz. Disney, Fox and Warner Sports streamer Venu to launch at $42.99/ Month. Don Lemon sues Elon Musk over canceled X deal. Meta talks With Judi Dench, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key for AI voice projects. Google pulls Olympics AI ad 'Dear Sydney.' Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Jason Howell, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit bitwarden.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit e-e.com/twit coda.io/twit

Radio Leo (Audio)
This Week in Tech 991: This Show is Securities Fraud

Radio Leo (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 172:13


Existential thoughts about Apple services revenue. Intel announces two extra years of warranty amid chip crashing and instability issues — longer warranty applies to 13th- and 14th-Gen Core processors. Intel plans to lay off 15% of workforce -- at least 15,000 people. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts stake in Apple by nearly 50%. Amazon paid almost $1 billion for Twitch in 2014. It's still losing money. Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled. Artist and musician sue SEC over its NFT regulatory jurisdiction. Senate passes the Kids Online Safety Act. Ding dong KOSA's dead (for now). A senate bill would radically improve voting machine security. Jailed cybercriminals returned to Russia in historic prisoner swap. US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules. Posing as 'Alicia,' this man scammed hundreds online. He was also a victim. Broadcasters fly in TikTokers and YouTubers to generate Olympic buzz. Disney, Fox and Warner Sports streamer Venu to launch at $42.99/ Month. Don Lemon sues Elon Musk over canceled X deal. Meta talks With Judi Dench, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key for AI voice projects. Google pulls Olympics AI ad 'Dear Sydney.' Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Jason Howell, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit bitwarden.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit e-e.com/twit coda.io/twit

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
This Week in Tech 991: This Show is Securities Fraud

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 172:12


Existential thoughts about Apple services revenue. Intel announces two extra years of warranty amid chip crashing and instability issues — longer warranty applies to 13th- and 14th-Gen Core processors. Intel plans to lay off 15% of workforce -- at least 15,000 people. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway cuts stake in Apple by nearly 50%. Amazon paid almost $1 billion for Twitch in 2014. It's still losing money. Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled. Artist and musician sue SEC over its NFT regulatory jurisdiction. Senate passes the Kids Online Safety Act. Ding dong KOSA's dead (for now). A senate bill would radically improve voting machine security. Jailed cybercriminals returned to Russia in historic prisoner swap. US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules. Posing as 'Alicia,' this man scammed hundreds online. He was also a victim. Broadcasters fly in TikTokers and YouTubers to generate Olympic buzz. Disney, Fox and Warner Sports streamer Venu to launch at $42.99/ Month. Don Lemon sues Elon Musk over canceled X deal. Meta talks With Judi Dench, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key for AI voice projects. Google pulls Olympics AI ad 'Dear Sydney.' Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Jason Howell, Alex Lindsay, and Jason Snell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit bitwarden.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit e-e.com/twit coda.io/twit

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #784 - More Intel Instability Woes, AMD Financials, Ryzen 9000 Delay Update, Cybertruck PC and MORE

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2024 66:03


Four of us gathered to discuss another week in PC hardware and software, and while Jeremy was absent (again) and Josh didn't have a burger (again), the podcast was still a podcast, and that probably means something.  AMD is touching 6Ghz, Intel is not OK, Cybertruck is a PC, and we've got so much financial news on AMD and ARM...punch it Chewy!Recorded July 31, 2024.Timestamps:00:00 Intro04:30 Food with Josh06:27 Josh's AMD financial report13:29 Josh's Arm financial report16:51 Intel will not recall the 13th and 14th Gen CPUs (and further discussion)26:58 Now might be the right time to trade in your potentially defective Intel CPU!28:40 An update on the Ryzen 9000 delay31:02 It may be possible to hit 6 GHz (and above) with a Ryzen 9 9950X33:12 Windows 11 July update breaks Bitlocker35:33 The Cybertruck PC40:51 (in)Security Corner53:01 Gaming Quick Hits57:06 Picks of the Week1:04:54 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

The Full Nerd
Episode 311: Ryzen 9000 Delayed, AFMF 2 Preview, Strix Point Reviews & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 97:10


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang covers AMD delaying Ryzen 9000, the latest on Intel CPU failures, the Fluid Motion Frames 2 technical preview, Ryzen AI 300 mobile reviews and more. And of course we answer your questions live! Links: - Ryzen 9000 delay: https://www.pcworld.com/article/2408002/ryzen-9000-cpu-launch-delayed-to-august.html - Intel instability: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-cpu-instability-crashing-bug-includes-65w-and-higher-skus-intel-says-damage-is-irreversible-no-planned-recall - AFMF 2: https://www.pcworld.com/article/2411947/amd-releases-ai-powered-fluid-motion-frames-2.html - Ryzen AI 300: https://www.pcworld.com/article/2411004/benchmarked-amds-ryzen-ai-300-brings-serious-performance-to-copilot-laptops.html Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on X: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @AdamPMurray ============= Follow PCWorld! Website: http://www.pcworld.com X: https://www.x.com/pcworld ============= This video is NOT sponsored. Some links may contain affiliate links, which means if you buy something PCWorld may receive a small commission.

Daily Tech Headlines
Apple Reportedly Delaying Apple Intelligence Despite iOS 18 September Launch – DTH

Daily Tech Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024


NY federal district court says border agents need warrants to search electronics, some Intel CPUs might not survive upcoming voltage patch, Twitch isn’t making money for Amazon. MP3 Please SUBSCRIBE HERE. You can get an ad-free feed of Daily Tech Headlines for $3 a month here. A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, noneContinue reading "Apple Reportedly Delaying Apple Intelligence Despite iOS 18 September Launch – DTH"

The PC Pro Podcast
Episode 702: Dissecting CrowdStrike

The PC Pro Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 71:20


The team discusses the global CrowdStrike catastrophe, dissects the official word on Intel CPU hiccups and learns why some NVIDIA graphics cards are no longer cool.Our Hot Hardware candidate is the Apple Vision Pro.

Digital Foundry Direct Weekly
DF Direct Weekly #172: PS5 Pro Still Coming in 2024? No Man's Sky Mega Update, Intel CPU Instability

Digital Foundry Direct Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 136:22


Another big DF Direct Weekly sees John, Rich and Alex discussing PS5 Pro release date uncertainties, the unprecedented support from Hello Games on No Man's Sky and the alarming stories surrounding stability issues on Intel's 13th and 14th Generation Core processors. Alex has much to share in terms of Unreal Engine and GPUOpen presentations, while John gets to play some Death Game Hotel with none other than Swery. 0:00:00 Introduction 0:01:24 News 01: Will PS5 Pro release in 2024? 0:11:59 News 02: No Man's Sky updated with new visual features 0:20:12 News 03: Intel CPU stability issues may run deep 0:34:54 News 04: GPUOpen tech presentations with Alex! 0:48:58 News 05: John's next project: PlayStation vs. Saturn 0:57:48 News 06: Can #StutterStruggle be overcome in Unreal Engine? 1:09:56 News 07: Gears of War Ultimate Edition suffers poor performance on PC 1:17:58 News 08: Playing Death Game Hotel with SWERY! 1:25:05 Supporter Q1: What would you like to see in a hypothetical DirectX 13? 1:30:20 Supporter Q2: Could a new Nvidia Shield device enhance game streaming with local processing? 1:36:58 Supporter Q3: Are large decreases in frame-rates still impactful when targeting high FPS? 1:45:54 Supporter Q4: What should we expect from the mooted handheld Xbox? 1:53:15 Supporter Q5: Is releasing a game as an early access title a good idea? 1:58:01 Supporter Q6: Will Switch 2 devs make use of the console's hardware decompression functionality? 2:01:47 Supporter Q7: Have any pivotal decisions altered your gaming destinies? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Full Nerd
Episode 309: Wendell Talks Zen 5, Arm Promises, Intel Crashes & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 131:51


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode we are joined by special guest Wendell from  @Level1Techs  to talk about the recent news around Zen 5, Arm on Windows, and Intel CPU crashes. And of course we answer your questions live! - Ryzen 9000 Details: https://youtu.be/gi0dqzfI52o - Windows/Arm Promises: https://youtu.be/qKRmYW1D0S0 - Intel Problems: https://youtu.be/QzHcrbT5D_Y Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on X: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @AdamPMurray ============= Follow PCWorld! Website: http://www.pcworld.com X: https://www.x.com/pcworld ============= #amd #snapdragon #intel This video is NOT sponsored. Some links may contain affiliate links, which means if you buy something PCWorld may receive a small commission.

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Zen 5 Incoming, FSR 3.1 Testing and More Intel CPU Issues

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024 82:49


Episode 37: A chat about the various projects we're working, everything from preparing for Zen 5, to testing FSR 3.1, more thoughts on the Intel CPU crashing saga and of course our various home projects.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro00:38 - Lead Up To Zen 5 Testing12:45 - Further Thoughts on FSR 3.1 Testing29:44 - Intel Power and Crashing Situation Is Still Ongoing53:53 - Intel Arc GPUs Actually Work Okay1:04:02 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

ExtremePCUK - A monthly show about PC Gaming, Building, Modding and Reviews.
235 - Intel CPUs, Elden Ring Shadow of the Erdtree, Atari, DrDisrespect trouble, Enshrouded, World Famous Quiz, and more

ExtremePCUK - A monthly show about PC Gaming, Building, Modding and Reviews.

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2024 94:54


Please join our FREE Discord at https://discord.gg/extremegamingpodcast Discord Subscriptions give you extra benefits ranging from your own rooms, your name near the top of the discord, an exclusive emoji next to your name, and most importantly, to say thanks and you are happy to support the community. Subscriptions can be found in the Server Shop at top left of the Discord. Levels range from $2.99 to $19.99. PLEASE SUB ONLY ON DESKTOP BECAUSE MOBILE APPS ADD A 30% SURCHARGE !! Thanks from Trev and Gray #podcast #gaming #technology #gamereview #viral

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #778 - Snapdragon X Elite Reviews Reaction, AMD Data Breach, Fractal Mood Review, Inexpensive 360AiO & MORE

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2024 71:34


Five of us entered, but only one survived. This is one episode you won't want to miss!In addition to all that, we discussed SFF specs, Copilot updates, the Fractal Mood, ARM speculative execution, and Intel CPU stability!Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:34 Food with Josh03:00 We react to Snapdragon X Elite reviews10:17 Intel issues microcode fix for 13th/14th Gen stability issues16:02 NVIDIA's new SFF-Ready GPU standard18:37 An ITX-sized RTX 4070 with a pink PCB19:54 Windows 10 update brings "Open With" dialog box bug21:23 ID-Cooling has a 360mm AiO with no RGB for only 60 bucks24:48 (in)Security Corner begins33:00 AMD data breach35:41 Gaming Quick Hits42:10 Fractal Mood mITX case review59:12 Picks of the Week1:11:07 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

The CyberWire
U.S. tightens the cybersecurity belt.

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024 34:59


Biden bans Kaspersky over security concerns. Accenture says reports of them being breached are greatly exaggerated. SneakyChef targets diplomats in Africa, the Middle East, Europe and Asia. A serious firmware flaw affects Intel CPUs. More headaches for car dealerships relying on CDK Global. CISA Alerts Over 100,000 Individuals of Potential Data Breach in Chemical Security Tool Hack. SquidLoader targets Chinese organizations through phishing. A new nonprofit aims to establish certification standards in maritime cybersecurity. A sneak peek of our latest podcast, Only Malware in the Building. Using the court system for customer support. Our 2024 N2K CyberWire Audience Survey is underway, make your voice heard and get in the running for a $100 Amazon gift card. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest Guest Selena Larson, joined by Dave Bittner and Rick Howard, hosts the new podcast "Only Malware in the Building." This monthly collaboration between N2K CyberWire and Proofpoint delves into the most impactful and intriguing malware stories. Selena makes complex cybersecurity info fun and digestible, offering tech professionals clear, actionable insights.  Selected Reading Biden bans US sales of Kaspersky software over Russia ties (Reuters) Exclusive: Accenture says data leak claims false, only 3 affected (Cyber Daily) Chinese-aligned hacking group targeted more than a dozen government agencies, researchers find (CyberScoop) Intel-powered computers affected by serious firmware flaw (CVE-2024-0762) (Help Net Security) CDK warns: threat actors are calling customers, posing as support (bleepingcomputer) Personal and Chemical Facility Information Potentially Accessed in CISA Hack (SecurityWeek) New Highly Evasive SquidLoader Attacking Employees Mimic As Word Document (gbhackers) New body IMCSO to elevate standards and streamline provisioning of cybersecurity services in Maritime (itsecurityguru) US DHS partners with Indonesia to strengthen maritime cybersecurity in Indo-Pacific region (Industrial Cyber) How small claims court became Meta's customer service hotline (engadget). The curious case of the missing IcedID (Only Malware in the Building) Share your feedback. We want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show.  Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Daily Decrypt - Cyber News and Discussions
CDK Global Car Dealership Cyber Incidents, SolarWinds Serv-U CVE-2024-28995, Intel UEFI Vulnerability

The Daily Decrypt - Cyber News and Discussions

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024


In today's episode, we delve into the "cyber incident" that has brought CDK Global's systems to a standstill, impacting more than 15,000 car dealerships (https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2024/06/cyberattacks-have-forced-thousands-of-car-dealerships-to-paper-for-a-second-day/). We also explore the active exploitation of a SolarWinds Serv-U path traversal vulnerability, urging urgent security updates (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/solarwinds-serv-u-path-traversal-flaw-actively-exploited-in-attacks/). Lastly, we examine the UEFI firmware vulnerability affecting multiple Intel CPUs, highlighting the critical need for immediate firmware updates (https://thehackernews.com/2024/06/researchers-uncover-uefi-vulnerability.html). 00:00 Introduction 00:56 CDK Global Cyber Incident Cripples Dealerships 03:02 SolarWinds Serv-U Exploit: Immediate Patch Required 04:54 Phoenix SecureCore UEFI Vulnerability Hits Intel CPUs Thanks to Jered Jones for providing the music for this episode. https://www.jeredjones.com/ Logo Design by https://www.zackgraber.com/ Tags: CDK Global, cyber incidents, car dealerships, customer data, SolarWinds, Serv-U, cybercriminals, UEFI, vulnerability, Intel, supply chain security, CVE-2024-28995, CVE-2024-0762 Search Phrases: CDK Global cyber attack, car dealership data breach, how to protect customer data from cyber threats, SolarWinds Serv-U vulnerability CVE-2024-28995, UEFI vulnerability affecting Intel CPUs, protecting endpoints from cyber incidents, steps to mitigate cyber attack downtime, supply chain security concerns in tech, immediate steps for car dealerships during a cyber incident, measures to fix UEFI vulnerability Video Episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dpGVq57dil4

Self-Hosted
123: How much CPU do You REALLY Need

Self-Hosted

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 57:26


Alex benchmarks Intel CPUs (and an Arc GPU) to find the ideal balance of age, power, and speed for your home media server. Plus, our thoughts on Immich going full-time.

docker chris fisher intel cpus jupiter broadcasting
All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
How much CPU do You REALLY Need | Self-Hosted 123

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024


Alex benchmarks Intel CPUs (and an Arc GPU) to find the ideal balance of age, power, and speed for your home media server. Plus, our thoughts on Immich going full-time.

intel cpus self hosted jupiter broadcasting
The Full Nerd
Episode 299: MSI & Radeon Breakup, Mobo Performance VS Stability, & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 106:22


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang covers the report that MSI is focusing on Nvidia GPUs, our thoughts on motherboard performance in the light of Intel CPU crashes, and more. And as always we answer your questions live! Subscribe to the new  @thefullnerdpodcast  YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@thefullnerdpodcast References: - https://www.notebookcheck.net/MSI-responds-to-quiet-removal-of-its-new-AMD-Radeon-graphics-cards-from-retail-stores.832129.0.html - https://www.pcworld.com/article/2318151/intel-memo-blames-motherboards-for-high-end-cpu-crashes.html Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on X: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @AdamPMurray ============= Follow PCWorld! Website: http://www.pcworld.com X: https://www.x.com/pcworld =============

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Intel Are "Clearly The Better Choice" for Gaming PCs... Apparently

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 86:49


Episode 30: We spend most of this episode discussing a really bad article that claims Intel CPUs are clearly better than AMD CPUs for gaming PCs, including plenty of UserBenchmark-level reasoning. It's a bit of a roast to be honest.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro00:27 - EKWB Update and a Few Rumors09:58 - Breaking Down A Terrible Article on Intel CPUs13:16 - AMD Has "Worse Stability" Than Intel25:56 - AMD's Power Efficiency "Doesn't Matter"34:51 - Intel Provides "More Bang for Buck"41:27 - AMD's Platform Longevity "Isn't A Must Have"1:03:32 - Updates from Our Boring LivesSOURCESTerrible Article: https://www.xda-developers.com/intel-is-better-than-amd-for-average-gamer/Gigabyte Ryzen 9000: https://www.gigabyte.com/Press/News/2161EKWB Apology: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/liquid-cooling/ekwb-issues-public-apology-regarding-delayed-payments-promises-employees-and-suppliers-it-will-change-its-waysSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Full Nerd
Episode 297: Intel Crashing Reports, Lunar/Arrow Lake, Gaming FPS Targets & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 120:09


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang covers the continued reports of high-end Intel CPU crashes, Lunar Lake details and Arrow Lake leaks, the best gaming frame rates to target, and more. And as always we answer your questions live! References: - https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/9/24125036/intel-game-crash-13900k-14900k-fortnite-unreal-engine-investigation - https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-says-lunar-lake-will-have-100-tops-of-ai-performance-45-tops-from-the-npu-alone-meeting-requirement-for-next-gen-ai-pcs - https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-core-ultra-arrow-lake-desktop-cpus-with-20-and-24-cores-spotted-with-no-hyperthreading Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on X: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @AdamPMurray ============= Follow PCWorld: Website: http://www.pcworld.com X: https://www.x.com/pcworld

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast
Unstable Intel CPUs, Trash B650 Boards, 13th-Gen Discontinued and XeSS 1.3

The Hardware Unboxed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 75:15


Episode 28: We discuss Intel 13th and 14th gen CPUs maybe being pushed a bit too far and crashing games, Steve has tested some really bad AMD B650 boards recently, Intel has started discontinuing 13th gen processors already and there's also XeSS 1.3 now.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro01:58 - Intel CPUs Crashing Games and Being Pushed to the Limits24:20 - New Entry-Level B650 Motherboards are Trash36:13 - Intel Discontinues 13th-gen K-series CPUs53:39 - AMD Launches Ryzen 7 8700F and Ryzen 5 8400F58:12 - Intel Launches XeSS 1.31:05:21 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

TechLinked
Windows 11 Updates blocked, Intel CPUs failing + more!

TechLinked

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 9:40


Timestamps: 0:00 wherefore dost thou watcheth?? 0:11 Updates blocked for Win11 PCs with add-ons 1:54 Win11 driver blocks registry workarounds 3:13 Intel 13th, 14th gen CPUs stability issue 5:22 QUICK BITS INTRO 5:36 Android Find my Device 6:11 Google Lookup on Pixels 6:42 RTX 5090, 5080 coming in Q4? 7:15 Windows on Arm beats Apple - Microsoft 8:07 Spotify AI playlists News Sources: https://lmg.gg/mj1mT Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #762 - AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE Review, RX 7700 XT Price Drop, Intel's New FET, and MORE

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 71:19


Josh is traveling again, Kent is back, and we have plenty to discuss. Intel CPU crashes, the RX 7900 GRE, the AT&T outage, Nvidia is the GPU cartel - it's all here in this one show!  Here us now, and believe us later.  See all the times below for a list of topics - and don't worry, Jeremy did the burger segment.Recorded February 28, 2024.Timestamps:00:00 Intro03:32 Food with Josh via Jeremy05:34 AMD Radeon GRE global launch and RX 7700 XT price drop07:40 Limited OC headroom from GRE a bug, says AMD08:38 Our RX 7900 GRE review - featuring the Sapphire PURE15:02 Intel has a new FET - and wants back in the server room20:53 Corsair launches new dual-chamber cases23:29 That AT&T outage last week28:05 More on the Intel 13th and 14th Gen crashing reports34:59 Herkelman says NVIDIA is a GPU cartel37:05 Security Corner53:41 Gaming Quick Hits1:01:29 Picks of the Week1:10:01 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

The Full Nerd
Episode 292: RX 7900 GRE Reviews, Intel CPU Crashes, New Nvidia App & More

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 96:58


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC hardware topics. In this episode the gang covers the AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE reviews, reports of high-end Intel CPUs crashing, and Nvidia's new application that replaces GeForce Experience and control panel. And as always we answer your questions live! *This episode of The Full Nerd is sponsored by Falcon Northwest. Head over to http://www.falconnorthwest.com/ to configure your ultimate PC now! Sources: - https://youtu.be/5yW9XyYAJBc?si=goUiDv9hegzuCUdZ - https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/is-your-intel-core-i9-13900k-crashing-in-games-your-motherboard-bios-settings-may-be-to-blame-other-high-end-intel-cpus-also-affected - https://www.pcworld.com/article/2244895/nvidia-app-beta-unifies-nvidia-control-panel-and-geforce-experience.html Buy The Full Nerd merch: https://crowdmade.com/collections/pcworld Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on Twitter: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @AdamPMurray Follow PCWorld for all things PC! ------------------------------­---- SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=PCWorldVideos TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/pcworld #amd #gpu #intel

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #761 - NVIDIA's Insane AI Growth, 14900KS Imminent, Corsair A115 Air Cooler, CoolerMaster sues + MORE!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2024 88:13


After a couple of weeks we are back at full strength, and it will take our combined willpower to withstand the might of NVIDIA's ridiculous earnings report. We also talked about the reported listings for a 400W Core i9-14900KS, took a look at Corsair's A115 air cooler, and Josh reviewed some food.  And also you can now trade one benevolent OS vendor for another with a Windows 10 -> ChromeOS upgrade!  Plus other topics, found in the time stamps below.Recorded February 21, 2024.Timestamps:00:00 Intro02:14 Food with Josh05:18 NVIDIA's insane quarter (is this AI stuff sustainable?)18:49 Intel Foundry news23:21 Reports of a 400W Intel Core i9-14900KS26:15 AMD paused the RX 7600 XT launch in China due to competition from AMD27:28 A brief mention of the new Cooler Master AiO lawsuit28:29 Ryzen 8000G STAPM issue was fixed33:46 Google Flexes a ChromeOS alternative to Windows 1136:28 Josh talks about Arm44:51 (in)Security Corner56:13 Gaming Quick Hits59:40 (GQH continues) Intel CPUs causing Unreal Engine crashes?1:07:57 Corsair A115 air cooler tested1:17:14 Picks of the Week1:27:17 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

TechLinked
Intel CPU Leak, HP CEO's Weird Interview, 4070 Super Sales Rumors, + More!

TechLinked

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 9:20


Timestamps: 0:00 YSK about tech news 0:13 Intel may kill hyperthreading 1:38 HP CEO's bizarre claims 3:14 4070 Super's “disappointing” sales? 4:38 Blinkist 5:38 QUICK BITS INTRO 5:48 RTX Remix in open beta 6:33 Japan's SLIM moon mission 7:18 Vision Pro's big sales 7:59 Meta bows to EU again 8:34 SpaceX restaurant and shopping centre

Geekshow Podcast
Geekshow Helpdesk: CES 2024 Pt1!

Geekshow Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2024 56:51


-The Personal Cone of Silence: https://www.engadget.com/the-skyted-mask-makes-you-quiet-enough-to-take-calls-even-in-a-library-043759088.html   -Hyper advanced reading glasses: https://www.engadget.com/vixion01-glasses-reduce-eyestrain-by-doing-the-focusing-for-you-205106281.html   -New Meat smoker tech: https://www.engadget.com/ge-profile-smart-indoor-smoker-150044423.html   -Intel CPUs: https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2024/01/08/intel-ces-processors-desktop-laptop-windows11/   -AMD CPUs: https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2024/01/08/ces-2024-amd-desktop-mobile-ai/   -LG T Series: https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/8/24029590/lg-oled-t-transparent-tv-announced-specs-features  -OpenAI says it's impossible to create useful AI models without stealing: https://arstechnica.com/?p=1994591   -Apple is gaslighting the public again with their VR headset: https://apple.slashdot.org/story/24/01/09/1344242/apple-tells-developers-not-to-call-their-ar-or-vr-apps-ar-or-vr-apps?utm_source=rss0.9mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed  Comes out in February: https://tech.slashdot.org/story/24/01/08/1449254/apples-3500-vision-pro-starts-shipping-in-february?utm_source=rss0.9mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed   -Bringing the Blackberry Palm Nokia experience to the iPhone: https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/4/24024957/clicks-iphone-keyboard-case-iphone-14-15-lightning-usb-c   -New laptop ram standard is pretty awesome: https://www.engadget.com/micron-debuts-lpcamm2-laptop-ram-that-could-finally-replace-sodimm-140018881.html?src=rss   -OpenAI Lawsuit https://www.theverge.com/2023/12/27/24016212/new-york-times-openai-microsoft-lawsuit-copyright-infringement

The CyberWire
Cyberespionage by several intelligence services, some of contracted out. Developments in the cyber underworld. Vulnerabilities reported in CPUs. Some notes on Patch Tuesday.

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 31:23


Reports of a Wide-ranging cyberespionage campaign by China's Ministry of State Security. EvilProxy phishing tool targets executives, and defeats multifactor authentication. Vulnerabilities in CPUs. Yashma ransomware targets a wide range of countries. MacOS threat trends. Is there a Russian attempt to disrupt British elections? Rob Boyce from Accenture checks in from the Blackhat conference. Maria Varmazis talking with Black Hat Aerospace Village's Kaylin Trychon and Steve Luczynski. Ukraine claims to have stopped a Russian spyware campaign. And Patch Tuesday has come and gone, but the vulnerabilities remain–unless, of course, you've applied the patches. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/151 Selected reading. Chinese hackers targeted at least 17 countries across Asia, Europe and North America (Record) RedHotel: A Prolific, Chinese State-Sponsored Group Operating at a Global Scale (Recorded Future) Cloud Account Takeover Campaign Leveraging EvilProxy Targets Top-Level Executives at over 100 Global Organizations (Proofpoint)  ‘Downfall' vulnerability leaves billions of Intel CPUs at risk  (CyberScoop)  New Inception attack leaks sensitive data from all AMD Zen CPUs (BleepingComputer) New Yashma Ransomware Variant Targets Multiple English-Speaking Countries (The Hacker News)  Suspected Vietnamese hacker targets Chinese, Bulgarian organizations with new ransomware (Record) Black Hat USA 2023 – Bitdefender macOS Threat Report Reveals Key Dangers for Mac Users (Bitdefender)  Russia ‘tops list of suspects' in cyber attack which exposed data of 40m UK voters (The Telegraph) Electoral Commission hack: Five things you need to know (Computing) ‘Hostile actors' hacked British voter registry, electoral agency says (Washington Post) Electoral Commission apologises for security breach involving UK voters' data (the Guardian)  Ukraine says it prevented Russian hacking of armed forces combat system (Reuters)  Ukraine says it thwarted attempt to breach military tablets (Record) Russian secret services try to penetrate operation planning electronic system of Ukraine's army (Ukrainska Pravda) Patch Tuesday: Adobe Patches 30 Acrobat, Reader Vulns (SecurityWeek)  Patch Tuesday: Microsoft (Finally) Patches Exploited Office Zero-Days (SecurityWeek) Microsoft Releases August 2023 Security Updates (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA) Fortinet Releases Security Update for FortiOS (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA) Adobe Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA)  Patch Tuesday review: August 2023. (CyberWire)