POPULARITY
TECNOLOGIA Y LIBERTAD ☕️ DONACIONES https://ko-fi.com/deknet
Alan Ashby, senior director of Americas data center presales and specialty sales at Dell. Today’s episode of In The Channel comes to you from the floor of Dell Technologies World 2026, where the expansion of the Dell AI Factory has been dominating the headlines. But what does that mean for partners who aren’t selling multi-million dollar deployments to the Fortune 500? To find out, we sat down with Alan Ashby, senior director of Americas data center presales and specialty sales at Dell. Ashby breaks down the practical realities of the AI infrastructure boom, explaining how partners can start small by deploying “AI supercomputers” like the Dell Pro Max GB10 directly to SMB desktops to unlock local, highly secure agentic AI workflows. We also dive into the economics of on-prem AI versus the public cloud, how partners can help customers escape “prototype purgatory” by narrowing their focus, and the massive opportunity remaining in traditional data center modernization—including the staggering claim that Dell’s new 18G platforms can consolidate 13 legacy servers into one. We also touch on how Dell is leveraging its Customer Solution Centers to help partners de-risk these complex deployments before the customer signs the PO. Read Full Transcript Robert Dutt: Hello and welcome to In the Channel from ChannelBuzz.ca, bringing news and information to the Canadian IT channel community for the last 16 years. I’m Robert Dutt, editor of ChannelBuzz.ca and your host for the show. We’re coming to you today from the floor of Dell Technologies World in Las Vegas where the expansion of the Dell AI Factory and new agentic AI capabilities have completely dominated the Day 1 headlines. But as we know, the keynote hype doesn’t always translate immediately to the loading dock. To understand how partners are supposed to actually size, architect, and sell these new AI infrastructure solutions, I sat down with Alan Ashby. He’s the senior director of Americas Data Center pre-sales and specialty sales at Dell. We dig into the economics of on-prem AI versus the public cloud, how partners can get mid-market customers started with an AI supercomputer right at their desk, and why the traditional data center refresh is still a massive and highly lucrative play for the channel. Let’s get right into it. My chat with Alan Ashby. Alan, thanks for taking the time. Appreciate it. Alan Ashby: Absolutely. Thanks for having us. Robert Dutt: Americas Data Center pre-sales and specialty sales. That’s a broad title. A lot of ground to cover there. To set the stage for MSPs, solution providers, folks listening to this, what can you tell me about what your team actually does kind of day-to-day when it comes to working with partners around infrastructure and AI solutions? Alan Ashby: Yeah, absolutely. So we’ve got a handful of folks that, you know, we’re aligned and dedicated to the partner ecosystem focused across the Americas. We have a couple of primary roles. So from a pre-sales perspective, helping support our partners from a technical enablement, understanding our product portfolio, understanding how to position the products correctly, both amongst the portfolio itself, but also kind of competitively in the marketplace. We also run what we call a technical account plan with our partners. So, you know, supporting them on their certifications, their enablement motions, etc. And then we also run what we have a program we call Heroes for our partners. So Heroes is our foundational enablement motion for partners. We run in the Americas somewhere between 15 and 30 regional face-to-face sessions every single quarter. Those we’d love to see partners participate in, try to do them all over the country. And those are deep dive sessions, you know, going through products and roadmaps and futures and how to position products, etc. And, you know, those have been an enablement motion for the last several years and been incredibly successful. Robert Dutt: All right. We’re hearing a lot this week, obviously, about the expansion of Dell AI Factory and the idea of bringing AI on-premise to the edge, closer to the enterprise itself. And from an infrastructure perspective, you’ve got PowerRack, the pitch there being you go to live customer workloads from kind of the box to deployed in six hours and change. For a partner who’s trying to sell into the mid-market or the enterprise, you know, how does that kind of speed of value fundamentally change the conversation that they’re having with their customer, whether that’s the CEO, CIO, or the business leader? Alan Ashby: Yeah, I don’t think there’s been a more exciting time for our partners with what the market’s putting out there for us. You know, when we look at, you know, you mentioned the mid-market space, I actually think there’s a massive opportunity for partners to go support those customers, especially with some of the agentic workflow processes that we announced today with some of the platforms. You know, it may not be those 100 million, 200 million dollar opportunities, but almost every single small business and medium business, you know, you start with maybe a product like the Dell Pro Max GB10, and you start there and you start building out that agentic workflows, you know, building out automated dashboards with AI assistance built into it. You know, a lot of great things that a partner could go deliver that everybody can see value in. Sometimes in that mid-market space and small business space, it’s easier to get started on some of these agentic flows because they don’t have data that’s kind of messy. They don’t have legacy debt from a data center infrastructure perspective. And then from a larger enterprise or commercial customer, you know, we have seen a number of very good successes across our partner ecosystem with delivering services and value to our customer sets collectively, you know, to help customers really try to find value through their AI journeys. Understanding and identifying key use cases or workloads that they think they can get value out of it, understanding the infrastructure, the architecture that’s designing it right. You know, early days, you know, we had a lot of times where, you know, customers and partners struggle with just, you know, how do we deploy this thing because power and cooling needs are maybe bigger than what I was expecting and, you know, managing through that challenge. So partners have a phenomenal opportunity, I think, to help provide that value to our customers collectively together. You know, every one of our partners, they bring a unique skill set and differentiators on their own to the marketplace and help support those customers to that kind of their own journeys together. Robert Dutt: What is that infrastructure pitch down to that, especially that mid-market or even SMB customer? In the past, there was interest in doing it, I think often they would end up, if they were going to do it, doing it on public cloud, because the alternative was a big old infrastructure solution that doesn’t really fit them, unless maybe a partner can bring it on and kind of do a multi-tenant kind of situation there. But where are we at in terms of having right-fit infrastructure to make that work? Alan Ashby: Yeah, I think, you know, even the stuff that we announced today on stage, you know, products we announced at GTC, I think really helped kind of build out that situation and story for a small customer to be able to scale. You think about going back to the Dell Pro Max GB10, you know, you can take that device and you can, you know, run a small business basically off that depending on the concurrent users and be able to move up from that to some of our Pro workstations all the way up to the GB300. You know, we can run a model as big as a trillion parameters, it’s kind of crazy what you can do on a desktop, you know, and that doesn’t require any unique power requirements, I can plug that into a normal outlet. And then I could scale into, you know, actual infrastructure depending on the size of what the need is. And that’s where I think there’s a lot of opportunity for partners to think through, you know, how do they help customers scale through that. And so we talked a lot today at the show around, you know, the economics of everything. And in the long term, it’s going to be very challenging economically to run things in a public cloud. Yeah, on-prem is going to be a massive opportunity. And the fact that Michael today even talked about things about running foundation models and open source models on-prem, you know, your data is fully secure, you manage it all yourself. You know, it’s a lot easier to think about how I actually, you know, pull and extract value out of those different solutions. Robert Dutt: Well, and that’s the pitch right for the desk-side agentic AI solution is the idea, I think that the number was 87% reduction in token cost and in terms of comparing the cost of acquiring, deploying, running the solution on-prem. I think the break-even was three months or something like that against running the same kind of solution in public cloud. Alan Ashby: Yeah, I think that’s where customers are challenged today is, you know, you can have a lot of different, you know, foundational models and, you know, some of the agentic tools that are out there today that are subscription-based, cloud-based. And you can run through usage real fast without getting a lot of value out of it. When you start thinking about deploying stuff on-prem, you know, you know exactly what your output per day could be, and you can scale accordingly. Robert Dutt: How does that change how a partner approaches both selling and thinking about running, maintaining that infrastructure as opposed to something that’s all outsourced to the cloud and has those significant question marks of cost attached? Alan Ashby: I think there’s a lot of stuff we’re still figuring out, to be honest. You know, I think a lot of partners are trying to understand that and every customer is going to be a little bit in a different spot in their journey. And I think, you know, that’s where some of our partner ecosystems have tremendous value to help meet them where they are and help them take that first or second step forward to try to be able to deliver overall value to the company. Robert Dutt: Do you see that kind of time to value, that reduction in overall costs being something that can get unstuck some of those classic cases of AI workloads that are getting put into prototype, into test phase, but never quite see the light of day, partially perhaps because of that economic headwind that you discover when you start trying to scale these things? Alan Ashby: I think there’s that. I also think sometimes some customers probably try to maybe bite off more than they can chew at one time. And I think when we start thinking about these AI use cases, sometimes we’ll talk with some customers and partners helping them through them. They have, you know, two, three dozen things they want to try to accomplish out of one solution or one opportunity. It’s how do we narrow that down a little bit to where we actually extract value out of that particular use case that you’re trying to drive value with. And we’ve seen some really great success with some of our partners being able to help, you know, negotiate and navigate partner customers through that journey. You know, I think it takes a skill set that’s unique, and we’re starting to see more and more of our partners, you know, invest in and put attention to building out dedicated AI practice teams, helping them understand the skill set. The market’s moving incredibly fast, unlike ever before. And so, you know, it takes somebody who has a real passionate interest and a lot of curiosity to understand how these things all work together and all the pieces fit together and how do you take advantage of everything as you go forward. Robert Dutt: How do you see the co-delivery model evolving over time as you say, things are moving fast. When it comes to deploying AI factories, I think we heard earlier that, you know, the model is sort of Dell handling deployment and management of the overall environment while partners are being asked to focus on the application, the vertical, those kinds of things. How do you see the role of the channel, I guess, especially professional services and advisory-type partners evolving? Alan Ashby: Yeah, I think that to your point, I think it’s evolving. And I think that, you know, there’s a lot of opportunities here from an educational services perspective, consulting services perspective, services for our partners, you know, very few customers, especially when you think about, you know, a traditional commercial customer, mid-market customer, know exactly what to do and what to do next. You know, they might have started a pilot out in the public cloud. And then they’re trying to figure out where to go from here. And like, there’s a lot of service opportunity for our partners there. When it comes from, you know, other deployment services, I think there’s opportunities there for our partners, you know, depending on the solutions. When you look at post-delivery of the product into the customer, I think that there’s even more opportunity for partners of how, once things are deployed and installed, what’s next? And how do you help customers really extract value out of the infrastructure they spent a lot of money on, and have pretty high expectations of the ROI and the benefits they get out of it? I think there’s a massive opportunity for partners to help those customers through that journey. I think there’s a big opportunity for partners to take a product like our GB10, GP300 products and say, how do I go show you how to build an agentic workflow on those systems that can deliver value for your customers? You know, those are all going to be partner-delivered opportunities. Robert Dutt: All right. It sounds like even though it’s relatively early in the process, we are at the point where some of those next steps are becoming clear then. Alan Ashby: Yeah, I would say so. I mean, the question is, how fast do things change? You know, and it’s one of those things like I look at the agentic opportunities, probably one of the biggest things that can bring value for our partners. We’re really looking for a partner ecosystem that has the skill sets to deliver those for customers. Robert Dutt: Speaking of things changing, moving from traditional virtualization workloads to AI is a pretty big shift in how you think about structure, infrastructure, especially around storage, IO, networking, GPUs, needless to say. How’s the pre-sales team helping partners to figure out what the right size is for these solutions, both for current state and future state, so that you’re not either over-provisioning or under-provisioning customers? Alan Ashby: That’s a great question, actually. I mean, we’ve done a lot of things internally at Dell to get better ourselves and have the right talent and resources to support the partner ecosystem. You know, we have teams that can help support partners, both from a sizing, scoping of the opportunity, all the way down to configuring and deploying that solution if the partner needs that help. We’re also trying to help up-level our partners to be able to do it on their own. It’s kind of self-service and building the tools to help them through that motion. A couple of years ago, we started launching AI workshops, the different skill sets to help up-level and help that motion for a lot of our partners. The partners that have participated in those have seen a lot more success than those that didn’t. We do those multiple times a quarter and encourage partners to participate through those motions. We have an AI workshop multiple times a quarter in North America, and we go through every step of the phase from how do you have a conversation with a customer all the way through, how do you narrow down use cases, to all the way to how do you actually develop, design, and build the systems for what you need. Robert Dutt: Along those same lines, but a little bit more customer-facing and kind of looking at the economics of it, AI projects carry a lot of financial and technical risk for CIOs. What resources are there, whether it’s proof of concept, technical validation, or specialty engineering teams that partners can tap in to kind of prove the math and de-risk a solution such as AI Factory for customers? Alan Ashby: Yeah, there’s a couple of them actually, and I encourage all partners to kind of look at the options. We have at Dell, we have what we call our Customer Solution Centers, and those Customer Solution Centers have the ability to be able to work with a pre-sales specialist, a pre-sales expert on various different solutions. We have data centers where partners can take advantage of and leverage to be able to do proof of concept for customers, proof of value with those folks, and that can vary from any size of the architecture, from small all the way up to very large, and help support them through that. Also encourage partners to reach out to their Dell teams and how do you take advantage of those CSC resources. It’s a very simple process, but work through Dell teams. Same thing would be to go spend time with us in our labs. We have a great lab up in the Hopkinton area where AI factories are manufactured and built, and love to take partners through that facility to be able to see what’s possible there. We have an AI lab down in Austin to help them through that as well. So there’s a lot of opportunities. I would say the other one is we have a lot of partners also building out their own capabilities, their own labs, and we’ve helped support them through that as well. I think that they’re providing some amazing value to their customers, being able to do their own POCs and demonstrations and whatever it might be to help support that customer throughout the process. Robert Dutt: AI obviously gets the big headlines because it’s the 2020s as it is. But customers still have traditional enterprise apps and aging infrastructure that is going to need a refresh. I guess, how does your team handle guiding partners around going after the new shiny thing, the big opportunity that’s out there versus the kind of day-to-day operational challenge of standard data center modernization and refresh? Alan Ashby: Yeah, it’s hard when they have two of these really big shiny objects out there that have a lot of potential value for customers, both with AI but also just traditional data center modernization. We’ve seen a really great success over the last year of helping customers, I would say, clean up the data center, think through what they’ve got today in there and how to modernize it and right-size everything. When you look at some of the things that we’ll announce here at the show, it’s pretty exciting, honestly. There’s some great announcements we had in the Day 1 keynote, Day 2 keynote will be just as exciting, more from an infrastructure perspective of things. I’m really excited what we’re doing just with traditional servers and we’ve seen a lot of great success by our partner ecosystem over the last several quarters with them going in and helping customers look at consolidation of those environments. Our 18G server platforms, which we’ll announce, can consolidate 13 legacy servers into one. That’s kind of crazy math when you think about that. It’s easy now to think about how do I help customers free up space and modernize things that makes it so AI is possible in their own data centers; consolidating racks in the servers is kind of a crazy concept. Then you think of how we’re looking at modernizing just traditional architecture with HCI architecture and the disaggregated architecture providing real value for customers with right-sizing, both compute capacity and storage capacity to be able to extract as much value as possible across the ecosystem of the portfolio. Robert Dutt: Along those lines, any other, I guess hidden opportunities for partners, things that maybe don’t get the big attention of the desk-side AI or PowerRack or some of those things, but still represent—sort of along the lines of the data center example you just gave—opportunities that are worth pursuing, that are worth looking at, but maybe not quite the highest profile? Alan Ashby: I mean, 100%. It’s easy to get excited with what we’re doing in AI. The market’s obviously kind of dictating a lot of that, but there’s a lot of opportunity, a lot of money to be made for our partners to be able to focus on classical data center architecture. We’ve got some great solutions. Our Dell Private Cloud is one that’s extremely exciting for partners, the opportunity to be able to help those customers through that process and think through that. I also am extremely excited with what we’re doing around the security front with our data protection portfolio, our PowerProtect product lines. Security is one that I think in the age of AI, we need to think through security differently. There’s some additional opportunities for partners to think about how do they provide those services, those extra value pieces to help make sure all of these customers are ready for what could be an AI security threat. Robert Dutt: I assume there’s a better together story to be told there between the hardware, the infrastructure, and the cyber protection. Alan Ashby: 100%. That’s one of the biggest values that we have at Dell. There’s inherent value between the products themselves being able to support each other differently, but also they have the large Dell value prop with the Dell supply chain, our security chain, how we build products. Everything provides value across the entire portfolio. Robert Dutt: What’s the single biggest misconception you see customers have around the idea of deploying on-prem AI in particular? Alan Ashby: That’s interesting. The big one I would say is where do I get started and how big do I need to get started? I think that we saw early days, a lot of customers thought initially you had to just get in line for supply on large GPU systems when you could run a lot of workloads, really interesting and exciting AI workloads on a server with a PCIe-based GPU, and now even more so with some of the other platforms with workstations or GB300, GB10. The biggest misconception is just thinking about how big I have to get started. I would encourage almost every executive, every leader of every company to start thinking differently about you probably should have an AI PC in your office and on your desk. You should have one of our, I always call it an AI supercomputer on your desk with the GB10. It’s about who’s going to be the most curious. There’s nothing that limits you from capabilities with what the models can do today. We really just need people to start using and playing and practicing and helping support the overall value to the customers and to our partners. Robert Dutt: It’s an interesting concept that a computer with a better NPU or GPU on board can unlock that curiosity towards AI and ultimately drag to infrastructure refresh down the road, I think. Alan Ashby: I think the key thing is you don’t have to be a coder. You don’t have to be a developer. Really today, anybody could be a developer. You could build your own application if you wanted to. You can build your own dashboards if you wanted to. You can run it 100% on-prem if you wanted to. You can use a coding assistant to help you manage through that. All you have to do is understand how to talk to it. How do you manage it like an individual and how do you manage it like an agent? It’s a secondary employee that helps you basically give you superpowers. Robert Dutt: If an MSP wants to get serious about the data center and AI with Dell, what’s the first step if they’re already in terms of certification, competency, that kind of thing that they should be looking at? Alan Ashby: Yeah, again, the portfolio is changing very quickly. I would say that table stakes obviously is having a good understanding of our compute platforms with what we’ve got put together with NVIDIA. That’d probably be step one. Step two would be thinking about what you can provide from a storage perspective and how you take advantage of both PowerScale and ObjectScale and all the way up through our lightning file systems, having good understanding how you can deploy that for your customers at scale. Then the other one would be how do you work closely with the Dell teams? That’s one of the things that is always encouraging for partners to think through is Dell has this incredibly large sales force that can help give them scale, give them opportunity. How do you share as a partner? How do you share your value back to the Dell teams? Make sure that they understand where you can be supportive of their customer experience. How do you work collaboratively with the Dell teams across the ecosystem? So forth. Tons of opportunity. We’re always looking for partners that have the right skill sets and the right capabilities. Our Dell teams want to bring them into customer accounts because we need their support. We need their help. Robert Dutt: Acknowledging this might be a wide range, what are some of those common threads that make for a good partner for you in terms of skill sets, areas of focus, that kind of thing? Alan Ashby: Yeah, I think it’s evolving over time. Today, I look at partners that have unique skill sets are incredibly important. Partners that have a competency across our portfolio. Table stakes of having competencies around our compute platform, our storage platforms, but then thinking even deeper, how do you have competency around some of our more isolated platforms like what we do in our unstructured storage space with PowerScale and ObjectScale and access scale that we announced today? Same thing with our data protection portfolio, our cyber resilience platforms, our SRP platforms, like partners that have deep technical specialty expertise in those areas, they’re always going to be needed and valued in our partner ecosystem. AI is one other area to differentiate a partner from, but there’s a lot of those opportunities. Even today with our Dell Private Cloud, I always tell partners that whenever you see a pivot change in our portfolio, like we did when we launched the Dell Private Cloud, this is an opportunity to differentiate yourself as a partner from other partners. To jump in early and be able to build the skill sets that our Dell team is looking for out of a partner to support their customers. Our Dell teams are always looking for those partners that can help lead the charge, especially from a technical perspective with the customers to validate the solution themselves to be able to provide that extensive value to the customer themselves. Robert Dutt: All right. Last one for me, without naming any names or with naming names, should you feel like doing so? What’s the most creative, unexpected, surprising use case for a Dell AI factory that you’ve seen a customer deploy thus far? Alan Ashby: Wow, that’s a hard one. I mean, there’s a lot of really interesting ones I’ve seen. I mean, early days, some of the ones I thought was some of the most exciting stuff that we did with Amarillo County in Texas. It’s a county that there’s a lot of languages natively spoken there and the community there needed to provide basically language services to a very large broad-based set of individuals in the community in their native tongue. And the Dell team worked closely with those folks to make that happen. All the way down there to where we got a number of partners helping small entities, both commercial and public entities, really think about how they can drive agentic workflows and some of the things that are dealing around that with dashboarding. Chat, agents, obviously is an easy one. And then helping customers through kind of how do you do code assist models. Those are probably the really big ones that we see from a use case perspective from our partners. Robert Dutt: No shortage of opportunities. Alan Ashby: Oh my gosh, it’s unbelievable how many there are today. Robert Dutt: Thank you for taking the time. Alan Ashby: Absolutely. This is great. Thank you. Robert Dutt: There you have it. Alan Ashby from Dell. I’d like to thank Alan for his time, carving out a few minutes for me amidst the chaos of day one here at DTW. My big takeaway from that conversation is that you don’t have to be deploying a multimillion dollar PowerRack system to get into the AI game with Dell right now. Between the new desktop workstations running localized agentic workflows and the massive 13 to one server consolidation plays they’re seeing in the traditional data center, there’s a very practical immediate path towards revenue here for partners in the mid market. I’d like to thank you as always for listening to the show. If you’re enjoying our coverage from Dell Technologies World, please do take a second and follow or subscribe in the podcast app of your choice. You can find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, wherever you get your audio. And if you have a moment to leave a rating or review, always hugely appreciated. Until next time, I’m Robert Dutt for channelbuzz.ca and I’ll see you in the channel.
Pre-show: Casey requests an app from Marco Roon Nugs
PCIe 6.0: La nuova frontiera della velocità nei sistemi di trasmissione dati
It's another glorious bounty of listener questions for the monthly Q&A, touching on a bunch of subjects like modern HDMI switchers, enormous turn-of-the-century TVs, MikroTik network gear, Pluribus, why the PCIe retaining clip exists (and how to defeat it), Unix on the desktop, our wishlist ESP32 projects, and the exact moment when cell phones became widespread -- and whether phone numbers are increasingly useless, at least in the US. Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod
The RAM-apocolypse continues of course, with hints of it hitting general manufacturers, and delay of gaming systems and even spinning harddrives. At least Micron is making some PCIe 6 drives you cannot have. Also, since we are sometimes audio geeks as well as PC, we talk about some bananas. Seriously. You'll just have to listen to get the scoop on bad Chrome extensions, bad Copilot, and bad password managers. Until then, enjoy Unread Tournament 2004!Timestamps:0:00 Intro01:15 Patreon03:22 Food with Josh05:20 Acer and ASUS caught up HEVC patent dispute07:15 Intel's new annual GPU cadence09:00 Micron is making PCI-E 6.0 SSDs that you can't have11:10 WD CEO says storage is already sold out for 202614:07 Warning - many consumer electronics companies will fail this year22:25 Sony may push PS6 launch as far as 202922:55 US reportedly removes two Chinese memory companies from banned list25:54 RTX 5090 LIGHTNING is 5090 USD (list price, anyhow)29:35 Audio dragged through the mud - and a banana34:34 (In)Security Corner45:07 Gaming Quick Hits50:35 Jeremy reviews 25 USD speakers from Cyber Acoustics56:53 Picks of the Week1:08:51 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Earlier this week, Apple today a "special Apple Experience" for the media in New York, London, and Shanghai, taking place on March 4, 2026 at 9:00am ET. It is notable that Apple is specifically using the word "experience," rather than "event." Unlike a full live-streamed event from Apple Park, the March 4 event in other cities is likely to be smaller in scale.The launch of several new Apple products is believed to be imminent. We're most likely to see the announcement of the iPhone 17e, a spec-bumped successor to the iPhone 16e, with rumored upgrades including an A19 chip, MagSafe, and Apple's C1X and N1 wireless chips. The device will apparently have a notch despite earlier rumors mentioning a Dynamic Island, and pricing will continue to start at $599 in the United States.The all-new low-cost MacBook is likely to arrive, featuring the A18 Pro chip, a 12.9-inch display, and a selection of fun color options. The MacBook Pro is also expected to receive the M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, and PCIe 5.0 support for faster SSD speeds.Additionally, the iPad Air is due a bump up to the M4 chip, while the entry-level iPad is expected to get the A18 chip with Apple Intelligence support.A refreshed MacBook Air, Mac Studio, and Studio Display are also possibilities, along with a new Apple TV and HomePod mini. The event could could include a demo of immersive Formula 1 content on the Apple Vision Pro, too.We also discuss iOS 26.4, which is now available in beta. The update includes a new Playlist Playground feature that lets users create a playlist with a text-based prompt, refinements to Apple Music's design, videos in Apple Podcasts, end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for RCS messages, and more.Ready to tackle bigger problems? Get started with Claude today at — https://www.Claude.ai/mac
Make a Logo on Fiverr If you're upgrading your setup in 2026—whether it's for content creation, streaming, or just building a smarter workspace—this gear haul hits all the right notes. From blazing-fast storage to a surprisingly versatile charging hub, these are the tools that stood out in real-world use and deserve a spot on your radar. Kingston Fury G5 SSD: PCIe 5 Speed Enters the Chat Starting strong, the Kingston Fury G5 SSD delivers next-gen PCIe 5.0 performance, pushing speeds up to a theoretical 14,000 MB/s. Even when running in a PCIe 4.0 system, it still delivers a noticeable performance bump, especially in heavy workloads like video editing and large file transfers. Installation is straightforward—drop it into your NVMe slot, secure it, and you're off. The real benefit shows up in sustained speeds and reduced bottlenecks, making it a solid upgrade for creators who need reliability and speed. Qwiizlab TB5 NVMe Enclosure: Portable Powerhouse Pair that SSD with the Qwiizlab TB5 NVMe enclosure and you've got a portable storage solution that doesn't slow you down. With Thunderbolt 5 support and up to 80Gbps bandwidth, this enclosure is built for speed across multiple systems. It's fanless, aluminum-built for heat dissipation, and designed for creators who jump between machines. Bring your own NVMe, snap it in, and you've got a flexible, high-speed external drive that works across Mac, PC, and USB-C environments. Ivanky FusionDock Pro 3: Desktop Command Center The Ivanky FusionDock Pro 3 is a Thunderbolt 5 docking station that turns your desk into a connectivity hub. With 11 ports, including 2.5Gb Ethernet, multiple USB-A and USB-C connections, and up to 140W power delivery, it's built to handle everything from laptops to full production rigs. It's especially useful for anyone juggling multiple devices—plug in once and everything connects. No HDMI here, but USB-C display support keeps things modern and flexible. Joyroom Podix 140W Charger: The Star of the Show The highlight of this haul is the Joyroom Podix 140W charger. This compact GaN charger packs serious functionality into a small cube design. It features retractable USB-C cables, multiple ports, and a smart display that shows real-time power distribution across devices. Whether you're charging a laptop, phone, tablet, or accessories, it dynamically balances up to 140W total output. What really sets it apart is usability—those retractable cables reduce clutter, and the display gives you instant feedback on what's drawing power. It's ideal for desks, studios, or even travel setups where you want everything powered without a mess of cables. *Joyroom sponsored this post Get the Charger here Lumary Rope Light: Smart Lighting with Personality For ambiance, the Lumary Rope Light brings customizable RGB IC lighting into your space. With segment-based color control, app integration, and voice assistant compatibility, it's more than just a light strip. You can design patterns, sync with music, or set scenes for different moods. The diffused rope design keeps the light looking smooth rather than dotted, making it perfect for studio backdrops or creative spaces. Dingbox D2: Flexible Android TV Box The Dingbox D2 runs Android 12 and offers a customizable TV experience with features like app sideloading, Wi-Fi 6, and extended recording capabilities. It supports up to 6K output and includes generous storage and RAM for smooth performance. While the security patch is dated, the flexibility makes it appealing for developers or users who want more control than typical streaming boxes allow. Logitech G522 Lightspeed Headset: Gaming Meets Broadcast Audio The Logitech G522 Lightspeed headset blends gaming performance with broadcast-style audio controls. With tri-connectivity (Lightspeed wireless, Bluetooth, USB), RGB lighting, and up to 60 hours of battery life, it's built for long sessions. The inclusion of Blue VO!CE tech allows for deep microphone tuning—EQ, noise reduction, compression—all customizable through Logitech's software. It's a strong option for gamers who also stream or record content. XVive U35 Wireless Microphone System: Cut the Cord Rounding out the haul is the XVive U35 wireless microphone system. Operating on 5.8GHz, it avoids the crowded 2.4GHz spectrum and provides stable wireless audio for dynamic microphones. Setup is simple—plug transmitter and receiver into your mic and mixer, and you're good to go. It's ideal for live performances, studio movement, or any situation where cables get in the way. The range and reliability make it a practical upgrade for musicians and presenters alike. Check out the Geekazine Merch, including "I AM AI " T-Shirt. Thanks for reading! Don't forget to subscribe to Geekazine: RSS Feed - YouTubeTwitter - Facebook Tip Me via Paypal.me Send a Tip via Venmo RSS Bandwidth by Cachefly Get a 14 Day Trial Be a Patreon: Part of the Sconnie Geek Nation! Reviews: Geekazine gets products in to review. Opinions are of Geekazine.com. Sponsored content will be labeled as such. Read all policies on the Geekazine review page. Reviews: Geekazine is also an affiliate of Amazon Last Updated on April 14, 2026 4:10 pm by Jeffrey PowersThe post New Gear Haul for 2026 Featuring the Joyroom Podix appeared first on Geekazine.
Tony: -Carbonation Station: Georgia Peach Arizona Energy -Snapmaker U1 early Impressions -Incoming Apple Event: https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/apples-next-event-is-set-for-march-4-145931890.html -Update on the Moderna Flu Shot Rejection: https://arstechnica.com/health/2026/02/trump-official-overruled-fda-scientists-to-reject-modernas-flu-shot/ Jarron: -Rivian reported a profit! https://tech.slashdot.org/story/26/02/15/2333200/rivians-stock-spikes-27-after-reporting-144-million-profit-in-2025?utm_source=rss0.9mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed -Micron produces PCIe 6.0 SSD: https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/02/17/1710225/microns-pcie-60-ssd-hits-mass-production-at-28-gbs?utm_source=rss0.9mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed -Western Digital is out of hard drives: https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/26/02/16/188251/western-digital-is-sold-out-of-hard-drives-for-2026?utm_source=rss0.9mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed -End-to-end encrypted RCS coming to iPhones: https://www.theverge.com/tech/879792/apple-iphone-android-rcs-messages-end-to-end-encrypted Owen: -Robot. Boxing. Need I say more. https://restofworld.org/2026/chinese-robot-boxing-unitree-rek/ -This tracks. https://www.theverge.com/report/879327/eva-ai-cafe-dating-ai-companions Lando: -Elon Musk wants to move the cloud to space! https://apnews.com/article/elon-musk-orbital-ai-data-centers-xai-spacex-92bc8ad95593bf3b5b801ddf36427194 -New law to prevent electronic price gouging. https://gizmodo.com/dems-want-to-ban-surveillance-pricing-at-big-grocery-stores-2000722182
Outlook’s autodiscover feature is leaking data again, our thoughts on the cycle of cloud and on-prem (centralised and local computing), and why you probably shouldn’t use NMVe to SATA adapters. Plugs Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with early episodes sometimes ZFS in Production: Real-World Deployment Patterns and Pitfalls Modern VDI on Proxmox: ZFS Reliability and GPU Acceleration at Lower Cost News/discussion Why has Microsoft been routing example.com traffic to a company in Japan? Free consulting We were asked about SATA to PCIe adapters. See our contact page for ways to get in touch.
Outlook’s autodiscover feature is leaking data again, our thoughts on the cycle of cloud and on-prem (centralised and local computing), and why you probably shouldn’t use NMVe to SATA adapters. Plugs ZFS in Production: Real-World Deployment Patterns and Pitfalls Modern VDI on Proxmox: ZFS Reliability and GPU Acceleration at Lower Cost News/discussion Why has Microsoft been routing example.com traffic to a company in Japan? Free consulting We were asked about SATA to PCIe adapters. See our contact page for ways to get in touch.
In this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's cybersecurity news, including: There's a CVSS 10/10 remote code exec in the React javascript server. JS server? U wot mate? China is out popping shells with it Linux adds support for PCIe bus encryption Amnesty International says Intellexa can just TeamViewer into its customers' surveillance systems …and a Belgian murder suspect complains that GrapheneOS's duress wipe feature failed him? This week's episode is sponsored by Kroll Cyber. Simon Onyons is Managing Director at Kroll's Cyber and Data Resilience arm, and he discusses a problem near to many of our hearts. Just how do you explain cyber risk to the board? This episode is also available on Youtube. Show notes Risky Bulletin: APTs go after the React2Shell vulnerability within hours - Risky Business Media Guillermo Rauch on X: "React2Shell" / X React2Shell-CVE-2025-55182-original-poc/README.md at main · lachlan2k/React2Shell-CVE-2025-55182-original-poc · GitHub Hydrogen: Shopify's headless commerce framework Researchers track dozens of organizations affected by React2Shell compromises tied to China's MSS | The Record from Recorded Future News Unveiling WARP PANDA: A New Sophisticated China-Nexus Adversary Three hacking groups, two vulnerabilities and all eyes on China | The Record from Recorded Future News Risky Bulletin: Linux adds PCIe encryption to help secure cloud servers Sean Plankey nomination to lead CISA appears to be over after Thursday vote | CyberScoop
Linux adds PCIe encryption to help secure cloud servers, Europol cracks down on Violence-as-a-Service providers, the International Criminal Court prepares for cyber-enabled genocide, and Cambodia busts a warehouse full of SMS blasters. Show notes Risky Bulletin: Linux adds PCIe encryption to help secure cloud servers
This week we talk about KDE wanting to push Plasma 6.8 into Wayland only territory. We also look at the rough edges that will probably still poke users and how long X11 might hang on before it finally gets kicked out. Venn checked out the ZimaBlade 7700 DIY NAS kit with its swappable RAM and actual PCIe slot. There is a quick bit on Linux Kernel 6.18 and its updates for gaming storage and hardware. And for dessert the 1 GB Raspberry Pi 5 shows up as the cheaper option right as RAM prices decide to climb again.Live recordings plus Video: https://www.patreon.com/lwdw Come say hi in Discord! https://discord.gg/uQVckr5gEZTimestamps00:00 Intro03:38 Linus visits Linus Tech Tips07:55 Exploding PC power supply adventure 18:18 KDE is going full-Wayland 26:51 ZimaBlade 7700 DIY NAS33:24 Linux kernel 6.1839:07 New 1GB RasPi 5 and price increases Show Links KDE Wayland announcement:https://blogs.kde.org/2025/11/26/going-all-in-on-a-wayland-future/ZimaBlade 7700 DIY NAS kit:https://interfacinglinux.com/2025/12/01/zimablade-7700-diy-nas-kit/Linux Kernel 6.18 overview:https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/11/linux-kernel-6-18-new-features1 GB Raspberry Pi 5 announcement:https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/1gb-raspberry-pi-5-now-available-at-45-and-memory-driven-price-rises/
Podcast ONE: 28 de noviembre de 2025 Descubre cómo la nueva herramienta de compras en ChatGPT puede revolucionar tus compras en línea, los detalles de los procesadores Intel Panther Lake y reflexiones sobre IA en el último episodio de noviembre de OneDigital. ¡No te pierdas este análisis tecnológico! #one_digital #onedigital #HerramientasDeCompra #IntelPantherLake #InteligenciaArtificial #Xochimilco #Tecnología #ViernesNegro2025 #PodcastOneDigital #ResumenOneDigital_28Noviembre2025 Escucha aquí el Podcast ONE: 28 de noviembre de 2025 Resumen del podcast One Digital – 28 de noviembre de 2025 Transmisión en vivo desde São Paulo, Brasil y Ciudad de México. Conducción de Vincent Quezada y Pablo Berruecos. Última emisión de noviembre centrada en herramientas de compras, procesadores Intel y reflexiones sobre inteligencia artificial. Herramienta de investigación de compras en ChatGPT ¿Qué es y cuándo se lanzó? OpenAI presentó una herramienta de investigación de compras integrada en ChatGPT el 24 de noviembre de 2025. Está diseñada para ayudar en búsquedas durante períodos de ofertas masivas como el viernes negro de noviembre. Capacidades principales La herramienta busca precios actualizados en múltiples tiendas, verifica disponibilidad de productos, recopila opiniones de usuarios y proporciona especificaciones técnicas. Según OpenAI, reduce el tiempo de búsqueda comparado con hacerlo manualmente, aunque esta cifra no ha sido validada por terceros independientes. Está disponible para todos los usuarios de Chat GPT, tanto planes gratuitos como de pago, con acceso ilimitado durante la temporada navideña. Cómo usarla: proceso en cinco pasos Paso Acción 1 Inicia sesión en ChatGPT y escribe una pregunta sobre compras específica 2 Define criterios con precisión: presupuesto exacto, características técnicas, marca, opciones de envío 3 Analiza las recomendaciones generadas con comparativas de precios y características 4 Refina los resultados utilizando comandos como “más como este” o “no me interesa” 5 Verifica disponibilidad y precio final en la tienda antes de comprar Consultas de ejemplo efectivas Ejemplo 1 – Teléfono inteligente: “Quiero un teléfono inteligente con cámara de calidad profesional, batería de larga duración y menos de 8,000 pesos. Muéstrame las mejores ofertas del viernes negro de 2025 en México.” Ejemplo 2 – Computadora portátil: “Necesito una computadora portátil para diseño gráfico y juegos profesionales con menos de 15,000 pesos. Compara las mejores opciones del viernes negro de 2025.” Ejemplo 3 – Computadora con especificaciones de transmisión en vivo: “Busco una computadora portátil para transmisiones en vivo con OBS, presupuesto máximo de 20,000 pesos, con opciones de pago en cuotas sin intereses en México. Prioriza procesador Ryzen AI sobre Snapdragon X.” Ventajas documentadas Reduce tiempo de búsqueda manualmente Personaliza recomendaciones según presupuesto y necesidades Genera comparativas lado a lado de características y precios Rastrea ofertas en tiempo real durante períodos de promoción No compartir datos con comercios o vendedores Accesible desde cualquier plan de Chat GPT, incluyendo el gratuito Limitaciones importantes No realiza la compra directa; debes completarla en la tienda recomendada No muestra ofertas exclusivas de membresías especiales como Amazon Prime Precisión variable en categorías muy especializadas La disponibilidad regional limita opciones en algunos países Los precios y disponibilidad pueden cambiar; debe verificarse en la tienda La información puede no estar actualizada en tiempo real Errores comunes a evitar Error Consecuencia Cómo evitarlo No verificar disponibilidad Producto agotado al comprar Revisa stock y precio en la tienda oficial antes de confirmar Confiar en una sola fuente Perder mejores ofertas Compara con Google Shopping, Ideal, Amazon Presupuesto impreciso Sorpresas en costo final Especifica “máximo 5,000 pesos incluyendo envío e impuestos” Ignorar opiniones de usuarios Comprar producto con defectos Solicita “resumen de reseñas recientes” en tu consulta No usar filtros de refinamiento Resultados imprecisos Usa “más como este” o “no me interesa” iterativamente Herramientas alternativas similares Perplexity: Enfocada en búsqueda actualizada; funciona bien para investigación de compras, especialmente versión Plus Google Gemini: Integración con ecosistema Google; menos especializada en compras pero versátil Microsoft Copilot: Búsqueda integrada; acceso a datos en tiempo real You.com: Combinación de búsqueda de tradición actualizada con análisis de inteligencia artificial Diferencia entre procesadores: Snapdragon X versus Ryzen AI Característica Snapdragon X Ryzen AI Computadora gamer tradicional Enfoque principal Eficiencia energética Rendimiento con inteligencia artificial integrada Rendimiento gráfico puro Duración de batería Excelente Buena Limitada Productividad Adecuada Superior Superior Transmisión en vivo (OBS) Limitada sin aceleración Optimizada con aceleración Optimizada con aceleración Juegos modernos Con limitaciones Sin problemas Excelente Ideal para Uso general y portabilidad Profesionales creativos y productividad Jugadores y diseño intensivo Recomendación práctica para presupuesto limitado Para alguien con presupuesto de 20,000 pesos que necesite productividad y transmisión en vivo: Priorizar procesador Ryzen AI en lugar de Snapdragon X, ya que ofrece aceleración específica para transmisión en vivo. Buscar opciones de pago en cuotas sin intereses disponibles en Mercado Libre o Amazon México. Verificar garantía extendida antes de comprar. Opciones de financiamiento en Mercado Libre y Amazon México Durante el viernes negro 2025, tanto Mercado Libre como Amazon México ofrecen múltiples opciones de financiamiento. Es importante verificar directamente en cada tienda según tu tarjeta bancaria, ya que las condiciones varían. Algunos bancos mexicanos como BBVA, Banamex y American Express ofrecen promociones especiales en ambas plataformas. Criterios para seleccionar una tableta con garantía extendida Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra: permite ampliar garantía hasta 5 años con planes especiales Apple iPad Pro: opciones de Apple Care Plus para extender hasta 3 años Lenovo Tab P11 Pro: ampliación de garantía disponible hasta 3 años Samsung Galaxy Tab A9 Plus: opción económica con garantía estándar de 2 años Nota importante: Verifica que el vendedor sea autorizado y que la garantía sea válida en tu país antes de completar la compra. Procesadores Intel Core Ultra serie 3 (Panther Lake) en México Presentación y contexto Intel presentó los procesadores Core Ultra serie 3 con nombre código Panther Lake en un evento en Ciudad de México el martes anterior al podcast. Esta es la generación más reciente de procesadores móviles de Intel, enfocada en computadoras portátiles. Especificaciones técnicas principales Los procesadores Panther Lake utilizan la litografía de fabricación más avanzada de Intel disponible en la actualidad. La configuración incluye múltiples tipos de núcleos especializados: 4 núcleos de rendimiento para tareas exigentes 8 núcleos de eficiencia para uso general 4 núcleos de bajo consumo para tareas simples Esta estructura permite que el procesador asigne trabajo inteligentemente: escribir correos o navegar usa los núcleos de bajo consumo; actividades más pesadas usan núcleos de eficiencia; solo las tareas más demandantes activan los de rendimiento máximo. Mejoras de rendimiento y eficiencia Comparado con la generación anterior (Lunar Lake), Panther Lake ofrece aproximadamente 50% más rendimiento usando similar cantidad de energía. En comparación con procesadores Arrow Lake, consume aproximadamente 30% menos energía con rendimiento comparable. La unidad de procesamiento de inteligencia artificial integrada alcanza rendimiento de hasta 50 unidades de cómputo especializadas. La unidad gráfica integrada alcanza hasta 120 unidades de cómputo en su configuración máxima, permitiendo que usuarios de computadoras portátiles jueguen sin necesidad de tarjeta gráfica adicional. Capacidades de memoria A diferencia de la generación anterior, permite configuraciones flexibles: Hasta 96 gigabytes de memoria rápida de bajo consumo (LPDDR5X) Hasta 128 gigabytes de memoria estándar (DDR5) Velocidades de hasta 9,600 megatransferencias por segundo en configuración de bajo consumo Conectividad e interfaces Hasta cuatro puertos Thunderbolt 4 12 líneas PCIe (8 generación 4 y 4 generación 5) Procesador de imagen dedicado para tareas multimedia Motor de visualización mejorado Penetración en México Intel presentó datos indicando que México ha mostrado interés notable en computadoras con inteligencia artificial. La adopción de computadoras Intel Core Ultra ha crecido en la región comparado con otros mercados latinoamericanos. Disponibilidad esperada Los procesadores Panther Lake inicialmente estarán disponibles principalmente en computadoras portátiles. La disponibilidad comercial específica no fue anunciada durante la presentación. Casos de uso recomendados Creadores de contenido que editan video o realizan transmisiones en vivo Diseñadores gráficos y profesionales de multimedia Usuarios que desean jugar sin invertir en componentes adicionales costosos Profesionales que requieren portabilidad sin sacrificar rendimiento Desarrolladores que necesitan ejecutar modelos de inteligencia artificial localmente Coatlicue será una súper-computadora pública impulsada por el gobierno de México, que se planea construir en aproximadamente 24 meses. Tendrá alrededor de 15 000 GPUs, organizadas en miles de procesadores trabajando en paralelo. Eso equivale, en términos prácticos, a unas 375 000–400 000 computadoras convencionales operando simultáneamente. Alcanzará una potencia estimada de 314 petaflops (314 mil billones de operaciones por segundo).Procesará grandes volúmenes de datos para investigación científica, modelados ambientales, climatología, agua, energía, salud, entre otros. Experiencia en restaurante Baldío, Arca Tierra, Sonos y chinampas de Xochimilco Contexto general Después del evento de Intel, Pablo Berruecos fue invitado a visitar el restaurante Baldío y una operación de agricultura tradicional en Xochimilco, Ciudad de México. Esta fue una experiencia complementaria al programa, tocando temas de sustentabilidad más que de tecnología directa. Sobre Baldío Baldío es un restaurante ubicado en la zona de La Condesa, Ciudad de México, que cuenta con una estrella Michelin. Su filosofía se centra en no desperdiciar alimentos y utilizar ingredientes locales cultivados a menos de 15 kilómetros de distancia. En lugar de importar vegetales de Estados Unidos u otros estados que requieren procesos extensos de refrigeración y distribución, el restaurante obtiene sus productos directamente de huertos cercanos. Esto garantiza mayor frescura y reduce la huella ambiental. Sistema de cultivo en chinampas El restaurante forma parte de un ecosistema de agricultura urbana que utiliza chinampas, un método prehispánico de cultivo en zonas lacustres. Las chinampas son terrenos construidos manualmente con troncos y mallas que retienen tierra fértil sobre agua. El lodo del fondo de los lagos, rico en materia orgánica descompuesta, se extrae manualmente y se coloca sobre las chinampas, enriqueciendo constantemente el suelo para cultivo. Proyectos de recuperación Más allá de mantener chinampas en operación, existe un proyecto de recuperación de terrenos abandonados en Xochimilco. Cuando un suelo está desaprovechado por largo tiempo, pierde propiedades esenciales y puede tardar hasta 6 años en recuperar su capacidad productiva. Un problema particular es que algunas chinampas han sido convertidas en campos de fútbol, transformando tierra potencialmente productiva en espacios recreativos. Esto representa un uso ineficiente de terreno que podría alimentar a parte significativa de la población. Biodiversidad del ecosistema El área de Xochimilco alberga fauna acuática y migratoria, incluyendo garzas, pelícanos y patos. Los atardeceres y amaneceres en la zona ofrecen condiciones visuales particulares, con la bruma entre árboles creando colores notables. Una especie invasora problemática es una planta acuática que no es nativa de la zona y se reproduce rápidamente, bloqueando entrada de luz solar y afectando el ecosistema acuático local. Importancia cultural y potencial turístico Xochimilco representa una zona de importancia cultural e histórica para México. Con eventos deportivos internacionales cercanos, el área tiene potencial como destino turístico, lo que hace importante mantener y recuperar estas zonas en condiciones óptimas. Reflexiones sobre inteligencia artificial y productividad Problemas de confiabilidad en ChatGPT Durante la discusión, se identificaron problemas consistentes con la confiabilidad de ChatGPT para trabajo profesional. Aunque la herramienta puede generar contenido inicial útil, frecuentemente contiene errores que requieren revisión exhaustiva. Un problema técnico documentado fue el sobrecalentamiento de computadoras durante tareas aparentemente simples. Al solicitar formateo de texto de 4 a 5 párrafos con instrucciones específicas, el ventilador se activa agresivamente, el navegador se congela durante 10 a 15 minutos, y en casos extremos se ofrece la opción de cerrar la pestaña por consumo excesivo de recursos. Este comportamiento contradice la promesa de aumento de productividad, ya que el tiempo ahorrado en generación inicial se pierde en revisión, corrección de errores y espera durante congelamientos. Saturación de memoria Acumular múltiples conversaciones en ChatGPT causa saturación gradual de memoria disponible. El sistema periódicamente indica que no hay espacio suficiente, requiriendo limpieza manual. La recomendación práctica es usar el mismo chat para categorías específicas de tareas en lugar de crear decenas de chats para temas relacionados. Una vez completada una conversación, se debe eliminar para liberar espacio. Modelo comercial similar a servicios anteriores Se mencionó paralelismo con la evolución de Google Fotos. Este servicio inicialmente ofrecía almacenamiento gratuito ilimitado, generando dependencia masiva. Posteriormente, Google comenzó a cobrar por almacenamiento adicional, forzando a millones de usuarios a pagar. Existe preocupación de que un modelo similar pueda desarrollarse con Chat GPT y herramientas de inteligencia artificial similares, donde el acceso gratuito se restringe gradualmente y los precios de planes pagos aumentan. Consideraciones de seguridad y privacidad Se discutió la percepción de mayor riesgo al usar inteligencia artificial de empresas chinas versus occidentales. Sin embargo, se argumentó que los mismos riesgos de privacidad existen en todas las plataformas, independientemente de origen. Las protecciones de privacidad prometidas por cualquier empresa no son garantías absolutas. Los usuarios de cualquier plataforma corren riesgos similares en términos de recolección y uso de datos. Especialización de herramientas diferentes No existe una herramienta de inteligencia artificial universal óptima para todos los casos. Diferentes sistemas están diseñados para propósitos específicos: ChatGPT: principalmente conversación y resolución de dudas generales Claude: redacción literaria y textos extensos con coherencia narrativa Google Gemini: versatilidad con integración en ecosistema Google Herramientas especializadas: gráficos, estadísticas, fotografía Usuarios profesionales necesitan familiarizarse con múltiples plataformas en lugar de depender exclusivamente de una. Alternativas emergentes Más allá de ChatGPT, herramientas como Gemini de Google están realizando avances para competir en capacidades. También existen alternativas como LeChat y DeepSeek con diferentes enfoque según caso de uso. Formato y estructura del programa El podcast One Digital transmite cada viernes de 4 a 6 de la tarde en horario de México, completamente en vivo desde São Paulo, Brasil y Ciudad de México, con transmisión simultánea en Facebook, Instagram y YouTube. Los episodios combinan demostración práctica de herramientas, análisis técnico detallado y reflexiones sobre impacto de tecnología en vida cotidiana. El formato es accesible para audiencias de diferentes niveles de conocimiento técnico. También comentamos temas relevantes como el lanzamiento del nuevo reloj de ORIS y su Pop Up en La Roma. El lanzamiento gratuito de Affinity de Canva para diseñadores. Huawei Talent Summit 2025 y HONOR Talents Global Design Awards 2025. Conclusión del episodio El episodio del 28 de noviembre representa el último viernes de este mes, con tono reflexivo sobre los ciclos que cierran. El programa agradece a la audiencia que constituye la comunidad de lectores, jugadores y creadores que participan en la experiencia digital. La metáfora central es cerrar ventanas para abrir el porvenir, preparándose para escribir el siguiente capítulo. El compromiso es continuar explorando tecnología cada viernes, manteniendo la curiosidad como motor de avance. El cargo Podcast ONE: 28 de noviembre de 2025 apareció primero en OneDigital.
Fevzi Turkalp, the Gadget Detective, joins Eddie Nestor on BBC Radio London to discuss the latest tech news and reviews. This time; is Artificial Intelligence still in its infancy, and how much more advanced will it become? Plus after O2 announces price increases well above those stated when customers took out their contracts it could be time to look for another provider, the Gadget Detective explains how. First Gadget of the Week is the Kioxia Exceria Plus G2 Portable SSD. This portable USB external SSD is available in 500mb, 1tb, and 2tb models and features a faster buffer memory to avoid data transfer slowdowns. Scoring 4 out of 5, more details in the show. Second Gadget of the Week is Kioxia's Exceria Plus G4 memory. This NVMe M.2 if PCIE 5 enabled for faster speeds and is available in 1 and 2tb sizes, making it ideal for increasing the memory of your PC or compatible gaming console. More in the show. Third Gadget of the week is the Fuji Film Instax Mini LiPlay+. This hybrid instant camera and photo printer can even print photos sent wirelessly to it from a mobile phone. Featuring a selfie camera and built in screen it's ideal for those wanting to take and print photos on the go at parties and so forth. Scoring 3.5 out of 5, more details in the show. Fourth Gadget of the Week You can hear the Gadget Detective on BBC Radio London just after 1pm every other Thursday and can follow and contact him on X @gadgetdetective and BlueSky @GadgetDetective.com #Fevzi #Turkalp #Gadget #Detective #Tech #Technology #News #Reviews #Help #Advice #Eddie #Nestor #BBC #Radio #London #Stephen #Fry #AI #Artificial #Intelligence #Development #Future #O2 #OFCOM #Price #Increase #Contract #Cost #GadgetoftheWeek #Kioxia #Exceria #Plus #G2 #Portable #SSD #External #Storage #500mb #1tb #2tb #USB #G4 #NVMe #Internal #PCIe #5 #PC #Console #Upgrade #Fuji #Film #Fujifilm #LiPLay #LiPlay+ #Printer #Instant #Hybrid #Camera #Selfie #Mobile #Connect #Instant #Photos #Fun #Party
**Palabras clave:** libros, escaneo, PDF, OCR, escala de grises, XNVW, Python, Windows 11, disco PCIe, Kindle, iPad, JPG, PNG, guillotina, Klinglandia, España, basura, costura, encuadernación. --- ### ¿Por qué se deshacen los libros? ### Proceso de generación de PDFs sin comprimir ### Uso de Windows 11 para el procesamiento ### Conversión a escala de grises ### Problemas encontrados durante la conversión ### Evaluación de formatos y tamaños ### Uso final y distribución ### Futuro de los libros físicos
Check out last week's video on ANET, AVGO, & Nvidia: https://youtu.be/FYBaX9tqWAAAstera Labs and its peer Credo Technology Group is pulling back substantially from recent all-time highs. We dive into the narrative about what's causing the drop—including new product announcements from competitors like Broadcom and Nvidia—and explain the more fundamental reason for the recent volatility: statistics and a hefty valuation.Astera Labs is a fabless chip designer. Its original product was the PCIe re-timer (a chip that recovers and retransmits degraded data signals in a data center) but has since expanded into fabric switches, memory controllers, and Ethernet smart cable modules.Despite incredible triple-digit year-over-year revenue increases and a flip to profitability with a massive 69% free cash flow margin in Q2 2025, the market expects growth and margins to moderate. Learn why a current 60× Price-to-Sales ratio for a hardware business is a "hefty valuation" and what this means for investors.Join us on Discord with Semiconductor Insider, sign up on our website: www.chipstockinvestor.com/membershipSupercharge your analysis with AI! Get 15% of your membership with our special link here: https://fiscal.ai/csi/Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/b1228c12f284/sign-up-landing-page-short-formIf you found this video useful, please make sure to like and subscribe!*********************************************************Affiliate links that are sprinkled in throughout this video. If something catches your eye and you decide to buy it, we might earn a little coffee money. Thanks for helping us (Kasey) fuel our caffeine addiction!Content in this video is for general information or entertainment only and is not specific or individual investment advice. Forecasts and information presented may not develop as predicted and there is no guarantee any strategies presented will be successful. All investing involves risk, and you could lose some or all of your principal.Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction: Astera Labs Stock is Crashing[01:36] What Astera Labs Does (PCIE Re-timers & More)[03:15] Astera's Competitors: Broadcom, Nvidia, and the 'Narrative'[04:08] The Fundamental Reason for the Crash: Statistics and Volatility[04:47] A Growth and Profitability Story: Triple-Digit Revenue & Free Cash Flow[06:40] Why Growth Will Moderate in H2 2025 and 2026[07:07] The Valuation Problem: High Price-to-Sales for a Cyclical Business[08:58] Final Thoughts: Should You Panic? #asteralabs #ALABstock #dataenters #aidatacenter #semiconductors #chips #investing #stocks #finance #financeeducation #silicon #artificialintelligence #ai #financeeducation #chipstocks #finance #stocks #investing #investor #financeeducation #stockmarket #chipstockinvestor #fablesschipdesign #chipmanufacturing #semiconductorstocks Nick and Kasey own shares of Credo, Broadcom, Nvidia
Question time is here again, and this month we attempt to provide answers about subjects such as homebrew on the Steam Deck, outsourcing the university network support, buying phones just to trade them in, grifters getting angry about game engines, why storefronts still bog down and crash in 2025, monitoring your home server energy use, how to distinguish drop-shipped knock-offs from the genuine article, and more.Decky Loader for Steam Deck homebrew: https://decky.xyz/MagicPods for ear buds on the Steam Deck: https://magicpods.app/steamdeck/The deep rabbit hole about PCIe and ASPM: https://z8.re/blog/aspm.html Support the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, a monthly bonus episode, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod
Welcome back! This week we have much to discuss, including NVIDIA buying a chunk of Intel, NVIDIA potentially buying an even bigger chunk of OpenAI, and NVIDIA eventually taking over the world. Also some non-NVIDIA stuff, probably. Which includes 250w of PCIe slot power, Windows 10 ends, they promise, RTings tortures TVs and yet another games library aggregator! Oh, and even more packed in there, so take a listen, we insist.00:00 Intro01:05 Patreon02:11 Completely necessary old tech digression05:32 Food with Josh07:24 NVIDIA and Intel team up15:45 Don't worry, Arc is not being abandoned yet18:05 NVIDIA wants to invest 100 billion in OpenAI19:47 AMD launches Radeon RX 7700 non-XT with 16GB VRAM21:54 PCI Express slots with 250W power delivery24:38 RTINGS concluding their TV lifespan test29:24 Ars concludes their history of the Internet31:40 Our regular reminder that Windows 10 is going EOL33:44 Not everyone is ready to give up USB-A ports yet38:48 (In)Security Corner48:45 Gaming Quick Hits1:07:45 LaCie Rugged SSD4 review1:11:54 Picks of the Week1:23:01 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
AMD is on the rise, and their financials show it, plus they might have won The Game. We discover that Windows 11 SE is still a thing, PCIe 8 has been ratified, and what's the best-worst GPU of 2025! XeSS goes cross-platform-gpu and turns out that people CAN actually detect malware if properly motivated. All this and more!Timestamps:00:00 Intro00:37 Patreon01:52 Food with Josh04:38 AMD financials09:43 AMD claims "world's fastest processors" as Intel struggles18:57 AMD may be planning X3D on both CCDs23:18 Windows 11 SE is going away26:13 Windows Vista stricken from latest Win11 build?27:48 Getting to the nub of ThinkPad design35:49 PCI-SIG announces PCI Express 8.038:29 AMD's AM6 socket rumored to bring DDR6 and PCIe 640:44 Best of the 8GB GPUs45:53 The RX 9060 non-XT48:10 Bracing for the possibility of 100% tariffs on chips49:50 (In)Security Corner1:04:55 Gaming Quick Hits1:18:11 Promoting Jeremy's HyperX Jet wireless headset review1:19:15 Picks of the Week1:34:57 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
The Threadripper leads the conversation this week, with it's impressive Linux performance and many, many cores and PCIe lanes. Then Bcachefs dangles over the precipice, NetworkManager 1.54 has some impressive features, and the Kernel calendar turns the page from 6.16 to the 6.17 merge window. Firewire is still around, KDE gets a day/night mode, and Wayland may never be ready. For tips we have OpenSnitch and a novel use for qemu-img. You can see the show notes at https://bit.ly/40OxbMf and until next week! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Host: Jeff Massie Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Want access to the ad-free video 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.
Timestamps: 0:00 The Prime Googler 0:07 YouTube ad-friendly guidelines update 2:10 Age-checks are rolling out everywhere 3:59 IGN Gaming Trends report 6:09 Proton! 7:06 QUICK BITS INTRO 7:15 Threadripper 9980X, 9970X reviews 7:40 Micron 9650, first PCIe 6.0 SSD 8:12 Photoshop Harmonize, ChatGPT Study Mode 8:49 Peacock feathers can emit laser beams! 9:18 Microsoft Smurface Laptop NEWS SOURCES: https://lmg.gg/3rfnc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Intel pulls the plug on Clear Linux, Mozilla crams more AI into Firefox, ESWIN Computing partners with Ubuntu for a new RISC-V SBC, and finally something worth shoving into the PCIe slot on a Raspberry Pi 5.
Audio-Podcast – OrionX.net: Deep Insight, Market Execution, Customer Engagement
Analyst roundtable covering the big ideas in technology that are changing the world, with Adrian Cockcroft, Stephen Perrenod, Chris Kruell, and Shahin Khan. In this episode: AI Agent Swarm Coding, IoT, Bitcoin, HPC, TOP500, PCIe, UCE, 5G, Cloud, Cybersecurity, Post-Quantum Cryptography, Quantum Computing, Nuclear Energy [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/OXD030_ART-6_20250708.mp3"][/audio] The post Analyst Roundtable: AI Agent Swarm Coding, PCIe, UEC, BTC – OXD30 appeared first on OrionX.net.
- Computex 2025 - NVLink Fusion, DGX Cloud Lepton - Intel 18A Fab Panther Lake, Gaudi 3 PCIe, Intel Arc Pro - Jack Dongarra, US Leadership in HPC - Matrix Algebra, 64 bit precision - Chiplet Alliance, UCIe consortium - "Motherchip" vs. Motherboard [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/HPCNB_20250519.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20250519 appeared first on OrionX.net.
Timestamps: 0:00 The Iliad guy beat them to Homer tho 0:07 Microsoft shuts down Skype 1:33 SpaceX company town - Starbase, Texas 2:28 OpenAI profit, Gemini 4 kids, Meta AI 3:57 DeleteMe! 4:32 QUICK BITS INTRO 4:38 RTX 5060 Ti 8GB on PCIe 4.0 5:14 Windows 11 24H2 forced update 5:48 it's a hover bike! 5:58 Worldcoin's eye-scanning orbs in US 6:40 Nintendo sues Genki 7:03 Cerabyte glass storage, punished NEWS SOURCES: https://lmg.gg/AeTwX Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Die Hardware- und Netzwerk-Spezialisten der c't-Redaktion Ernst Ahlers, Andrijan Möcker und Christof Windeck gehen den Hintergründen auf die Spur: Glasfaser wird zwar an vielen Stellen mit 2,5 Gbit/s ausgebaut, aber schon ihre 1-Gbit/s-Anschlüsse werden die Anbieter im Privatkundengeschäft kaum los. Ähnlich gilt fürs Heimnetz, dass sich Wifi-7 und 6-GHz-Router schlecht verkaufen, und dass beim Kabel-LAN meist 1 Gbit/s reichen. NAS, Boards und Router mit 2G5-Ethernet gibt's zwar immer mehr, aber kaum jemand scheint wirklich Wert drauf zu legen – ganz zu schweigen von schnelleren Kabellösungen. Auch die Nachfrage nach USB-Sticks oder Speicherkarten mit garantiert 20 oder 40 MBit/s bleibt gering. Selbst die PC-internen Schnittstellen stagnieren, beispielsweise verkaufen sich schnelle PCIe-5.0-SSDs kaum, und die fertig spezifizierte PCIe-Schnittstelle für Festplatten als SATA-Ersatz wird von keinem Hersteller implementiert. Spezielle NAS-Festplatten sind vom Markt wieder quasi verschwunden. Anders siehts lediglich für Profi-Hardware aus: Die Rechenzentren haben Bedarf nach schnelleren und größeren Festplatten, besseren Schnittstellen, mehr RAM und leistungsfähigeren Interconnects (sogar der KI-Grafikkarten direkt untereinander). Wieso klafft das so auseinander? Wir spüren dem Bedarf hinterher, schauen in die Zukunft, diskutieren Einsatzgebiete und Gewohnheiten – wie viel Zeit etwa wollen wir in die Pflege einer Smartphone-Fotosammlung stecken? Eine wichtige Grenze sind auch die menschlichen Sinne, etwa was Augen und Ohren wahrnehmen können. Mit dabei: Ernst Ahlers, Andrijan Möcker, Christof Windeck Moderation: Jörg Wirtgen Produktion: Gordon Hof
Die Hardware- und Netzwerk-Spezialisten der c't-Redaktion Ernst Ahlers, Andrijan Möcker und Christof Windeck gehen den Hintergründen auf die Spur: Glasfaser wird zwar an vielen Stellen mit 2,5 Gbit/s ausgebaut, aber schon ihre 1-Gbit/s-Anschlüsse werden die Anbieter im Privatkundengeschäft kaum los. Ähnlich gilt fürs Heimnetz, dass sich Wifi-7 und 6-GHz-Router schlecht verkaufen, und dass beim Kabel-LAN meist 1 Gbit/s reichen. NAS, Boards und Router mit 2G5-Ethernet gibt's zwar immer mehr, aber kaum jemand scheint wirklich Wert drauf zu legen – ganz zu schweigen von schnelleren Kabellösungen. Auch die Nachfrage nach USB-Sticks oder Speicherkarten mit garantiert 20 oder 40 MBit/s bleibt gering. Selbst die PC-internen Schnittstellen stagnieren, beispielsweise verkaufen sich schnelle PCIe-5.0-SSDs kaum, und die fertig spezifizierte PCIe-Schnittstelle für Festplatten als SATA-Ersatz wird von keinem Hersteller implementiert. Spezielle NAS-Festplatten sind vom Markt wieder quasi verschwunden. Anders siehts lediglich für Profi-Hardware aus: Die Rechenzentren haben Bedarf nach schnelleren und größeren Festplatten, besseren Schnittstellen, mehr RAM und leistungsfähigeren Interconnects (sogar der KI-Grafikkarten direkt untereinander). Wieso klafft das so auseinander? Wir spüren dem Bedarf hinterher, schauen in die Zukunft, diskutieren Einsatzgebiete und Gewohnheiten – wie viel Zeit etwa wollen wir in die Pflege einer Smartphone-Fotosammlung stecken? Eine wichtige Grenze sind auch die menschlichen Sinne, etwa was Augen und Ohren wahrnehmen können.
Die Hardware- und Netzwerk-Spezialisten der c't-Redaktion Ernst Ahlers, Andrijan Möcker und Christof Windeck gehen den Hintergründen auf die Spur: Glasfaser wird zwar an vielen Stellen mit 2,5 Gbit/s ausgebaut, aber schon ihre 1-Gbit/s-Anschlüsse werden die Anbieter im Privatkundengeschäft kaum los. Ähnlich gilt fürs Heimnetz, dass sich Wifi-7 und 6-GHz-Router schlecht verkaufen, und dass beim Kabel-LAN meist 1 Gbit/s reichen. NAS, Boards und Router mit 2G5-Ethernet gibt's zwar immer mehr, aber kaum jemand scheint wirklich Wert drauf zu legen – ganz zu schweigen von schnelleren Kabellösungen. Auch die Nachfrage nach USB-Sticks oder Speicherkarten mit garantiert 20 oder 40 MBit/s bleibt gering. Selbst die PC-internen Schnittstellen stagnieren, beispielsweise verkaufen sich schnelle PCIe-5.0-SSDs kaum, und die fertig spezifizierte PCIe-Schnittstelle für Festplatten als SATA-Ersatz wird von keinem Hersteller implementiert. Spezielle NAS-Festplatten sind vom Markt wieder quasi verschwunden. Anders siehts lediglich für Profi-Hardware aus: Die Rechenzentren haben Bedarf nach schnelleren und größeren Festplatten, besseren Schnittstellen, mehr RAM und leistungsfähigeren Interconnects (sogar der KI-Grafikkarten direkt untereinander). Wieso klafft das so auseinander? Wir spüren dem Bedarf hinterher, schauen in die Zukunft, diskutieren Einsatzgebiete und Gewohnheiten – wie viel Zeit etwa wollen wir in die Pflege einer Smartphone-Fotosammlung stecken? Eine wichtige Grenze sind auch die menschlichen Sinne, etwa was Augen und Ohren wahrnehmen können. Mit dabei: Ernst Ahlers, Andrijan Möcker, Christof Windeck Moderation: Jörg Wirtgen Produktion: Gordon Hof
Josh finally had another burger, and published his SECOND review of the month!! All hail the Thrustmaster! Mindfactory never went anywhere, Windows likes your printers again, and all the GPU news you can stand! And we know who you are, since 23andMe sold all your data... J/K!00:00 Intro01:33 Food with Josh03:19 RTX 5060 series delay rumor, 8GB and 16GB Ti confirmed06:19 AMD says RX 9070 series had 10x more first-week sales12:12 Making wafers at TSMC Arizona might be just 10% more expensive14:02 Mindfactory attempts a comeback15:31 Windows update fixes printer issues16:32 Also, Windows update breaks VEEAM recovery19:28 MSI selling PSUs with only one 8-pin PCIe connector21:58 Google Maps may have deleted your timeline data25:48 23andMe potentially selling all of your personal data29:31 Podcast sponsor - Incogni30:55 (in)Security Corner43:16 Podcast sponsor - Stash44:25 Gaming Quick Hits51:36 Thrustmaster T818 Review1:05:51 Picks of the Week1:14:27 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
In this conversation, Judy Warner and Matt Burns dive into the real-world challenges engineers face as data rates push past 224 Gbps and AI strains data center infrastructure. They break down the copper vs. fiber tradeoffs, why optical solutions are becoming critical for longer distances, and how midboard optics offer better flexibility than front panel options. Matt also covers how PCIe and CXL are evolving to support AI workloads and why modular system designs are key to future-proofing networks. Whether you're designing high-speed interconnects or just trying to keep up with industry shifts, this episode unpacks the trends shaping the future of high-speed connectivity.
本期嘉宾:彭林、十天、蓝白、老郑、恺伦本期节目的主要内容有:· 关于小米 15 Ultra 我们还有什么没说的· 关于小米外挂磁吸镜头我们还有什么没说的· 关于致态 TiPro 9000 PCIe 5.0 硬盘我们还有什么没说的· 苹果折叠 iPhone 被曝售价超 2000 美元· 苹果四款新品发售· 消息称罗永浩挖走小米前 50 号员工做 AIOS· Nothing Phone (3a) 系列发布· AMD 发布 RX 9000 系列显卡· 全球第一款通用 Agent 产品 Manus 亮相· 鸿蒙智行悬赏 500 万打击黑公关还有众多观众朋友的热心提问~每周五晚 8 点,爱否直播间,我们一起开心聊天
In this episode, Chris discusses the options available to storage system vendors when building modern storage appliances, with Bill Basinas, Senior Director, Product Marketing at Infinidat. The conversation derives from an observation on architectural choices, following the move to AMD processors from Intel for the latest G4 systems built by Infinidat. AMD offers a greater core count per processor compared to Intel, allowing Infinidat to move to single socket designs, while gaining improvements from PCIe 5.0 and DDR5 memory. Ultimately, this discussion highlights how modern storage system design can take standardised components and build flexible architectures, implementing most features in software. For Infinidat, that could mean expanding its range of solutions for smaller enterprise requirements, or building out products specifically for Edge use cases. Although Bill did not reveal any future plans, the implication is clear - watch this space for future evolution of the InfiniBox architecture to a wider and more varied set of hardwaree configurations. Elapsed Time: 00:37:13 Timeline 00:00:00 - Intros 00:01:15 - How do vendors choose the hardware components for storage systems? 00:02:30 - What are the main (storage) technology challenges for customers? 00:04:08 - Customers want predictable data features 00:05:55 - Capacity demand continues to grow relentlessly 00:07:30 - Infinidat features are built into software 00:09:35 - Most AI requirements wil run on existing performance storage 00:11:20 - Modern hardware provides significant flexibility for system design 00:15:00 - AMD gives access to single and high core-count processors 00:16:10 - PCIe 5.0 provides for faster SSDs and power efficiency 00:18:46 - Infinidat has introduced smaller form-factor solutions 00:21:32 - Multiple cores will always get used! 00:25:53 - Infinidat G4 architecture provides for in-place controller upgrades 00:28:22 - Storage arrays should become more “virtual” 00:34:10 - Data services implementations are very different between vendors 00:35:55 - Hybrid architecture still has value in the Infinidat world 00:36:20 - Wrap Up Related Podcasts & Blogs Storage Unpacked 258 - Introducing Infinidat G4, InfuzeOS 8 and InfiniSafe ACP #202 - Enterprise Storage Consolidation with Phil Bullinger from Infinidat Infinidat adds customer value with SSA Express and improved SSA capacity Copyright (c) 2016-2025 Unpacked Network. No reproduction or re-use without permission. Podcast episode #e4dr
We have new info regarding the future of RADEON, and discuss Nvidia Blackwell! [SPON: Support MLID by downloading Filmora 14 for FREE: https://bit.ly/4avRYHV ] [SPON: Use "brokensilicon“ at CDKeyOffer for $23 Win11 Pro: https://www.cdkeyoffer.com/cko/Moore11 ] 0:00 AI thinks Dan is Steve & Jensen's Jacket looks CHEAP (Intro Banter) 5:09 Does Intel really want to minimize Battlemage Production? (Corrections) 9:30 Nvidia RTX 5090 Reviews – Why it's Underwhelming 16:10 How isn't the 5090 better at Raster, RT, OR AI?! 27:16 Nvidia DLSS 4 Multi-Framegen Reviewed 40:07 RTX 5090 & 5080 Launch sounds like “another Ampere” 44:47 Some version of FSR 4 is planned for RDNA 3/3.5 49:09 RX 9000 Performance Leaked…and Delayed 52:37 (NEW Leak) Lisa Su KILLED Big RDNA 4 1:06:21 Intel Battlemage B570 10GB Reviewed & “Launched” 1:13:57 Nintendo Switch 2 (Kinda) Revealed 1:22:51 PCIe 7.0, Melting Connectors Solved, 4-Slot Titan, Strix Halo Performance (Wrap-Up) 1:30:30 AMD CPU Codenmaes, 9950X3D V-Cache Benefits (Final RM) https://www.anandtech.com/show/21425/intel-lunar-lake-architecture-deep-dive-lion-cove-xe2-and-npu4 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrow_Lake_(microprocessor) https://www.techspot.com/review/2944-nvidia-geforce-rtx-5090/ Ridiculous: https://www.techspot.com/review/2944-nvidia-geforce-rtx-5090/#2025-01-23-image-2-jpg LTT underwhelmed by AI Performance: https://youtu.be/Q82tQJyJwgk?si=Gy7rr2EL99AGxtaJ&t=1047 Capped Power Scaling: https://x.com/ComputerBase/status/1882433556678615247 Mostly Underwhelming 8K Performance: https://www.techradar.com/computing/gaming-pcs/nvidia-rtx-5090-8k-performance-has-blown-me-away-already-and-its-mainly-thanks-to-multi-frame-generation https://www.storagereview.com/review/nvidia-geforce-rtx-5090-review-pushing-boundaries-with-ai-acceleration MSI 5090 Suprim water-cooled review: https://www.techpowerup.com/review/msi-geforce-rtx-5090-suprim-liquid/ https://youtu.be/Q82tQJyJwgk?si=WeiVlNImWXI0Qc6f&t=788 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_fGlVqKs1k&ab_channel=HardwareUnboxed https://youtu.be/bZ6NeSGad4I?si=YaSbxKUOzhuDfmy4 https://youtu.be/bZ6NeSGad4I https://youtu.be/0Zk688QKrAg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuGlXL3uKKQ&ab_channel=Moore%27sLawIsDead https://x.com/McAfeeDavid_AMD/status/1881435903358628047 AMD Marketing forgot to delete a scheduled Tweet: https://videocardz.com/newz/somebody-didnt-get-a-memo-amd-ad-claims-you-can-enjoy-gaming-on-radeon-rx-9070-xt-already Seems like it might even be late March: https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-radeon-rx-9070-preorders-to-start-on-march-23-according-to-major-us-retailer https://www.techspot.com/review/2943-intel-arc-b570/ https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/intel-arc-b570-review-asrock-challenger-oc-tested https://youtu.be/itpcsQQvgAQ?si=GV4q8534eqmSTBi0 https://www.forbes.com/sites/jasonevangelho/2025/01/16/3-crucial-takeaways-from-the-switch-2-reveal-trailer/ https://www.techspot.com/news/106409-pcie-70-spec-nearing-completion-promising-16gbs-lane.html https://quasarzone.com/bbs/qn_report/views/444251 https://youtu.be/RDr1pr_c6ts?si=vup3QhjEZ0eOCaQj https://www.techspot.com/news/106369-microsoft-considered-shutting-down-xbox-before-major-game.html https://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/AMD-Ryzen-AI-Max-395-Strix-Halo-APU-With-Radeon-8060S-iGPU-_-Gaming-Benchmarks.png?_gl=1*1524w9j*_ga*MTA0ODI5MjA1MS4xNzI3MzAxNzI4*_ga_591JRXV2QC*MTczNzkyNDQ5Ny40My4xLjE3Mzc5MjQ0OTguMC4wLjA
This week's EYE ON NPI is an EYE ON A PI - it's the Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/r/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-compute-module-5), the latest update to the easily embeddable mini modules that make industrial developers happy by giving them all the power of a Pi 5 in a ready-to-go pluggable solution. The Raspberry Pi computer launched with the goal of bringing low cost computing to the education market (https://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/rorycellanjones/2011/05/a_15_computer_to_inspire_young.html) and through the Pi Foundation (https://www.raspberrypi.org/) they still have that charitable goal (https://static.raspberrypi.org/files/about/RaspberryPiFoundationStrategy2025.pdf) while also spinning off the manufacturing/sales company into the Trading Company which went public this year (https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/what-would-an-ipo-mean-for-the-raspberry-pi-foundation/). The first few Raspberry Pi computers were 'all in one' style (https://www.adafruit.com/product/1344), with power, GPIO, Video and Audio output, USB, Ethernet, and Micro SD card storage (https://raspi.tv/2018/new-raspberry-pi-family-photo-including-pi3a-plus-zero-wh). Eventually enough folks asked for an enclosure-friendly version that would allow an "I/O" board to be designed with the ports in a different arrangement - the big-sized-Pis have them arrayed over 3 sides. To solve this conundrum, and to satisfy the growing industrial/commercial market, the Pi engineers designed the Compute Module 1 which is still available (https://www.raspberrypi.com/products/compute-module-1/). This clever SODIMM packaged board has all the GPIO and peripheral pins on a plug-in connector so you can slot it into an existing design securely and easily - SODIMM sockets (https://www.digikey.com/short/rz9cdjrn) come both vertical and horizontal. This was later updated to the CM3 and CM3+ (https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/raspberry-pi/SC0149/9866293) which was on par with the Pi 3 instead of the Pi 1, with significantly higher computational power. However, perhaps because they wanted a more compact module, or to support high-frequency signals better, the next generation of Compute Module 4's (https://www.digikey.com/short/wffzdn0b) came in a flat rectangular shape with dual 100-pin Hirose contacts. (https://www.digikey.com/short/5m8djf0t) Another nice thing that happened with the CM4 is it became available in dozens of configurations: 1/2/4/8 GB RAM, SD or 8/16/32GB MMC, and with or without WiFi/BLE/BT. This allowed commercial users to go with the 'lowest cost option' needed to fulfill their requirements - whereas the Pi 4 comes in only 3 or 4 RAM options (https://www.digikey.com/short/4pn5vw24). The ready-to-go software - no kernel compiling or OpenWRT configuration required! Long-term hardware support and low prices pushed the CM4 into more and more designs. Which brings us to the NPI of the week, the Compute Module 5 (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/r/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-compute-module-5)! The CM5 is a big upgrade, with quad A76s at 2.4GHz for a 2x computing upgrade, increased RAM options of up to 16G, increased MMC option of 64GB, USB 3.0 ports, PCIe and RP1 hardware interfacing with PIO support (https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/piolib-a-userspace-library-for-pio-control/). If you have an existing CM4 design, you can easily upgrade or update to the new hotness. If you're new to integrating Raspberry pi, then while you may think of the Pi as a hobby/school computer, that isn't necessarily true anymore with 72% of Pi computers sold going into commercial/industrial use (https://investors.raspberrypi.com/ipo/documents/1). That means you can be confident that you'll get consistent pricing and availability for a long time so that you can work on designing the rest of your product for the CM series to plug into. And like the CM4, the CM5 is available in a variety of configurations and prices, from $45 to $135. Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5's are currently only available for pre-order (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/r/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-compute-module-5) , with estimated ship times in Q1 of 2025 to DigiKey - and the moment DigiKey gets some in stock, they'll ship your pre-order instantly so you can get integrating with the Pi ecosystem the very next day. Don't wait till release day because they'll sell out instantly! Instead, when you pre-order from DigiKey, your order goes into a queue and you'll get first-come-first-served prioritization. See more on DigiKey https://www.digikey.com/short/47t12drj
Audio-Podcast – OrionX.net: Deep Insight, Market Execution, Customer Engagement
We have a full house with Adrian Cockcroft, Stephen Perrenod, Chris Kruell, and Shahin Khan with a "postview" of the SC24 conference, the latest CryptoSuper500 list, a snapshot of quantum computing, and the RISC-V Summit. They also discuss Bitcoin, AI vs. HPC, HPC in the cloud, liquid cooling, InfraTech, Interconnects, Optical Computing, OpenMP, PCIe, CXL, GPUs, CPUs, and energy efficiency and ESG. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/OXD025_SC24-Postview_CryptoSuper500_Quantum_RISCV-Summit_20241216.mp3"][/audio] The post SC24, Supercomputing, CryptoSuper500, Quantum, RISC-V Summit – OXD25 appeared first on OrionX.net.
Great engineers have the ability to socialize their ideas, and spar respectfully with their technical colleagues. Listen to Dave and Sumiran focus on this foundational skill and share how we can all improve our communication. Dave Harriman is a Distinguished Engineer and chair of the PCIe protocol working group. Sumiran Shubhi is a Principal Engineer and SoC Architect.
Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang covers the Windows 24H2 update that is boosting Ryzen CPU performance in gaming, why MSI is adding extra PCIe power connectors to X870 motherboards, and more. And of course we answer your questions live! Links: - Hardware Unboxed 23H2 vs 24H2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlfTHCzBnnQ - MSI X870E: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/motherboards/msi-x870-x870e-motherboards-have-an-extra-8-pin-pcie-power-connector-for-next-gen-gpus-unofficially-aimed-at-geforce-rtx-50-series 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. #msi #amd #podcast
In episode 51 of Infrastructure Matters, hosts Steven Dickens and Camberley Bates discuss the latest developments in the data infrastructure industry, with a focus on the Future of Memory and Storage Summit (FMS). They highlight the importance of the tech stack for AI, the challenges faced by Intel, and the growing role of companies like Palantir and Cloudera in managing and curating data for AI applications. The episode also touches on Camberley's involvement in promoting women in the tech industry through the SuperWomen of FMS initiative. The key talking points include: Future of Memory and Storage Summit (FMS): The summit focused on advancements in memory technology, including high-bandwidth memory (HBM), CXL, and the latest PCIe standards. AI and data processing were major themes. Intel's Challenges: Discussion on Intel's 40% stock decline year-to-date and the strategic importance of Intel's success to U.S. interests. Pat Gelsinger's turnaround efforts are compared to IBM's historic recovery. Palantir's Growth: Palantir's significant growth in the commercial sector, with a 55% increase in commercial business and efforts to move beyond its defense industry roots. Cloudera's Role in Data Management: Cloudera's work in managing and classifying data for AI, focusing on data governance, curation, and pipeline management. SuperWomen of FMS: Camberley Bates' initiative to attract and retain women in the tech industry, including an annual leadership award recognizing influential women in the memory and storage field.
How and why the recent huge Windows outage was caused by a bad CrowdStrike update and how it could have been avoided, a hilariously dumb ESXi vulnerability, and using SAS drives with a PCIe card. Plug Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with early episodes sometimes News A closer […]
How and why the recent huge Windows outage was caused by a bad CrowdStrike update and how it could have been avoided, a hilariously dumb ESXi vulnerability, and using SAS drives with a PCIe card. Plug Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with early episodes sometimes News A closer... Read More
Alex's mini-PC surprise, why we're trying Tube Archivist, Alex's Nextcloud update, and how Chris stacks automations with Bitfocus Companion.
This episode features an interview with Stephanie and Marcos from the Production Team, where they help manufacture and build our desktops from raw sheet metal.We'll also talk about what makes the System76 factory unique, as well as new hardware updates, community happenings, and a fun game at the end!Five facts about us:-Desktops and keyboards handcrafted in the US-Pop!_OS is free and collects zero user data-Laptops ship to over 60 countries-In-house support for the life of your hardware-Advocate for Right to Repair, Linux, and open sourceCheck out what we make!Laptops: s76.co/WuEDOnoSDesktops: s76.co/Zn4NXTf9Pop!_OS: s76.co/D_IWRvWDShare what you make with us!twitter.com/system76facebook.com/system76instagram.com/system76_com01:00 Sandwich banter2:12 Laptop Releases, Oryx, Lemur and new Darter Pro, all ultraportable laptops have 100% SRGB display3:20 New KS fast desktop processors available now4:12 Thelio now with PCIe 5.04:31 AMD Thelio Spark incoming, Thelio Spring sale ending6:10 COSMIC updates GTK 3 and 4 themeing added7:03 COSMIC community contributions, COSMIC task app and webapp and input devices applet8:10 Spreading the word about COSMIC8:55 Meetups galore!9:40 Introducing Stephanie and Marcos from production team9:54 Marcos explains all the roles he's reponsible for at System7610:34 Stephanie explains her role as Production Manager10:50 Marcos discusses the cool projects he's had the opportunity to work on, highlighting flashing IO boards11:40 Stephanie explains how onlining keyboards was a fun experience12:30 The work that went into launching the Launch keyboard line13:20 Stephanie describes her favorite System76 product15:10 Marcos talks about his hobbies outside work16:10 Stephanie is a major crafter in her free time and responsible for all the plants at the factory18:50 Production is just crafting19:30 Pinata making at the factory20:29 How System76 manufacturing is different21:28 Creative problem solving21:50 The nerdiest things witnessed at the factory22:44 Garbage disposal situation24:00 How to take a tour of System7624:50 Emma has a box game that may or may not be fun27:44: Outro and blooper
"We've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Processors effectively on fire with default motherboard settings. We watched chipsets glitter in the dark near the Copper Pipe. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain."- JoshTEKK SmithAlso tune in for some Star Wars gaming news, PCIe 7 is the new Hotness, and Dump It like D-Link! More in the timestamps beeeelooooow!Timestamps:00:00 Intro00:53 Food with Josh03:04 The Intel 13th and 14th Gen Core i9 Problem Escalates15:26 Intel Gaudi 3 is an up to 900W AI chip20:46 AMD Ryzen 9000 processors mentioned in new chipset driver25:09 An APU faceoff at FPS Review32:16 The first draft of PCI Express 7 is here39:48 Roku has new tech to serve ads over HDMI43:58 The Pi 5 vs cheap Amazon mini PCs47:28 Security Corner1:00:01 Gaming Quick Hits1:06:53 Alienware AW3225QF 4K QD-OLED monitor review1:24:12 Jeremy has a new Drop keyboard1:26:56 Picks of the Week1:36:10 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
We dissect the latest Zen 5 rumors, analyze Snapdragon X Elite performance, and discuss Windows AI. [SPON: Use "brokensilicon“ at CDKeyOffer to get Win 11 Pro for $23: https://www.cdkeyoffer.com/cko/Moore11 ] [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] 00:00 Mustached Tom Scratched his Eye, Fly Over States (Intro Banter) 6:13 Why PS3's CELL did (and didn't) Make Sense (Corrections) 10:27 Intel Foundries' Horrific Losses, Taiwan Earthquake 16:15 AMD could Win a Price War in 2024 23:57 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite runs BG3 at 30 FPS (Please Clap) 32:57 Zen 5 IPC & Release Date Re-Leaked 44:37 Igor's Lab leaks Lunar Lake Pictures 56:09 Microsoft Copilot 40 TOPs Requirement Confirmed 1:02:34 Should Windows 12 have an “AI Key”? 1:09:44 Multiple Reports Surface of Devs Doubting XBOX's Future 1:19:36 Ryzen 5000 XT, PCIe 7.0, DLSS 3.7, XeSS 1.3, Windows 10 EOL (Wrap-up) 1:26:48 Switch 2, PS5 Pro SSD Transfer, 4090D, Thumbnail Advice (Final RM) https://www.cnbc.com/2024/04/02/intel-shares-fall-after-company-reveals-7-billion-operating-loss-in-foundry-business.html https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/05/asia/taiwan-hualien-earthquake-resilience-dst-intl-hnk/index.html https://www.umc.com/en/News/press_release/Content/corporate/20240403 https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/04/tsmc_earthquake_fine/ https://www.techspot.com/news/102416-qualcomm-snapdragon-x-elite-arm-chip-can-run.html https://www.pcgameshardware.de/Baldurs-Gate-3-Spiel-18525/Specials/Benchmark-Test-Review-Grafik-Ersteindruck-1425826/2/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAjQXdwkgEE&ab_channel=GamersNexus https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1GBo8K2MY0&ab_channel=AncientGameplays https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6h_lFEXtQs&ab_channel=AncientGameplays https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oho0QzrfxWc&ab_channel=Moore%27sLawIsDead https://www.techpowerup.com/320980/alleged-amd-ryzen-granite-ridge-engineering-samples-pop-up-in-shipping-manifests https://www.techpowerup.com/320971/amd-zen-5-based-strix-point-and-fire-range-mobile-processors-spied-in-shipping-manifests https://www.igorslab.de/en/news-from-intels-mobile-lunar-lake-cpu-rumors-confirmed-picture-and-schematic/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5bXBEjvgvs&ab_channel=Moore%27sLawIsDead https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-confirms-microsoft-copilot-will-soon-run-locally-on-pcs-next-gen-ai-pcs-require-40-tops-of-npu-performance https://youtu.be/2ls_e4MDeh4?si=bEzGX6pXSwMSV8Mb https://www.techspot.com/news/102406-developers-gdc-think-most-xbox-games-going-multi.html https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-preparing-ryzen-5000xt-series-yet-another-update-for-am4-socket https://pcisig.com/blog/pcie%C2%AE-70-specification-version-05-now-available-full-draft-available-members https://videocardz.com/newz/nvidia-releases-streamline-2-4-0-sdk-and-dlss-3-7-0 https://www.techspot.com/news/102523-intel-xess-13-improves-performance-new-presets-intros.html https://www.techpowerup.com/321170/windows-10-security-updates-to-cost-usd-61-after-2025-usd-427-by-2028 https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/04/hdmi-customized-ad-insertion-patent-would-show-rokus-ads-atop-non-roku-video/ https://videocardz.com/newz/asrock-launches-radeon-rx-550-low-profile-based-on-7-year-old-polaris-gpu
Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC hardware topics. In this episode the gang covers the AM5+ socket potentially showing up in microcode (and why you shouldn't freak out), the newly announced PCIe 7.0 spec, Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon X push, and more. And as always we answer your questions live! References: - https://www.pcworld.com/article/2284554/qualcomm-says-snapdragon-x-elite-kicks-intel-core-ultras-butt-too.html - https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amd-may-have-a-new-platform-for-upcoming-ryzen-cpus - https://www.pcworld.com/article/2287853/pcie-7-0s-first-draft-could-arrive-in-2025-at-up-to-512gb-s.html 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 WEBSITE: http://www.pcworld.com
This week, we cover Windows adding sudo, Ubuntu failing with KDE 6, and the Kernel finally getting some Continuous Integration. Google is spending a million bucks to make Rust and C++ play nice, Microsoft is giving developers another 12 months to use out-of-date Ubuntu with VSCode, and there's some neat Raspberry Pi news to share. For tips there's Grub2Win, the Github arm-runner-action, a bit of explanation on PCIe bifurcation, and a howto on diff. See the show notes at https://bit.ly/487uaYl and Enjoy the show! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Ken McDonald, 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.
Try Notion AI for free at https://www.Notion.com/wan Try some unique flavors of coffee at https://lmg.gg/boneswan and use code LINUS for 20% off your first order! Looking for electronic components and equipment? Consult the specialists! Head over to https://lmg.gg/CircuitSpecialists and save 10% using code LMG Timestamps (Courtesy of NoKi1119) Note: Timing may be off due to sponsor change: 0:00 Chapters 1:07 Intro 1:38 Topic #1 - Ubisoft claims users are comfortable with not owning games 1:54 Linus lists down Ubisoft's launcher naming history 4:07 Ubisoft Classic & Premium, pricing, games published, Luke's hot take 6:02 Linus's FP exclusive interview with Terren the CEO, 7:27 Tremblay's quote, Linus mentions CDs, streaming services 13:12 Game servers that were shut down, company trust, Ubisoft's stock & finances 22:26 Linus mentions Nvidia, Intel, gambling, countries' funds, Pentagon's $52,000 trash can 30:49 Swen Vincke on the future of games, games, movies, gaming on keyboard 42:54 Topic #2 - SSD shortage expected to increase SSD prices by up to 50% 44:03 How do you deal with these shortages? ft. Linus's retired LEGO set, games 51:07 LTTStore's "The Steve" turtleneck ft. Linus's new profile picture 53:22 Linus's Steve Jobs in a past NCIX video, history of controversy 58:19 Merch Messages #1 58:50 Where is the tech industry going? Dealing with pessimism? 1:03:00 Which LMG video do you want to serve as a future resource for techies? 1:08:29 Topic #3 - Research shows search engines are getting worse 1:11:12 Luke mentions articles, Linus on site subscriptions, Wikipedia's revenue 1:18:02 Linus mentions Apple's alleged habits, Luke on its worth 1:19:21 Topic #4 - Google blames slow YouTube videos loading on extensions 1:21:04 Adblock's past buffer bug, Luke on people jumping on the hate wagon 1:24:06 Google Incognito, Canary's "more privately" change 1:26:22 Sponsors 1:31:55 Merch messages #2 1:32:01 Screen time & social media's impact on mental health? 1:33:16 Linus's favorite gadgets? ft. GamersGrass site 1:37:22 HDPLEX's 500W GaN ATX PSU, do you see GaN PSUs in the consumer market? 1:40:14 LTT laptop bag & shoulder bag update? ft. Flocking machine, cable magnetic management, backpack relationship 1:43:26 Topic #5 - Fujitsu's software causes huge blunders in UK post offices 1:49:40 Topic #6 - Haier threatens to sue home assistant plugin developer 1:55:32 Topic #7 - OpenAI's new policy change, quietly removes ban on military use 1:56:24 Topic #8 - Alexa Plus, a new model with ChatGPT 2:04:58 Topic #10 - YouTube lays off 100 employees 2:05:31 Topic #11 - AMD's Ryzen 8000G limits PCIe 40 2:07:39 Merch Messages #3 ft. dbrand sponsors WAN Show After Dark 2:09:21 Sarah Butt chose grass, dbrand non-MagSafe soon to release 2:11:30 Do you use a funky Windows login process? 2:13:26 Early days of LMG's forum & community 2:16:12 How do Linus's socks & sandals fair during the Canadian winter? 2:19:38 Future bionic augments for your body, how far will you go? 2:26:36 Tips on effectively researching products before purchase? 2:29:31 Any features you wished Wikipedia had? 2:31:28 Why can't you emulate CUDA on other hardware? 2:33:55 What would it take for a new WAN Show intro & set? 2:37:20 Alternatives for Ubiquiti? 2:38:35 If Nvidia buys ARM, do you think it can topple Intel & AMD? 2:40:47 Your opinion on the community porting Spiderman 2 to PC? 2:43:01 Progress on the water resistant ballcap? 2:43:13 Has Luke heard of TARKOV'S SPT? 2:45:43 Thoughts on algorithm-sorting network switches? 2:47:47 Advice on how to know what I'm doing as a software engineer? 2:49:48 If SE remakes Final Fantasy VI, what approach should they take? 2:51:36 Luke on making a birb-rito 2:52:18 What advice does Linus have for starting a business in 2024? 2:56:52 Any updates Linus would've done to his home network? 3:03:41 What game do you think was underhyped & overperforming this year? Which one killed the studio? 3:05:05 Outro
Try Notion AI for free at https://www.Notion.com/wan Reserve the next generation of Samsung Galaxy devices at https://lmg.gg/galaxyunpacked Upgrade your appliances! Check out Dreo at https://lmg.gg/dreo Timestamps (Courtesy of NoKi1119) Note: Timing may be off due to sponsor change: 0:00 Chapters 1:02 Intro 1:28 The reason behind late WAN 3:00 Topic #1 - Apple's debatable iPhone satisfaction claims 4:00 Satisfaction "rates," 451 Research's odd surveys 9:56 Topic #2 - Intel discontinues NUC mini PCs 13:35 451 Research's quote on their service 14:40 Usages of NUCs, recalling GIGABYTE's BRIX 17:20 Intel will still support existing systems, why did NUCs fail? 20:43 LTTStore's Lime Day deals 22:38 Free shipping coupon for above $150, Linus calls Nick 25:40 Merch Messages #1 34:02 Topic #3 - China hijacks government emails, Skyblivion's Discord hijacked 36:36 Forged authentications, discussing the danger behind this 39:58 LMG & Floatplane is hiring 40:21 Free global shipping overwhelms DLL 42:17 Sponsors 43:59 Secret Shopper - Sponsors Edition 48:16 Sponsors continued 49:00 Merch Messages #2 1:14:29 Mellow_Labs's "Hit me Dan!" desktop toy 1:19:05 Topic #4 - Amazon is not a "large online platform" 1:21:14 European retailers, discussing AWS & Amazon's response 1:33:08 "Where's your Canadian Tire!?," collectible bills 1:36:43 Linus looks at pinball forums & Super Chexx thread 1:42:08 Topic #5 - EU will require replaceable phone batteries 1:43:11 Video of modified Super Chexx 1:45:17 Would this result in replaceable batteries outside of the EU? 1:50:10 Luke notices the dashboard, "profitable margins" 1:54:34 Topic #6 - PlayStation 5 Access Controller to release soon 1:59:50 Topic #7 - NVIDIA pressures board partners to stop building Battlemage GPUs 2:07:00 Topic #8 - Windows Update Restored updates old OSs 2:08:10 Topic #9 - Battalion 1944 refunds backers 2:12:51 Topic #10 - US Telecom cables' toxic lead hazard 2:16:56 Merch Messages #3 ft. On a break Dan, WAN Show After Dark 2:26:22 Dealing with management when they want to replace working on computers? 2:27:56 How much in-house engineering do you do at LMG? 2:30:54 Would 16:9 stay the standard, or 21:9 be more widely used? 2:33:16 Possible conflict of interest with LTT & iFixit? 2:35:15 Schedules for LTX livestreams? 2:41:08 What are your best tinkering stories? 2:46:53 Advice on protecting your devices from threats? 2:48:52 What to do about GPU water blocks causing wrecked loops? 2:51:03 Good headset reviews despite the lack of content creators? 2:56:35 Any special colors for the stubby screwdriver? 2:58:45 Do you miss the 5 hour WAN Show? 3:01:28 How much did you expect to lose from Lime Day? 3:04:41 What would you say was your highest high & lowest low at LMG? 3:06:14 What would you test the gaming minivan with? 3:09:30 Anything Linus does about his insomnia? 3:12:51 Ever considered hiring an analyst to find a trend with the YouTube algorithm? 3:14:26 How to get credible independent reviews you can trust? 3:16:04 How do the ladies feel when they model merch of a channel with men viewers as a majority? 3:18:22 Ever had an interaction with someone you wished you hadn't? 3:21:01 Possible LTX in Europe? 3:22:50 How would Linus's retirement party's montage look? 3:24:56 Could NVIDIA join the CPU market? 3:25:47 Do you have any bad memories of your past teachers? 3:31:27 Anything to keep in mind with opening a computer repair shop? ft. Dad joke 3:32:07 LTTStore Ryzen 7000 CPU pillows? 3:36:41 Events that nearly caused the cancellation of the WAN Show? 3:38:10 Creators Warehouse in Europe? 3:41:10 Why isn't badminton as big money-wise as tennis? 3:45:52 A service to replace M50X headcups 3:47:49 Best job match for content creators when YouTube wouldn't work out? 3:49:10 What piece of tech that baffles you with how old governments are? 3:51:24 How many PCIE lanes do you need for your devices? 3:52:18 $100,000 in sales, Luke on outro merch messages time 3:58:26 Outro