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- 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.
Micronがデータセンター向け新型SSD「Micron 6550 ION」を発表 コンパクトなE3.S形状×PCIe 5.0×最大約60TB×ワッパで競合を圧倒。 Micronは11月12日(米国太平洋時間)、データセンター向け新型SSD「Micron 6550 ION NVMe SSD」を発表した。E3.Sモデルについては、同フォームファクターとしては初めて60TBの大容量を実現した上で、PCI Express 5.0接続に対応することで「よりコンパクトで高速かつ大容量のストレージ環境を構築できる」としている。
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.
No episódio de hoje falamos sobre o lançamento dos novos Moto G35 e Moto G75 no Brasil, do ChatGPT que agora tem app oficial no Windows, do novo celular baratinho da Samsung que será atualizado até o Android 20, do Instagram bloqueando de vez prints em fotos de visualização única, e da Netflix encerrando o plano Básico sem anúncios no Brasil. Venha para a Black Friday TecMundo: https://bit.ly/bf-24-ytb
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
Vybrat SSD není snadný úkol. Jiří Kuruc, šéfredaktor Computeru, vysvětluje, jaké typy jsou dnes na trhu a na jaké parametry si dávat pozor při výběru. Výrobci některé informace o úložištích tají, takže nezbývá, než sledovat recenze, pokud chcete o produktu vědět úplně všechno. Na poskytnuté informace se ale spolehnout můžete a s našimi radami vyberete dobře.V podcastu se dozvíte, proč jsou varianty pro PCIe 5.0 (zatím) zbytečné a kdy se vyplatí koupit SSD s pasivním chladičem. Jestli neradi posloucháte, problematice se věnujeme také v článcích. Plánujete-li koupi úložiště v dohledné době, koncem srpna vyjde časopis Computer s dalším velkým testem SSD.02:52 – Formáty a rozhraní08:35 – Co výrobci neříkají15:08 – Příklady z praxe19:03 – Tajemná SLC cache23:18 – Kdy je nutné řešit chlazení25:54 – PCIe 5.0 a cenová srovnání
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
In this episode of The 5G Factor, our series that focuses on all things 5G, the IoT, and the 5G ecosystem as a whole, we review the major mobile ecosystem moves to make AI open, responsible, and transparent including Intel's Enterprise AI proposition emphasizing open industry software for developer productivity, Qualcomm's Responsible AI vision focus on privacy and security, and Nokia using Transparent AI across its audio portfolio development. Our analytical review spotlighted: Intel Enterprise AI Strategy Emphasizes Openness. At Intel Vision 2024 Intel sharpened its Enterprise AI proposition across critical sectors such as finance, manufacturing, and healthcare as they are rapidly seeking to broaden accessibility to AI and transitioning generative AI (GenAI) projects from experimental phases to full-scale implementation. We delve into why the Gaudi 3 AI accelerator launch underpins Intel's vison by bringing together AI-dedicated compute engine, memory boost for LLM capacity requirements, efficient scaling for enterprise GenAI, open industry software for developer productivity, and Gaudi 3 PCIe capabilities as well as Bharti Airtel's selection of Intel's AI technology for enhancing its telecom data to improve customer experience and Infosys collaborating to bring Intel technologies to Infosys Topaz, an AI-first set of services, solutions and platforms that seek to accelerate business value using GenAI technologies. Qualcomm Emphasizes Privacy and Security in Responsible AI Vision. Qualcomm, in a recent blog by Durga Malladi, SVP & GM, Technology Planning & Edge Solutions, detailed its vision for shaping the future of AI responsibly by spotlighting that one of the core principles of responsible AI is privacy and security. This is especially pertinent as AI systems collect and analyze vast amounts of data to protect individuals' privacy rights and ensure the security of sensitive information. We assess why Qualcomm, by promoting transparency, is effectively targeting the fostering of trust that can enable users to make informed decisions about AI technologies, ensuring that they align with their values and expectations. Nokia Attains Audio Portfolio Gains Through Transparent AI. Nokia's applications of transparent AI in audio product development, such as OZO Audio and Immersive Voice, plays an integral role in providing mobile device owners with sounds of immersion, clarity and focus. This level of quality requires extensive exploration, analysis and testing at every step of the development process. Many of the smart features of these audio solutions, such as applying noise reduction, are developed by training algorithms. We delve into how Nokia's research and engineering team running audio data through machine-learning (ML) models, can analyze the output and tweak the algorithms until the team gets the desired result for its product. This includes using Simple Linux Utility for Resource Management (SLURM). a cluster-management, resource-allocation and job-scheduling system that shows which user ran a specific job and with what resources, together with the container system Apptainer, allows Nokia to transfer its code transparently between various allocated resources in the company's datacenter.
"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
Ultra Ethernet promises to tune Ethernet for the needs of specialized workloads, including HPC and AI, from the lowest hardware to the software stack. This episode of Utilizing Tech features Dr. J Metz, Steering Committee Chair of the Ultra Ethernet Consortium, discussing this new technology with Frederic Van Haren and Stephen Foskett. The process of tuning Ethernet begins with a study of the profile and workloads to be served to identify the characteristics needed to support it. The group focuses on scale-out networks for large-scale applications like AI and HPC. Considerations include security, latency, ordering, and scalability. The goal is not to replace PCIe, CXL, or fabrics like NVLink but to extend Ethernet to address the connectivity and performance needs in an open standardized way. But Ultra Ethernet is more than hardware; the group is also building software features including a Libfabric interface and are working with OCP, DMTF, SNIA, and other industry groups. Hosts: Stephen Foskett, Organizer of Tech Field Day: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sfoskett/ Frederic Van Haren, CTO and Founder of HighFens, Inc.: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredericvharen/ Guest: J Metz, Chair of the Ultra Ethernet Consortium and SNIA, Technical Director at AMD: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jmetz/
This week is NVIDIA GTC, or as Futurum Group CEO Daniel Newman called it "the Woodstock of AI". There's been a lot of discussion about the ascendant NVIDIA and how they plan on capitalizing on a hot market. NVIDIA unveiled Blackwell, their newest architecture. The chip was named after American mathematician David Blackwell and math is most definitely the strong suit of this product line. It has 208 billion transistors to power a second-generation transformer engine for accelerating inferencing. There is also support for fifth-generation NVLink and NVLink Switch connectivity for GPU clusters with speeds of up to 1.8 terabytes per second of bidirectional throughput, which means Blackwell could process the entire bandwidth of the Internet in just 11 units. Blackwell is being integrated into The GB100 and GB200 superchip systems which focus on Tensor core performance and can be combined into new clusters of water-cooled units of up to 72 Blackwell GPUs. Time Stamps: 0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown 1:18 - CHIPS Act Package is Worth $19.5 Billion 6:12 - Zscaler Acquires Zero-Trust AI Pioneer Avalor 9:05 - Broadcom and Astera Labs Competing in PCIe and Retimer Space 13:03 - Broadcom Announces First Co-Packaged Optics for Scalable AI Systems 17:35 - Mustafa Suleyman to Lead Copilot for Microsoft 21:50 - Selector AIOps Solution Integrates GenAI 25:22 - NVIDIA GTC News and NVIDIA Blackwell Systems 39:52 - The Weeks Ahead 42:22 - Thanks for Watching Follow our Hosts on Social Media Tom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerd Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT #Rundown, #NVIDIAGTC, #NVIDIABlackwell, #AI, #CHIPSAct, #Security, #PCIe, #CXL, #Networking, #Copilot, #GenAI, #XFD11, #EFD3, #MFD11, #ADFD1, @GestaltIT, @SFoskett, @NetworkingNerd, @TheFuturumGroup, @TechFieldDay, @NVIDIA, @Microsoft, @SelectorAI, @Broadcom, @ZScaler, @AsteraLabs, @Intel, @IntelBusiness,
This week's EYE ON NPI is a sweet valentine, as the Bard famously spoke "What's in a connector? That which we call a Hirose DF40F Series Board-to-Board connector by any other word would smell as sweet" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_rose_by_any_other_name_would_smell_as_sweet). OK, well, maybe we chocolate-fudged that reference a bit but it's still a perfect day for lovers of reliable products from Hirose as today we're looking at the Hirose DF40F and friends (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/h/hirose/df40f-series-board-to-board-connectors) - diamond-rock solid connectors that mate together perfectly like perfect partners. Ok, I know your number one question, it's how to pronounce Hirose (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4wd9qEZV5A) - is it "high rose"? We got ya, it's "hero say"! And they are definitely heroes when it comes to designing connectors, with well-thought-out components that you probably use all the time. For example, did you know that the ultra-popular u.FL connector (https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/h/hirose/ufl-series) used almost in every RF product is from Hirose (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hirose_U.FL), patented by them in 1993 (https://patents.google.com/patent/US5180315)? Hirose DF40 connectors have popped up in many developer boards, due to their high density and ease-of-use. The first time we saw them was on the Intel Edison boards (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Edison), which featured a 70-pin DF40 (https://www.adafruit.com/product/2227) for high speed USB or SDIO interfaces. More recently, the same DF40 family is seen on the popular Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 (https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/raspberry-pi/SC0696/13530919), as dual 100 pin connectors that pass USB, Ethernet, PCIe, eMMC, DVI, DSI and CSI MIPI, and DPI parallel TFT displays. You can check out Shawn Hymel's guide on making an adapter board for the CM4 if you want tips on laying out and soldering DF40's (https://www.digikey.com/en/maker/projects/creating-a-raspberry-pi-compute-module-4-cm4-carrier-board-in-kicad/7812da347e5e409aa28d59ea2aaea490) And looking at the specs for the DF40 series (https://www.hirose.com/product/series/DF40) we see that these connectors are very well 'rounded': they can handle high voltages like 30V AC or DC, high speeds up to 10 Gbps, and fairly high currents 0.3A per pin - just double or triple up pins if you need more current capacity. That means you don't need separate power connectors and can power single board linux computers like the CM4 directly over the same connectors that pass HDMI and PCIe data for reliable and compact connectivity. Compared to 2.54mm or 2mm pitch headers, you don't have to worry about pins getting bent or the high offset height from IDC connectors because the Hirose DF40 series can be as low as 2mm, or as high as 4mm if you need height for component clearance. They're good for at least 30 mating cycles, with grooves to help align for easy mate and de-mate, just make sure to press down flat in the center and lift from two opposite edges so you minimize torque. If you have a submodule or multi-stacked board design and you need a low-profile, high-speed and high-power connector, the Hirose DF40F series of board-to-board connectors (https://www.digikey.com/short/dnr4r5j1) is trusted and reliable by many. I think of Hirose as the "YKK Zippers" of connectors (https://ykkamericas.com/products/zippers/): if you design a $100 board and it fails because of a poorly crafted $1 connector, the quality and reputation of your product is damaged - but if you use a reliable, enjoyable connector that makes good contact each time, the quality and reputation is enhanced! You can order DF40 and DF40F series in a wide series of sizes and configurations from DigiKey (https://www.digikey.com/short/dt70d4t0) all in stock right now and available for immediate shipment, like FTD (https://www.ftd.com/). Book today and your favorite Hirose connectors will ship instantly so that you can get to stacking and snapping by tomorrow afternoon.
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.
Interview with Bob Zona of Microchip's Clock and Timing Business Unit. Clock and Timing solutions are essential for all types of digital systems, from the growing use of computing and communication in automotive to the extreme conditions of space. Bob Zona, Senior Product Marketing Manager at Microchip, talks about the company's unique abilities in MEMS oscillators that make Microchip the leader in the clock and timing and field. With the broadest Clock and Timing portfolio in the industry, spanning atomic clocks, RTCCs, PCIe timing, and 60 years of experience, Microchip offers system designers the timing solutions and expertise they need to develop successful products. Find out more about Microchip's Clock and Timing products here https://www.microchip.com/en-us/products/clock-and-timing Time Stamps [01:19] Microchip products and ‘swapability' of products [2:52] The need for specialist products in the clock tree [3:51] Microchip's strengths in the timing market [07:52] Unique manufacturing capability gives end-to-end control [09:15] Benefits of MEMS compared to quartz clocks [10:59] Applications for Microchip MEMS family [14:13] Working with other BUs on complete timing systems solutions [16:44] Unusual applications for MC products [18:22] Designing a timing system [19:21] Takeaway – Microchip in timing Follow Bob Bob Zona on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bob-zona-12b1812/ If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe to our podcast for more discussions about Microchip's smart, connected and secure embedded control solutions and connect with us on social media to stay updated on upcoming episodes. We'd also appreciate it if you could leave us a review on your favorite podcast platform. Want more? Look out for more upcoming podcasts from Microchip: Beyond the Microchip So much of our daily lives are controlled or influenced by electronics. We rely on GPS to direct us, we hit "brew" on our coffee machines for our mornin' cup of Joe, we wave our hands over a sensor to get running water from a faucet, and press a button to open our garage doors. But do we really know what's going on inside? Are we aware of the universe of technology and calculations going on right under our nose? Beyond the Microchip takes you inside the world of Embedded Control technologies to understand how the chips and sensors we can't see impact our lives in dramatic ways. They remind us why we have and embrace technology, to enhance the human experience. Join us each episode as we look at an aspect of our daily lives that shapes what it means to be human and how we can empower the innovation that enhances that experience through Microchip Technology. Subscribe to Beyond the Microchip wherever you get your podcasts.
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
دوای نزیکەی ١٢ ساڵ کۆتایی بە ماکبووکەم هات ٤٠ ساڵ بەر لە ئێستا ئەپڵ کۆمپیوتەری لیزای خستەوە لەبەردەم وەچەی چواری usb و خێرایی ٨٠گێگابیت بۆ چرکەیە خێرایی وەچەی نوێی PCIe 5 کە دەچێت بۆ ١٢٨گێگا گواستنەوە بۆ چرکەیەک وەچەی نوێی فایبەر ئۆپتیک بەرەو ٤٠٠ گێگابیت بۆ چرکەیەک ئەم هەموو خێراییە بۆ کوێ بەرین، لە کاتێکدا ڕێژەی ڕەهای خەڵکی ئەم سەرزەمینە لە کێشەی پێداویستی سەرەتایین ناکرێت لە داهاتوودا جیاووازییەکەی نێو جیهانی پێشکەوتوو و سێیەم ببن بە گەردوونێکی تر؟ پێوستی ئاپ بە سیستەمی کارپێکردن یان دەکرێت بەس پەڕەیەکی وێب بن؟ بۆچی وێبگەڕەکان لەسەر ios درەنگ نوێکاریەکانیان پێدەگات؟ ئابونەی ئاپەکان لەکاتی فرۆشتن لە ڕێگای AppStore. - سیا نەریمان - ئاڵان هیلال بەهیوای کاتێکی بەسوودی لەگەڵ ببەنە سەر. https://www.youtube.com/@chawg-org #چاوگ #پۆدکاستی_چاوگ
► Thanks to Lexar for sponsoring this video! Check them out at the links below! Lexar CES Press Release: https://bit.ly/3U7xDmr PLAY M.2 2230 PCIe 4.0 SSD 1TB: https://amzn.to/48F9IP4 NM800 Pro with Heatsink 2TB: https://bit.ly/47ou3XU ► Check out today's hottest tech deals here: https://www.ufd.deals/ https://geni.us/mrCy7q https://geni.us/xmKx https://geni.us/R3LOaA 0:00 - Intro 00:31 - Battlemage Still Coming: https://tinyurl.com/ywrvtjmh 01:20 - Sponsor 02:38 - 40 SUPER: https://tinyurl.com/ylqpmvso https://tinyurl.com/yq9weyt2 https://tinyurl.com/yldx9a5n 04:12 - MSI Claw: https://tinyurl.com/ykpoeyhc 05:54 - DualSense V2: https://tinyurl.com/yuxr3ejk https://tinyurl.com/ynhfmq73 06:49 - UFD Deals: https://www.ufd.deals https://geni.us/mrCy7q https://geni.us/xmKx https://geni.us/R3LOaA 07:35 - Hertz Chucking EVs: https://tinyurl.com/ylch98fv 08:42 - Twitch Layoffs: https://tinyurl.com/ynrw9lyw 09:08 - Ayaneo Next Lite With “SteamOS”: https://tinyurl.com/ytlgpepf https://tinyurl.com/ykbw963x 10:03 - AMD's New CPUs: https://tinyurl.com/yuydrlab https://tinyurl.com/ywxm5d27 11:30 - AFMF on Jan 24: https://tinyurl.com/ykqfbs94 12:12 - 7600 XT: https://tinyurl.com/ykmbbrou https://tinyurl.com/ykmuqthy 14:33 - Comment Response ► Follow me on Twitch - http://www.twitch.tv/ufdisciple ► Join Our Discord: https://discord.gg/GduJmEM ► Support Us on Floatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ufdtech ► Support Us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/UFDTech ► Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/UFDTech ► Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/ufdtech ► Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/ufd_tech ► Reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/UFDTech/ Presenter: Brett Sticklemonster Videographer: Brett Sticklemonster Editor: Rikus Strauss Thumbnail Designer: Reece Hill
- SC23 stats - Exascale update and future - Raft of new chips - Quantum Village at SC23 - UCIe, PCIe, Ultra Ethernet [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/HPCNB_20231120.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20231120 appeared first on OrionX.net.
In another packed DF Direct Weekly, we find Rich, John and Oliver taking a first look at the Modern Warfare 3 campaign, Oliver shares his thoughts on the Apple M3 launch, John talks Gran Turismo 7 updates and Super Mario RPG, while Rich tests out Marvel's Spider-Man 2 on the worst PS5 SSD upgrade available... hobbled to run at PCIe x1 bandwidth. Does the game still work? 0:00:00 Introduction 0:01:05 News 01: Modern Warfare 3 campaign launches in early access 0:20:28 News 02: Apple announces M3 line of Mac chips 0:36:58 News 03: Gran Turismo 7 updated with new track, cars, 4-player splitscreen 0:43:36 News 04: How does Spider-Man 2 work on the slowest PS5 SSD? 0:53:16 News 05: Super Mario RPG previewed! 0:58:11 News 06: Switch OLED: does it burn in? 1:05:59 News 07: EA WRC: problematic PC performance 1:18:31 Supporter Q1: What OLED would you recommend to someone who enjoys both new and old games? 1:26:31 Supporter Q2: What are your hopes for the Max Payne remakes' use of Northlight? 1:35:32 Supporter Q3: For retro themed games and collections, what can developers do to improve low-res visuals? 1:40:49 Supporter Q4: Some people seem to be rejecting graphical improvements - what are your thoughts? 1:49:39 Supporter Q5: Do you think Metroid Prime 4 will skip the current Switch and ship only on the upcoming Switch? 1:53:22 Supporter Q6: Is there a market for publishers to release older games without upgrades? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week on the Great Search, we've had our eyes on the new Pi 5 announcement - they're not shipping yet but we did get some tantalizing new images including a new PCIe connector on board. PCIe is a high speed bus that will make it a lot easier to add hardware to a Pi computer, including storage cards, cell modules, radios, and co-processors (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI_Express) that can use 1 lane of data. A PCIe HAT is expected from Raspberry Pi at some point, and there's a few folks trying to make adapters for M.2, which we covered on The Great Search earlier (https://blog.adafruit.com/2020/10/27/the-great-search-m-2-e-key-connectors-thegreatsearch-digikey-digikey-adafruit/) So this time around let's look for PCIe sockets. We'll try to find one that is SMT and vertical, so a wide variety of cards can be inserted.
Prejuicios por el fondo de tus videollamadas / Intel Irlanda arranca los 4 nm / Raspberry Pi 5 por sorpresa / Redada de Nvidia en Francia / Diseña tu propia galaxia Patrocinador: Por fin llega a los cines The Creator, una de las películas de ciencia ficción más esperada. Se estrena el 29 de septiembre y que no te puedes perder por nada del mundo. Dirigida por Gareth Edwards (su primera película tras Rogue One), estoy seguro que The Creator será un clásico instantáneo. — ¿Has visto ya el trailer? Prejuicios por el fondo de tus videollamadas / Intel Irlanda arranca los 4 nm / Raspberry Pi 5 por sorpresa / Redada de Nvidia en Francia / Diseña tu propia galaxia
In this episode of the Infrastructure Matters podcast, hosts Steven Dickens and Camberley Bates, discuss highlights from the Flash Memory Summit (FMS), which covers various aspects of data storage and technology beyond flash and two remarkable women in the industry who received awards: Amber Huffman from Google and Amy Fowler from Pure Storage. They also touch on technological advancements, including PCIe Gen 5 and innovative cooling systems for dense disc drives. They also talk about the Panel discussion from FMS on the CHIPS Act of 2022, how it has progressed in the last 12 months and key governmental actions that have been taken. Topics include: Highlights from the Flash Memory Summit with advancements in technologies like PCIe Gen 5 and innovative cooling systems for dense disc drives The CHIPS Act of 2022, a government initiative investing in R&D and semiconductor manufacturing, is examined, emphasizing its nationwide approach and geopolitical implications Increasing role of technology in industries, such as automobiles and the collaboration with Qualcomm and Cadillac
A Look into Recent vRAN Developments and How Key Players such as Marvell, Intel, Ericsson, Samsung, and Nokia Have Juiced vRAN Innovation In this episode of The 5G Factor, our series that focuses on all things 5G, the IoT, and the ecosystem as a whole, The Futurum Group's Ron Westfall is joined by colleague and fellow analyst, Todd R. Weiss, for a look at the top 5G developments, including recent vRAN developments and how key players such as Marvell, Intel, Ericsson, Samsung, and Nokia Have Juiced vRAN innovation. Our conversation underscored: Intel Delivers vRAN Boost to 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable Processors Samsung and Intel Expand vRAN Collaboration Ericsson on Board for Intel's 18A Process Marvell OCTEON Fusion Font of vRAN Innovation Join us for this eye-opening conversation!
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
We are now launching our dedicated new YouTube and Twitter! Any help in amplifying our podcast would be greatly appreciated, and of course, tell your friends! Notable followon discussions collected on Twitter, Reddit, Reddit, Reddit, HN, and HN. Please don't obsess too much over the GPT4 discussion as it is mostly rumor; we spent much more time on tinybox/tinygrad on which George is the foremost authority!We are excited to share the world's first interview with George Hotz on the tiny corp!If you don't know George, he was the first person to unlock the iPhone, jailbreak the PS3, went on to start Comma.ai, and briefly “interned” at the Elon Musk-run Twitter. Tinycorp is the company behind the deep learning framework tinygrad, as well as the recently announced tinybox, a new $15,000 “luxury AI computer” aimed at local model training and inference, aka your “personal compute cluster”:* 738 FP16 TFLOPS* 144 GB GPU RAM* 5.76 TB/s RAM bandwidth* 30 GB/s model load bandwidth (big llama loads in around 4 seconds)* AMD EPYC CPU* 1600W (one 120V outlet)* Runs 65B FP16 LLaMA out of the box (using tinygrad, subject to software development risks)(In the episode, we also talked about the future of the tinybox as the intelligence center of every home that will help run models, at-home robots, and more. Make sure to check the timestamps
AFTER × E103 • S04E15 It's dangerous to go alone! Take this: Shownotes Sony, because reasons Vision Pro display resolution shown off in Sony video | ↗ 9to5Mac
Listen in to our interview with Larry O'Connor, Founder and CEO of Other World Computing. He has lots of information for us following the 2023 WWDC (Apple's Developer Conference Keynote). He was particularly impressed with the new 15 inch MacBook Air, and the MacPro M2 Ultra (that was demo'd with OWC's 8M2 Accelsior PCIe SSD!). Larry also updates us on OWC's Docks, Innergize Software, Atlas Cards and Readers, the new version of Soft RAID, 7.5, and more. Visit Apple's MacPro page and check out the MacPro. Scroll down to Footnote #14 and check out what Apple says about the 16TB OWC Accelsior 8M2 chip in that PCIE slot. :) If you enjoy our podcast, please subscribe and tell all your friends about us! We love our listeners. And, if you have ideas for segments, write to OWCRadio@catania.us. We are always up for new ideas! ABOUT OWC: Other World Computing, under the leadership of Larry O'Connor since he was 15 years old, has expanded to all corners of the world and works every day to create hardware and software that make the lives of creatives and business-oriented companies faster, more efficient and more stable. Go to MacSales.com for more information and to discover an ecosystem that serves your needs. As Larry says, "Our dedication to excellence and sustainable innovation extends beyond our day-to-day business and into the community. We strive for zero waste, both environmentally and strategically. Our outlook is to the long term, and in everything we do, we look for simplicity in action and sustainability in practice. For us, it's as much about building exceptional relationships, as it is about building exceptional products." ABOUT OUR HOST: Filmmaker Cirina Catania, the Co-Founder and prior Executive Director of the Sundance Film Festival, and Founder and Lead Creative at The Catania Group Global, has been involved as a writer, director, producer, cinematographer or marketing exec on over 150 film, television and new media projects for the big screen as well as for networks such as National Geographic, Discovery, etc. She was a senior executive at MGM-UA and United Artists and is a member of the WGA-West, the PGA, IATSE Local 600, NPPA, the National Press Club, and more. Cirina lives in San Diego, D.C. and Berlin when she is not on the road filming for her projects or for clients, or speaking as a tech evangelist for companies such as Blackmagic Design and Lumberjack System. Cirina is the Founder and Executive Director of the High Media Collective (HSMC) a national nonprofit with top industry mentors bringing media literacy and new career pathways to classrooms across the country. Cirina Catania edited this edition of OWC RADiO on Final Cut and Lumberjack's Builder. It was recorded on a OWC Elektron SSD with a Shure SM7B microphone, all driven by the MacPro and archived on an OWC Flex 8 and stored on a Jupiter Callisto server. Music from Artlist. OWC's introduction recorded by Ted Limpert. If you'd like to know more, please contact us.
We are unimpressed by Apple's new headset, a particularly bountiful watering hole attack, misdirection from the AI industry, and connecting hard disks via a PCIe card. Plugs Support us on patreon OpenZFS, Your Data and the Challenge of Ransomware News Apple Vision Pro Hololens dev Twitter thread (archived version) Some Curseforge accounts might […]
Here's the Supporter-only Q&A from April 20th, 2023. All comments and questions are fielded through the supporter service Q&A page. Please consider supporting this channel via monthly support services, tips, or even just by using our affiliate links to purchase things you were already going to buy anyway, at no extra cost to you: https://www.retrorgb.com/support.html These are also available as an audio-only podcast: https://anchor.fm/retrorgb T-Shirts: https://retrorgb.link/tshirts Amazon Recommended List: http://retrorgb.link/amazon TIMESTAMPS (please assume all links are affiliate links): 00:00 Thanks for your support!: https://www.retrorgb.com/support.html 00:28 Sony 127w Composite & S-Video Input Card 01:58 SNES Digital Audio Mod Info 06:19 Portable gaming monitor?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08NSW5F8V?linkCode=sl1&tag=retrorgb-20 07:51 Where to sell a 20L5 or 14L5?: https://www.patreon.com/retrotechUSA 09:57 Which Wii rev can output the best quality video over analog and with this mod?: https://www.retrorgb.com/wii-hdmi-kit-compatible-with-all-non-mini-models.html 12:35 HDMI 16x4 matrix switch? Or maybe a 16x1, plus this?: https://amzn.to/41F2yXq 14:15 How to get ahold of Voultar (LOLLLLLLL) What about Louis?: https://www.youtube.com/@ZezRetro eBay General Affiliate Link: http://ebay.us/Dv0BVk Amazon General Affiliate Link: https://www.amazon.com/?tag=retrorgb-20&linkCode=ez 21:38 PCIe to M2 converter for old video card??? Is 60fps interlaced actually 30fps? If not, why? CRT Color Calibration: https://www.retrorgb.com/crt-color-calibration-series.html 24:04 2023 TV's I'm interested in: Lower Priced (not quite ‘cheap' though): https://amzn.to/3FR35gK Samsung: https://amzn.to/3jJ8bDG LG: https://amzn.to/40qpkBx AWESOME HDTV Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@hdtvtest Voultar's cheap digital HDMI rant (I actually agree with it) 32:58 Mic test!!!: https://www.amazon.com/shop/retrorgb/list/3MQMVMOI8SFOT?ref_=aip_sf_list_spv_ofs_mixed_d Workflow Video: https://youtu.be/Wlopp_q_l0M --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/retrorgb/support
Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC hardware topics. In this episode the gang is joined by special guest Jarred Walton from @tomshardware to chat about the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 reviews, which CPU is the best for gaming, PCIe 5.0 SSD testing, and of course we answer your questions live! Read Brad's RTX 4070 review: https://www.pcworld.com/article/1781139/nvidia-geforce-rtx-4070-review.html Watch Jarred's RTX 4070 review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=por2IzH0ayQ Buy The Full Nerd merch: https://crowdmade.com/collections/pcworld Join the PC related discussions and ask us questions on Discord: https://discord.gg/SGPRSy7 Follow the crew on Twitter: @GordonUng @BradChacos @MorphingBall @KeithPlaysPC @AdamPMurray Follow PCWorld for all things PC! ---------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=PCWorldVideos TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/PCWorldUS TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/pcworld
Yes, Brad built a new PC. Seriously! For this momentous occasion, we got together to talk all things PC-building, starting with some early impressions of the new build and then heading off into tangents on ludicrous ray tracing performance, the ongoing mystery of PCIe lanes, working with the executive motherboard, the terror of the land grid array, and more.Download Fan Control here: https://github.com/Rem0o/FanControl.ReleasesSupport the Pod! Contribute to the Tech Pod Patreon and get access to our booming Discord, your name in the credits, and other great benefits! You can support the show at: https://patreon.com/techpod