Podcasts about Xeon

  • 143PODCASTS
  • 435EPISODES
  • 37mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Mar 12, 2025LATEST
Xeon

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Xeon

Latest podcast episodes about Xeon

WALL STREET COLADA
Inflación en la Mira, Alianza en Semiconductores y Salesforce Apuesta por IA.

WALL STREET COLADA

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 4:18


En este episodio, analizamos los eventos más relevantes que están impactando los mercados y sectores clave: Mercados en alza mientras entran en vigor los aranceles: Wall Street sube mientras las tarifas del 25% a importaciones de acero y aluminio entran en vigor. La atención del mercado está en el CPI de febrero, con una inflación esperada del 2.9%, clave para la próxima decisión de la Fed. Super Micro Computer y la revolución en Edge AI: $SMCI integrará los nuevos procesadores Xeon 6 de $INTC en sus servidores, prometiendo mayor eficiencia energética y capacidad en redes de telecomunicaciones e inteligencia artificial en el borde de la red. Salesforce expande su presencia en Singapur con inversión de $1B: $CRM busca acelerar la adopción de su plataforma de IA, Agentforce, mientras colabora con Singapore Airlines para desarrollar soluciones de gestión de clientes impulsadas por IA. TSMC propone una alianza con Intel para su división de fundición: $TSM busca operar la manufactura de chips de $INTC con el respaldo de $NVDA, $AMD y $AVGO. Analizamos el impacto de esta movida en la industria y la posible aprobación de la administración Trump. Acompáñanos para entender cómo estos eventos están moldeando los mercados, la tecnología y la innovación global. ¡Un episodio cargado de análisis estratégico!

Choses à Savoir TECH
Intel bientôt racheté par des géants de la Tech ?

Choses à Savoir TECH

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 2:01


Intel pourrait bientôt vivre un tournant majeur. Selon le Wall Street Journal, le géant des semi-conducteurs envisagerait de vendre sa division de conception de puces, incluant les célèbres processeurs Core et Xeon, à Broadcom. Mais cette acquisition dépendrait d'une condition cruciale : la reprise des usines de fabrication d'Intel par une autre entreprise.C'est là que TSMC entre en jeu. Le leader taïwanais de la production de puces examinerait la possibilité de racheter une partie ou l'intégralité des sites de production d'Intel, notamment ceux situés aux États-Unis. Bien que ces discussions soient encore préliminaires, elles surviennent à un moment critique pour Intel, confronté à d'importantes difficultés financières. Le groupe a récemment annoncé un plan de réduction des coûts de 10 milliards de dollars, impliquant la suppression de plus de 15 000 emplois.Pour financer cette opération, l'idée d'un consortium prend forme. Celui-ci pourrait inclure d'autres concepteurs de puces ainsi que des sociétés de capital-investissement, répartissant ainsi les risques financiers et stratégiques de l'acquisition. Une donnée politique s'ajoute à cette équation complexe : l'administration Trump aurait encouragé TSMC à explorer cette opportunité pour maintenir la production de puces sur le sol américain. Toutefois, un responsable de la Maison Blanche a indiqué que le président Trump ne soutiendrait probablement pas le contrôle d'une entreprise étrangère sur des usines américaines aussi stratégiques.En coulisses, Frank Yeary, président exécutif par intérim d'Intel, aurait déjà engagé des discussions avec l'administration Trump et les dirigeants de TSMC pour séparer les activités de fabrication et de conception de puces. Cette stratégie permettrait à Intel de se concentrer sur ses points forts pour mieux rivaliser avec des concurrents comme AMD et NVIDIA. Si l'accord concerne principalement les usines américaines, il pourrait aussi inclure des sites en Irlande et en Israël. Mais avant de concrétiser cette restructuration historique, de nombreux défis restent à relever, notamment l'approbation réglementaire et l'impact sur l'industrie mondiale des semi-conducteurs. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

RadioBorsa - La tua guida controcorrente per investire bene nella Borsa e nella Vita
Tassi in calo: come parcheggiare la liquidità nel 2025 tra Euro e Dollaro

RadioBorsa - La tua guida controcorrente per investire bene nella Borsa e nella Vita

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 23:38


Puoi visionare il video completo su Youtube a questo link:https://youtu.be/IBMGhzL09NAExpert Risponde:"Buongiorno, seguo con interesse i vostri video, in particolare mi hanno colpito quelli di Barbara Giani sulle obbligazioni. Se possibile vi sottopongo questo domanda: Ormai da 1 anno e mezzo “parcheggio” la mia liquidità per possibili esigenze di breve termine su XEON.Ho visto che i rendimenti stanno scendendo e in ottica di taglio dei tassi della BCE, conviene ancora utilizzare questo strumento o è opportuno valutarne altri? Potrebbe essere più efficiente iniziare a investire nel breve termine in USD visti i rendimenti più elevati? Grazie"Per inviare le vostre domande: info@soldiexpert.com

Vidas en red Spreaker
241010 Docker Xeon

Vidas en red Spreaker

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 23:43


MIS EQUIPOS EN VENTA: https://www.vidasenred.com/2024/06/ventas-en-red-surface-pro-x-y-lenovo.htmlTelegram Isla difusión: https://t.me/+M46yiWO_BJU2NzkySuscríbete a mi podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/user/vidasenredMi canal en Odysee: https://odysee.com/@vidasenred:8En Pocket Cast: https://pca.st/podcast/38707740-c7a5-012f-7f6b-723c91aeae46Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@juliomm1

Audio News
INTEL Y AWS SE ASOCIAN PARA IMPULSAR LA FABRICACIÓN DE CHIPS

Audio News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 4:49


Como parte de una colaboración multimillonaria y a largo plazo, Intel producirá un chip AI Fabric en Intel 18A y un chip Xeon 6 en Intel 3 para AWS, ampliando así su colaboración para impulsar la fabricación de chips en EE. UU. Este acuerdo acelerará el desarrollo de la industria de semiconductores, especialmente en Ohio, reforzando la competitividad tecnológica de Estados Unidos.

The Full Nerd
Episode 318: Wendell Talks Lunar Lake & Xeon 6 Reviews

The Full Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 137:59


Join The Full Nerd gang as they talk about the latest PC building news. In this episode the gang is joined by special guest Wendell from  @Level1Techs  to talk about Lunar Lake, Xeon 6 reviews, more. And of course we answer your questions live! Links - Lunar Lake: https://www.pcworld.com/article/2463714/tested-intels-lunar-lake-wants-you-to-forget-snapdragon-ever-existed.html - Lunar Lake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QB1u4mjpBQI - Xeon 6: https://youtu.be/HXGKl-DpQB4?si=Vuof0LqI9GzZ0yum 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.

The Daily Business & Finance Show
Rithm's Stock Move, Crowded Shorts, Visa Monopoly Suit (+5 more stories)

The Daily Business & Finance Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 5:56


The Daily Business and Finance Show - Tuesday, 24 September 2024 We get our business and finance news from Seeking Alpha and you should too! Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium for more in-depth market news and help support this podcast. Free for 14-days! Please click here for more info: Subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium News Today's headlines: Rithm Capital announces public offering of common stock The top five short crowded stocks in each U.S. sector Justice Department sues Visa, alleging monopoly in debit card market Coca-Cola pulls the plug on Coke Spiced Intel launches enterprise AI solutions Xeon 6, Gaudi 3 The top quant-rated China stocks by Seeking Alpha McKesson cut to Neutral at Baird on “unusual” sell side event Nvidia trends up as Blackwell release date nears Explanations from OpenAI ChatGPT API with proprietary prompts. This podcast provides information only and should not be construed as financial or business advice. This podcast is produced by Klassic Studios Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The VectorVest Stock Market Podcast
Is the Intel and Amazon Alliance a Gamechanger? | VectorVest

The VectorVest Stock Market Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2024 9:07


Send us a texthttps://youtu.be/nbpWEe-nKGYTry VectorVest Risk-Free ➥➥➥ https://www.vectorvest.com/YTIntel and Amazon Web Services (AWS) entered into a multi-year, multi-billion-dollarchip deal aimed at boosting AI and cloud computing capabilities. This deal strengthens Intel's foundry business by having it produce custom chips for AWS, including an AI fabric chip using Intel's advanced 18A process node and a custom Xeon 6 chip on Intel 3 technology. This marks a significant expansion of the companies' long-term partnership, which began in 2006. This deal helps Intel gain traction in the AI chip market and reinforces AWS's leadership in cloud infrastructure by enabling more specialized hardware for its customers. Is the news worth the Investment?

The CyberWire
Spamageddon: Xeon Sender's cloudy SMS attack revealed! [Research Saturday]

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2024 18:57


Alex Delamotte, Threat Researcher from SentinelOne Labs, joins to share their work on "Xeon Sender | SMS Spam Shipping Multi-Tool Targeting SaaS Credentials." SentinelOne's Labs team has uncovered new research on Xeon Sender, a cloud hacktool used to launch SMS spam attacks via legitimate APIs like Amazon SNS. First seen in 2022, this tool has been repurposed by multiple threat actors and distributed on underground forums, highlighting the ongoing trend of SMS spam through cloud services and SaaS. The research can be found here: Xeon Sender | SMS Spam Shipping Multi-Tool Targeting SaaS Credentials Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Research Saturday
Spamageddon: Xeon Sender's cloudy SMS attack revealed!

Research Saturday

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2024 18:57


Alex Delamotte, Threat Researcher from SentinelOne Labs, joins to share their work on "Xeon Sender | SMS Spam Shipping Multi-Tool Targeting SaaS Credentials." SentinelOne's Labs team has uncovered new research on Xeon Sender, a cloud hacktool used to launch SMS spam attacks via legitimate APIs like Amazon SNS. First seen in 2022, this tool has been repurposed by multiple threat actors and distributed on underground forums, highlighting the ongoing trend of SMS spam through cloud services and SaaS. The research can be found here: Xeon Sender | SMS Spam Shipping Multi-Tool Targeting SaaS Credentials Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Broken Silicon
271. Intel Raptor Lake & Xeon Issues, AMD Zen 5, RDNA 4, Nvidia AI | Server Engineer

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2024 123:18


An anonymous server engineer joins to discuss the latest Zen vulnerabilities, and confidence in Intel. [SPON: Use "brokensilicon“ at CDKeyOffer to get Win 11 Pro for $23: https://www.cdkeyoffer.com/cko/Moore11 ] [SPON: Use “brokensilicon” to get $30 OFF the Minisforum MS-A1: https://shrsl.com/4n656 ] [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] 0:00 Anonymous Server Engineer's thoughts on CrowdStrike 5:46 AMD Zen 5 and the Legacy of Zen 3 Milan 14:33 P-Cores vs E-Cores vs c-Cores 25:52 Intel vs AMD Q2 2024 Earnings 35:54 Should Pat Gelsinger step down? 39:15 Are Raptor Lake failures worse than Spectre/MDS? 50:53 AMD Security Vulnerabilities 1:02:43 Will bad Zen 5 reviews influence server? Will ARM replace x86? 1:12:46 Nvidia Dominance & AI 1:24:44 MI300X, Strix Halo, AI Hype 1:36:47 The Future of Server and De-Clouding 1:46:45 Should Zen 5c come to AM5? Do we need more than 256 Cores? 1:51:06 Shocking Intel Employee Testimonial Last Episode he was on: https://youtu.be/bdnb7Mq9vFk?si=1PkZeVYRP5JDc8Qm Last Full Episode he was on: https://youtu.be/sVN9LrWREBs?si=TG65d3y-9rk3dy7d https://www.phoronix.com/review/ryzen-9950x-windows11-ubuntu/8 https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amd-records-its-highest-server-market-share-in-decades-but-intel-fights-back-in-client-pcs https://www.nextplatform.com/2024/08/02/the-resurrection-of-intel-will-take-more-than-three-days/

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman
Intel's Computex Report Card - Six Five on the Road

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 23:33


On this episode of the Six Five on the Road, Daniel Newman and Patrick Moorhead break down the latest developments and key messages shared by Intel at Computex 2024. Their discussion covers: Intel's showing at Computex 2024  The announcements of Xeon 6 for the data center, AI accelerators Gaudi 2 & 3, and AI PC processor Lunar Lake The execution of Lunar Lake and Xeon 6 processors (which are on time or even ahead of schedule) Intel's AI PC strategy  The need to show more real-world use cases for Gaudi in the data center   Learn more at Intel at Computex 2024.

Morgans AM
Wednesday, 5 June 2024: Fresh job openings data suggested the labour market continued to cool in April

Morgans AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 5:01


US equity markets edged higher after fresh job openings data suggested the labour market continued to cool in April - Dow gained +140-points or +0.36%. Cisco Systems Inc rose +1.65% after it launched a US$1B fund to invest in artificial intelligence (AI) startups. Intel Corp fell -0.86% slipped 0.9% after unveiling its next-generation Xeon 6 AI data centre chips at the Computex trade fair in Taipei alongside other leading chipmakers. The next-generation chips come in two types: a more powerful processor to handle the workload of larger AI infrastructure requirements, and an efficiency model, which the company has positioned as a replacement for earlier-generation chips.

ITmedia PC USER
Intelが「Xeon 6プロセッサ」の詳細を発表 コンパクトな「6700シリーズ」と大型の「6900シリーズ」の2本立て

ITmedia PC USER

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 0:52


Intelが「Xeon 6プロセッサ」の詳細を発表 コンパクトな「6700シリーズ」と大型の「6900シリーズ」の2本立て。 Intelは6月4日(台湾時間)、データセンター/HPC向けCPU「Xeon 6プロセッサ」を正式発表した。小型パッケージの「Xeon 6 6700シリーズ」と、大型パッケージの「Xeon 6 6900シリーズ」の2本立てで、それぞれに高性能コア(Pコア/開発コード名:Granite Rapids)搭載モデルと高効率コア(Eコア/開発コード名:Sierra Forest)搭載モデルを用意している。小型パッケージのEコアモデル(Xeon 6 6700Eシリーズ)を皮切りに、6月から2025年第1四半期にかけて順次発売される予定だ。

Morgans Financial Limited
Morgans AM: Wednesday, 5 June 2024

Morgans Financial Limited

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 5:00


US equity markets edged higher after fresh job openings data suggested the labour market continued to cool in April - Dow gained +140-points or +0.36%. Cisco Systems Inc rose +1.65% after it launched a US$1B fund to invest in artificial intelligence (AI) startups. Intel Corp fell -0.86% slipped 0.9% after unveiling its next-generation Xeon 6 AI data centre chips at the Computex trade fair in Taipei alongside other leading chipmakers. The next-generation chips come in two types: a more powerful processor to handle the workload of larger AI infrastructure requirements, and an efficiency model, which the company has positioned as a replacement for earlier-generation chips.

Construction Brothers
Build a Ballin' Rig (ft. Dell's Ken Flannigan)

Construction Brothers

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 51:40


00:00 - IntroductionWe start out today with some small talk–or maybe short talk–about online meetings. We share our complicated experiences with meeting people in person after establishing relationships online or over the phone. We also share some speculations about how avatars may affect this in the future. Then, of course, we express our affection for Bluey because… well, because he's Bluey. Then things briefly take a dark turn as Tyler shares some of his own dog blues.06:22 - Welcome, Ken Ken is Director of AEC Alliances and Solutions at Dell. In this role, he leads strategy related to the construction industry, geospatial industry, and some parts of the manufacturing industry. Ken's background is more in software than in hardware. He brings the voice of the industry into the engineering groups to help them understand how Dell's towers, laptops, and rugged hardware are used by people in industry. Ken shares about his work with drafting–from 2D AutoCAD to floor designs. He walks us through the path he followed into Revit design work and training and eventually consultant work. He worked as a BIM solution owner for Kone, a Finnish elevator company.Eddie asks about Kone elevators, and Ken geeks out in a way that reveals his detailer/designer roots.  13:28 - Tyler Goofs Up  Tyler raises the painful story about one of his recent interactions with Ken. It had to do with a rugged laptop that Ken graciously shared for a video shoot. Tyler decided to get kind of Tyler-ish with it and… Let's just say Tyler pushed it too far. The laptop handled an amazing array of challenges. Then Tyler saw the 40,000-pound boom lift. Tyler talks through the numerous other tests he conducted with the rugged laptop. Ken glosses over his request for a replacement laptop.18:51 - A Broad Update We ask Ken to bring us up-to-date on what's going on in computer technology within the construction industry. He talks about the numerous demands on computers operating in the current landscape. He touches on the annual updates to internal hardware components. With a growing number of demanding software packages, these updates make noticeable differences. We spend some time talking about AI integration and its effects on computer performance. This leads to a discussion about the NPU (neural processing unit) on Intel's 14th-gen processors. Ken explains how this low-latency unit can help to conduct behind-the-scenes performance enhancements.Tyler asks about reality capture and the use of AI with registration, stitching, and object classification. We get into some point-cloud talk and photogrammetry. Ken addresses the interplay among ISVs (independent software vendors) and computer companies. He also fesses up to using advanced features to make his house look clean during online meetings.25:50 - Helping the Lost Eddie raises the concern that many people feel overwhelmed or lost when choosing hardware that can meet the demands of their software. He also asks about battery life. Ken shares some scenarios related to battery consumption as well as the heat mitigation that affects computer performance. We discuss the need for computer down-time–proactive or reactive–that was needed while using early versions of Revit and other demanding software. Ken shares some early-career stories about workloads growing because his boss saw the cool things that he could do in design software. 32:42 - Processor Talk: Core vs. XeonTyler asks Ken to explain the difference between Core processors and Xeon processors. Ken explains that a Xeon processor is like a bus or a train that can get you and all of your friends to your destination reliably and quickly. A Core processor is like a Corvette, that can get just you and one friend to your destination, but will get you there really quickly. Ken also explains single-threading and multi-threading and how those things affect daily tasks.Eddie asks for some specific advice on devices. Ken explains the Precision 3680 is the bulldog of the industry as far as tower workstations, and he suggests that you load up on as much RAM as possible. He also discusses the benefits of graphics cards, including some specific NVIDIA GPUs. As far as mobile units–especially for reality-capture specialists–he recommends the 7780 Precision laptop. We discuss additional component specifics 41:58: Where Are We? Eddie asks if the industry is as far along as we think we are in computing. Ken discusses costs and processing power. Ken shares about the challenges of having an entire team that is properly trained and properly equipped to leverage the features that are out there. We also discuss how to cope with lacking IT support.49:14: Megaphone MessageKen wants the industry to know that you can't just throw more software at new challenges without investing some time in knowing what hardware is required to make that software operate at its full potential. Check out the partners that make our show possible.Find Us Online: BrosPodcast.com - LinkedIn - Youtube - Instagram - Facebook - TikTok - Eddie's LinkedIn - Tyler's LinkedInIf you enjoy the podcast, please rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to us! Thanks for listening!

@HPCpodcast with Shahin Khan and Doug Black

- Intel Vision 2024 Event, Intel Gaudi 3, Xeon 6 - Meta MTIA accelerator chip - Nvidia GPU shortage easing - Category Theory, Categorical Deep Learning, Geometric Deep Learning - China economic growth plans, high end manufacturing industrial policy [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/HPCNB_20240415.mp3"][/audio] The post HPC News Bytes – 20240415 appeared first on OrionX.net.

backspace.fm
#532:【前編】2024年のテックトレンドを予想する

backspace.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2024 83:16


ポッドキャストを始めて10周年の記念すべき回では、レギュラー3人が、それぞれの得意分野で2024年の技術動向を予想しました。▽番組からお知らせ番組10周年記念キャンペーン!1/20までBSM年間購読が半額です。購読はこちらのURLまたはクーポンコード BSM2024 で適用されます。https://backspace.fm/bsm2024▽トピックオープニング / 善司さん予想▽関連リンク@backspacefm / TwitterBSマガジンYouTube版 #532「第5世代Xeonスケーラブルプロセッサ」はどう変わったのか? その秘密を技術解説する▽レギュラースポンサーこの番組はフェンリル株式会社の提供でお届けしております。backspace専用マストドンインスタンス、通称グルドンはさくらインターネットのサポートを受けて運用しています。backspace.fmでは我々の活動を応援してくれるスポンサーを募集しています。興味がある方はぜひこちらにて連絡ください!drikin+backspacefm@gmail.comこの番組は Riverside.fm を使ってリモート収録しています。 Riverside.fmはビデオ通話をしながら高音質ファイルを同時に収録することができる、ポッドキャストなどのリモート収録に特化したサービスです。興味がある方はぜひこちらをチェックしてみてください。https://bit.ly/RiversideFM_BackspaceSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Broken Silicon
236. Nvidia 4070 SUPER Release Date, Meteor Lake Review, PS5 Pro, Intel Emerald Xeon

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 142:56


We leak Nvidia SUPER supply details, internal issues at Intel, and discuss the latest news! [SPON: Join Xsolla Metasites demo here: https://clik.cc/mooreslawisdead and shape the future!] [SPON: Use "brokensilicon“ at CDKeyOffer $16 Win10: https://www.cdkeyoffer.com/cko/Moore10 ] [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] #christmas #windows11 #cdkeyoffer 0:00 Dan's Recovery, Traveling North for Christmas (Intro Banter) 4:54 Realistic RDNA 4 Performance (Corrections) 10:59 Nvidia 40 SUPER Release Dates & Supply Whispers 19:11 Intel Emerald Rapids Launches, and it seems good! 26:19 MI300X & MI300A Revealed at AI Show 34:30 AMD Hawk Point Revealed, Zen 5 Strix Teased 44:08 Meteor Lake Released with Limited Early Reviews 56:05 Remember that Desktop MTL was Cancelled 1:01:15 Why MTL's specific issues are worrisome for Intel's Future 1:15:55 Is Intel's 4 the issue? Will Hawk Point get any better Reviews? 1:22:48 PlayStation 5 Pro Rumored to Launch 2024 1:31:25 Why 16GB of GDDR6 & Zen 2 could make sense 1:42:29 GTA VI Announced!!! 1:49:38 XSX $399, TLOU Factions Cancelled, E3 Cancelled (Wrap-Up) 2:02:17 Game Awards, Nvidia + AMD Frame Gen, Next Gen Features (Final RM) [SPON: Get $25 OFF at Microcenter when you submit your Build: https://micro.center/cpnh ] https://videocardz.com/newz/nvidia-geforce-rtx-40-super-review-and-sales-embargo-information-leaks-out https://youtu.be/W5K8GM2fNDM?si=22wUQAGX2y8bui2g https://youtu.be/KQYort4XIfI?si=KAFLl0ee0lcTXlhg https://www.techpowerup.com/316758/intel-emerald-rapids-xeon-platinum-8592-tested-shows-20-improvement-over-sapphire-rapids https://www.phoronix.com/review/intel-xeon-platinum-8592 https://www.servethehome.com/5th-gen-intel-xeon-scalable-emerald-rapids-resets-servers-by-intel/ https://videocardz.com/press-release/intel-launches-5th-gen-xeon-scalable-emerald-rapids-up-to-64-cores-and-320-mb-of-cache https://www.youtube.com/live/tfSZqjxsr0M?si=vxVai8hkcCa39v5m https://www.servethehome.com/amd-instinct-mi300x-gpu-and-mi300a-apus-launched-for-ai-era/ https://youtu.be/bqZZPJCg3mU?si=qOkH3bg7B8WbZEXG https://www.anandtech.com/show/21177/amd-unveils-ryzen-8040-mobile-series-apus-hawk-point-with-zen-4-and-ryzen-ai https://www.anandtech.com/show/21185/intel-releases-core-ultra-h-and-u-series-processors-meteor-lake-brings-ai-and-arc-to-ultra-thin-notebooks https://youtu.be/Jw-apgUOpHk?si=qqjaASvd21FLR5f_ https://youtu.be/aowqsIKcYPc?si=zG_sKGutGAufzv6g https://www.resetera.com/threads/tom-henderson-ps5-pro-specs-and-release-window-details-codenamed-trinity-30wgps-18000mts-memory-speed-november-2024-target.744703/page-63?post=116078280#post-116078280 https://twitter.com/kepler_l2/status/1734129960434950655 https://twitter.com/_tom_henderson_/status/1734126081878135051 https://youtu.be/Qlqq7JrJujI?si=ptfEiGYwGN55obAr&t=472 https://youtu.be/X6RSEU1d-g8?si=5TbZ6MxJMMXUMsIA&t=200 https://kotaku.com/gta-6-vi-pc-port-next-gen-ps5-xbox-series-x-trailer-1851072350 https://youtu.be/QdBZY2fkU-0?si=ZFKU6_jxiSIIRjud https://videocardz.com/newz/xbox-series-x-drops-to-399-in-us-series-s-at-239 https://www.naughtydog.com/blog/an_update_on_the_last_of_us_online https://twitter.com/E3/status/1734583493592498437 https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1734325207710552305 https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-epyc-turin-cpus-have-been-pictured-up-to-128-zen5-or-192-zen5c-cores https://www.techpowerup.com/316762/amd-ryzen-8000g-socket-am5-desktop-apu-lineup-detailed https://www.techpowerup.com/316752/amd-releases-fsr-3-source-code-on-gpuopen https://www.techpowerup.com/316721/nvidia-geforce-rtx-4080-super-rtx-4070-ti-super-and-rtx-4070-super-release-dates-leaked https://youtu.be/KXwwueQ7SXQ?si=G7W5_nU7Y3fnpUk7 https://quasarzone.com/bbs/qc_plan/views/34540 https://videocardz.com/newz/intels-canceled-meteor-lake-s-cpu-for-lga-1851-socket-has-been-pictured

Cyber Security Inside
182. Uncovering Insights from Listeners' Top Voices in Sustainability 2023

Cyber Security Inside

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 16:04


In this episode of InTechnology, Camille delves into a roundup of our most popular listener topics on sustainability in 2023. The first topic is green software with Asim Hussain, Director of Green Software and Ecosystems at Intel. The second covers electricity mapping featuring Olivier Corradi, Founder and CEO of Electricity Maps. Finally, on this roundup is energy efficiency in the cloud with Lily Looi, Intel Fellow as well as Chief Power Architect of Intel's Xeon product line.  Listen to the full episode (EP 137) - WTM: Green Software with Asim Hussain. Listen to the full episode (EP 147) with Olivier Corradi – How Green Is Your Electricity? Listen to the full episode (EP 148) - WTM: Energy Efficiency In The Cloud with Lily Looi.   The views and opinions expressed are those of the guests and author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Intel Corporation.

Stupid Wise Girl
Episode 101: How To Be 1 of 1 With The Most Influential Man Michael Giuliano

Stupid Wise Girl

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023 44:10


Michael Giuliano is an American entrepreneur and scholar that has independently designed, developed, patented, and commercialized products in excess of $2,000,000,000 USD.He has a mastery level in the areas of Business Intelligence, Predictive Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, Organizational Change, Corporate Alignment, Data Science, Quantitative Analytics, Machine Learning, AntiGravitics, and Neural Networks. An active board member and volunteer at several top rated Engineering and Business Schools.  He currently serves as a paid Chairman of the Board for several of the top echelon leadership organizations including Special Forces, Cyber, Tactical, and Corporations.Michael started his career at tech-giant Intel® as a microchip manufacturing engineer earning distinct Engineering honors spanning some of the highest-profile product launches on record in the digital and mobility spaces (including X-Box®, Apple®, Xeon®,and Pentium4®) and served as Intel's First Lean Content Expert at their Flagship Plant.Clients and collaborators include the global "who's who" of brands including: Intel, Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Disney, Coca-Cola, Altria, Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Louis Vuitton, McDonald's, Toyota, Honda, Nike, Cisco, SAP, Oracle, Verizon, GE, Budweiser, IBM, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, American Express, L'Oréal, Gucci, Hermès, General Motors, Nestles, Home Depot, Starbucks, Sony, FedEx, UPS, YellowRoadway, AmerisourceBergen, ClevelandClinic, Stryker, Medtronic, and more.Michael is most recognized as the US Patent & Trademark Owner of certifiedlean®, he has led and trained thousands globally in Lean, Product Development, Rapid Prototyping, and Hoshin Kanri spanning nearly every industry, discipline, and profession.  In 2014, he proudly donated his “certified-lean®" mark to Ohio University, which has been formally incorporated into the Industrial and Systems Engineering Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees as well as professional online certifications across the globe.Listen to this episode to hear what it takes to have a disciplined mindset and be able to stay focused and become unstoppable.Follow Michael on Instagram Support the showFollow Jackie Minsky on Instagram Send a message and let Jackie know what you love, what you want more of on the show

The Cloud Pod
227: The Cloud Pod Peeps at Azure's Explicit Proxy

The Cloud Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 51:58


Vidas en red Spreaker
Episodio 207 - Ideas a poner en marcha

Vidas en red Spreaker

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2023 12:58


Estas son algunas ideas que me rondan la cabeza.

Gestalt IT Rundown
Intel, Arm, AMD, and More Announcements from Hot Chips 2023 | Gestalt IT Rundown: August 30, 2023

Gestalt IT Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 43:42


At Hot Chips 2023, Intel unveiled Sierra Forest and Granite Rapids Xeon processors targeting data centers. Sierra Forest is Intel's first E-core Xeon with 144 CPU cores, while Granite Rapids focuses on core performance. Arm introduced Neoverse Compute Subsystem, aiding Neoverse N2 core integration. AMD previewed Siena Epyc processors for edge computing with up to 64 cores, notable power efficiency, and a compact form, catering to the edge computing market's demands. Time Stamps: 0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown 1:06 - Google Revs Up Storage Offerings 4:09 - Arm Files for a NASDAQ Listing 7:20 - Apica Aquires LOGIC.AI and Raises $10 Million in Funding 9:40 - Cisco and Nutanix Form Global Partnership 12:54 - IBM Bumps Tape to 50TB 16:28 - Europe's DSA Hits Big Internet Platforms 20:30 - Intel Previews Next Xeons 29:02 - Arm Presents Neoverse V2 and CSS at Hot Chips 2023 33:50 - AMD Siena Targets Devices at the Edge 38:51 - More Fun Announcements from Hot Chips 2023 41:37 - The Weeks Ahead 42:35 - 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, #HotChips2023, #IntelXeon, #NeoverseV2, #AMDSiena, #DSA, #Storage, #Multicloud, #Security, @GestaltIT, @Google, @Arm, @GoogleCloud, @ApicaSystems, @LogicAIbsc, @Nutanix, @Cisco, @IBM, @IntelBusiness, @AMD, @SFoskett, @NetworkingNerd,

Futurum Tech Podcast
The 5G Factor: Intel, Marvell, Ericsson, Samsung, Nokia Advance vRAN

Futurum Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 20:05


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!

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman
The Six Five On the Road at VMware Explore 2023 with Intel's Chris Tobias

The Six Five with Patrick Moorhead and Daniel Newman

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2023 16:43


On this episode of The Six Five – On The Road, hosts Daniel Newman and Patrick Moorhead welcome Chris Tobias, GM, Americas Technology Leadership/Global Platform ISV Account Team at Intel Corporation for a conversation during VMWare Explore in Las Vegas. Their discussion covers: The evolution in the industry of running everything on the core CPU to now using more specific accelerators and how impacts Intel's strategy Why Intel has chosen a cores and accelerator strategy for Xeon processors, and what workloads these accelerators address Details on their AI accelerator, Intel AMX  How Intel AMX compares to a discrete GPU, as well as software and frameworks

Broken Silicon
213. Intel's Sapphire Rapids DISASTER delays AMD Zen 4 Threadripper | DAW Engineer

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 141:06


An Audio Workstation Expert joins to discuss AMD, Xeon, and the future of Intel! [SPON: Use “MLID50” for $50 OFF an i7 + A770M NUC: https://tinyurl.com/y25ef5x5 ] [SPON: dieshrink = 3% off Everything, brokensilicon = 25% off Windows: https://biitt.ly/shbSk ] [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] 7:17 Challenges in Leaking Intel and AMD Information 14:11 Building Workstations for Virtual Orchestras 24:11 What truly makes DAWs different from traditional Workstations? 31:20 Importance of Reliable Power Supplies & Minimizing Components 47:08 Why Zen hasn't been good for Audio Workstations until NOW 53:23 How Intel Fishhawk Falls has failed to live up to Expectations 1:00:03 Why Intel Sapphire Rapids Workstations are a DISASTER 1:06:07 Sapphire Rapids has Misleading Power Requirements 1:20:05 Why AMD doesn't care about Releasing Zen 4 Threadripper 1:43:08 How do we feel about Intel's Future? What about E-Cores? 1:52:20 SPR-R Whispers, Quality Audio, Sound Cards Vin's Company: https://aavimt.com.au/ Vin's Podcast: https://dawbench.libsyn.com/ Vin's Co-Host on DAWBench: https://www.linkedin.com/in/petebrown/ https://www.tomshardware.com/news/bug-forces-intel-to-halt-sapphire-rapids-shipments https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-resumes-shipping-xeon-mcc-processors-after-bug-is-mitigated https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-xeon-granite-rapids-d-to-come-in-two-variants https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/233483/intel-xeon-w93495x-processor-105m-cache-1-90-ghz/specifications.html Not Der8auer, this is who Vin Referenced: https://skatterbencher.com/2023/03/29/skatterbencher-59-intel-xeon-w7-2495x-overclocked-to-5200-mhz/

#AskTheCEO Podcast
Sustainable Computing: Challenges and Opportunities for Enterprises

#AskTheCEO Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 14:12


This episode is sponsored by Intel® Intel® just launched its 4th Generation Xeon® Scalable processor, which is geared towards its Enterprise customer base. To learn more about how Intel solves sustainability challenges, I had a conversation with Stephanie Schmidt, who is the Senior Director, Data Center Product Sustainability with Intel. The key takeaways of the conversation are as follows: • Sustainability is a key issue: With the increasing demand for compute, data center energy consumption, waste, and water use are also growing, making sustainability a critical consideration for enterprises. Inefficient infrastructure can emit increasing amounts of carbon, especially as compute demand increases, creating a big challenge for enterprises. • Sustainability can drive business growth: Sustainability can be a differentiator for businesses and lead to new monetization opportunities. It reduces costs, drives value, and is a huge driver for innovation, making it a selling point for sustainable products and solutions. • Energy efficiency is driving tech innovation: Sustainability is driving tech innovation and new solutions. For example, AI-based telemetry and immersion cooling can reduce electricity consumption, and modularity can reduce carbon footprint. Intel offers software that autonomously and continuously optimizes applications in the cloud, reducing CPU utilization while still meeting performance and latency goals. Contact Stephanie: Web: https://intel.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-schmidt-sustainability/ Contact Avrohom: Web: https://asktheceo.biz LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/avrohom-gottheil/ Facebook: AvrohomGottheil Twitter: @avrohomg Instagram: @avrohomg INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS: [00:31] One of the topics on everyone's minds is sustainability. As you know, there are many public initiatives focused on it. We have the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals, as well as many individual government initiatives that are focused on the health of our planet. With that on our minds, what are some of the challenges enterprises face when considering options for refreshing their aging infrastructure? [03:53] What are some of the ways businesses go about attaining their sustainability goals, while still keeping their CFO happy because at the end of the day, it's the economics that will drive the growth of their business? [08:17] Can you share some case studies on how the 4th generation Intel scalable processor addresses sustainability? [11:32] How can people connect with you to learn more about the 4th generation Xeon scalable processor? [12:33] Do you have any parting words of wisdom to share with the audience? Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/2xYgEp7lmo8

Gestalt IT Rundown
Intel's Transformation Continues | Gestalt IT Rundown: April 19, 2023

Gestalt IT Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 36:00


Intel made a couple of big moves this week. The first was the surprise news that they are exiting the server market. No, they aren't giving up on Xeons and they are going to get Sapphire Rapids out the door. Instead, they are selling off their server integration business. The recipient of this windfall is MiTAC, an edge-to-cloud solutions provider and ODM partner of DSG. Intel is giving MiTAC the rights to manufacture existing designs. In addition, they announced the end of their Blockscale ASIC line which was used primarily by Bitcoin miners. Intel said that they are continuing to focus on IDM 2.0 operations. Stephen, we've talked a lot about Intel but the transformation seems to be accelerating! Time Stamps: 0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown 0:46 - Solo.io Gloos a New Fabric 4:16 - Western Digital Hackers Have the Goods 7:32 - Emerson Acquires NI 10:54 - Prosimo Launches Cloud-Native Networking Suite 15:04 - Amazon's Edge Gateway Goes to OCP 18:49 - Intel's Transformation Continues 32:37 - The Weeks Ahead 34:15 - Thanks for Watching Follow our hosts on Social MediaTom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerdStephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Follow Gestalt ITWebsite: https://www.GestaltIT.com/Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltITLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1789 Tags: #Rundown, #Gloo, #Ransomware, #CloudNative, #Networking, #EdgeComputing, #Edge, #EdgeGateway, #Xeon, #Servers, #Automation, @SoloIO_Inc, @WesternDigital, @EMR_Automation, @Prosimo_IO, @AWSCloud, @Intel, @IntelBusiness, #NFDx, #ArubaAtmosphere

Screaming in the Cloud
Hacking Old Hardware and Developer Advocate Presentations with Darko Mesaroš

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 27:46


Darko Mesaroš, Senior Developer Advocate at AWS, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss all the weird and wonderful things that can be done with old hardware, as well as the necessary skills for being a successful Developer Advocate. Darko walks through how he managed to deploy Kubernetes on a computer from 1986, as well as the trade-offs we've made in computer technology as hardware has progressed. Corey and Darko also explore the forgotten art of optimizing when you're developing, and how it can help to cut costs. Darko also shares what he feels is the key skill every Developer Advocate needs to have, and walks through how he has structured his presentations to ensure he is captivating and delivering value to his audience.About DarkoDarko is a Senior Developer Advocate based in Seattle, WA. His goal is to share his passion and technological know-how with Engineers, Developers, Builders, and tech enthusiasts across the world. If it can be automated, Darko will definitely try to do so. Most of his focus is towards DevOps and Management Tools, where automation, pipelines, and efficient developer tools is the name of the game – click less and code more so you do not repeat yourself ! Darko also collects a lot of old technology and tries to make it do what it should not. Like deploy AWS infrastructure through a Commodore 64.Links Referenced: AWS: https://aws.amazon.com/ Blog post RE deploying Kubernetes on a TRS-80: https://www.buildon.aws/posts/i-deployed-kubernetes-with-a-1986-tandy-102-portable-computer AWS Twitch: https://twitch.tv/aws Twitter: https://twitter.com/darkosubotica Mastodon: https://hachyderm.io/@darkosubotica TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Chronosphere. When it costs more money and time to observe your environment than it does to build it, there's a problem. With Chronosphere, you can shape and transform observability data based on need, context and utility. Learn how to only store the useful data you need to see in order to reduce costs and improve performance at chronosphere.io/corey-quinn. That's chronosphere.io/corey-quinn. And my thanks to them for sponsor ing my ridiculous nonsense. Corey: Do you wish your developers had less permanent access to AWS? Has the complexity of Amazon's reference architecture for temporary elevated access caused you to sob uncontrollably? With Sym, you can protect your cloud infrastructure with customizable, just-in-time access workflows that can be setup in minutes. By automating the access request lifecycle, Sym helps you reduce the scope of default access while keeping your developers moving quickly. Say goodbye to your cloud access woes with Sym. Go to symops.com/corey to learn more. That's S-Y-M-O-P-S.com/coreyCorey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and my guest today is almost as bizarre as I am, in a somewhat similar direction. Darko Mesaroš is a Senior Developer Advocate at AWS. And instead of following my path of inappropriately using things as databases that weren't designed to be used that way, he instead uses the latest of technology with the earliest of computers. Darko, thank you for joining me.Darko: Thank you so much, Corey. First of all, you know, you tell me, Darko is a senior developer advocate. No, Corey. I'm a system administrator by heart. I happen to be a developer advocate these days, but I was born in the cold, cold racks of a data center. I maintain systems, I've installed packages on Linux systems. I even set up Solaris Zones a long time ago. So yeah, but I happen to yell into the camera these days, [laugh] so thank you for having me here.Corey: No, no, it goes well. You started my career as a sysadmin. And honestly, my opinion, if you asked me—which no one does, but I share it anyway—is that the difference between an SRE and a sysadmin is about a 40% salary bump.Darko: Exactly.Corey: That's about it. It is effectively the same job. The tools are different, the approach we take is different, but the fundamental mandate of ‘keep the site up' has not materially changed.Darko: It has not. I don't know, like, what the modern SRS do, but like, I used to also semi-maintain AC units. Like, you have to walk around with a screwdriver nonetheless, so sometimes, besides just installing the freshest packages on your Red Hat 4 system, you have to also change the filters in the AC. So, not sure if that belongs into the SRE manifesto these days.Corey: Well, the reason that I wound up inviting you onto the show was a recent blog post you put up where you were able to deploy Kubernetes from the best computer from 1986, which is the TRS-80, or the Trash-80. For the record, the worst computer from 1986 was—and remains—IBM Cloud. But that's neither here nor there.What does it mean to deploy Kubernetes because, to be direct, the way that I tend to deploy anything these days, if you know, I'm sensible and being grown up about it, is a Git push and then the automation takes it away from there. I get the sense, you went a little bit deep.Darko: So, when it comes to deploying stuff from an old computer, like, you know, you kind of said the right thing here, like, I have the best computer from 1986. Actually, it's a portable version of the best computer from 1986; it's a TRS-80 Model 102. It's a portable, basically a little computer intended for journalists and people on the go to write stuff and send emails or whatever it was back in those days. And I deployed Kubernetes through that system. Now, of course, I cheated a bit because the way I did it is I just used it as a glorified terminal.I just hooked up the RS 232, the wonderful serial connection, to a Raspberry Pi somewhere out there and it just showed the stuff from a Raspberry Pi onto the TRS-80. So, the TRS-80 didn't actually know how to run kubectl—or ‘kube cuddle,' what they call it—it just asked somebody else to do it. But that's kind of the magic of it.Corey: You could have done a Lambda deployment then just as easily.Darko: Absolutely. Like that's the magic of, like, these old hunks of junks is that when you get down to it, they still do things with numbers and transmit electrical signals through some wires somewhere out there. So, if you're capable enough, if you are savvy, or if you just have a lot of time, you can take any old computer and have it do modern things, especially now. Like, and I will say 15 years ago, we could have not done anything like this because 15 years ago, a lot of the stuff at least that I was involved with, which was Microsoft products, were click only. I couldn't, for the love of me, deploy a bunch of stuff on an Active Directory domain by using a command line. PowerShell was not a thing back then. You could use VB Script, but sort of.Corey: Couldn't you wind up using something that would effect, like, Selenium or whatnot that winds up emulating a user session and moving the mouse to certain coordinates and clicking and then waiting some arbitrary time and clicking somewhere else?Darko: Yes.Corey: Which sounds like the absolute worst version of automation ever. That's like, “I deployed Kubernetes using a typewriter.” “Well, how the hell did you do that?” “Oh, I use the typewriter to hit the enter key. Problem solved.” But I don't think that counts.Darko: Well, yeah, so actually even back then, like, just thinking of, like, a 10, 12-year step back to my career, I automated stuff on Windows systems—like Windows 2000, and Windows 2003 systems—by a tool called AutoIt. It would literally emulate clicks of a mouse on a specific location on the screen. So, you were just really hoping that window pops up at the same place all the time. Otherwise, your automation doesn't work. So yeah, it was kind of like that.And so, if you look at it that way, I could take my Trash-80, I could write an AutoIt script with specific coordinates, and I could deploy Windows things. So actually, yeah, you can deploy anything with these days, with an old computer.Corey: I think that we've lost something in the world of computers. If I, like, throw a computer at you these days, you're going to be pretty annoyed with me. Those things are expensive, it'll probably break, et cetera. If I throw a computer from this era at you, your family is taking bereavement leave. Like, those things where—there would be no second hit.These things were beefy. They were a sense of solidity to them. The keyboards were phenomenal. We've been chasing that high ever since. And, yeah, they were obnoxiously heavy and the battery life was 20 seconds, but it was still something that—you felt like it is computer time. And now, all these things have faded into the background. I am not protesting the march of progress, particularly in this particular respect, but I do miss the sense of having keyboards didn't weren't overwhelmingly flimsy plastic.Darko: I think it's just a fact of, like, we have computers as commodities these days. Back then computers were workstations, computers were something you would buy to perform a specific tasks. Today, computer is anything from watching Twitch to going on Twitter, complaining about Twitter, to deploying Kubernetes, right? So, they have become such commodities such… I don't want to call them single-use items, but they're more becoming single-use items as time progresses because they're just not repairable anymore. Like, if you give me a computer that's five years old, I don't know what to do with it. I probably cannot fix it if it's broken. But if you give me a computer that's 35 years old, I bet you can fix it no matter what happened.Corey: And the sheer compute changes have come so fast and furious, it's easy to lose sight of them, especially with branding being more or less the same. But I saved up and took a additional loan out when I graduated high school to spend three grand on a Dell Inspiron laptop, this big beefy thing. And for fun, I checked the specs recently, and yep, that's a Raspberry Pi these days; they're $30, and it's not going to work super well to browse the web because it's underpowered. And I'm sitting here realizing wait a minute, even with a modern computer—forget the Raspberry Pi for a second—I'm sitting here and I'm pulling up web pages or opening Slack, or God forbid, Slack and Chrome simultaneously, and the fan spins up and it sounds incredibly anemic. And it's, these things are magical supercomputers from the future. Why are they churning this hard to show me a funny picture of a cat? What's going on here?Darko: So, my theory on this is… because we can. We can argue about this, but we currently—Corey: Oh, I think you're right.Darko: We have unlimited compute capacity in the world. Like, you can come up with an idea, you're probably going to find a supercomputer out there, you're probably going to find a cloud vendor out there that's going to give you all of the resources you need to perform this massive computation. So, we didn't really think about optimization as much as we used to do in the past. So, that's it: we can. Chrome doesn't care. You have 32 gigs of RAM, Corey. It doesn't care that it takes 28 gigs of that because you have—Corey: I have 128 gigs on this thing. I bought the Mac studio and maxed it out. I gave it the hostname of us-shitpost-1 and we run with it.Darko: [laugh]. There you go. But like, I did some fiddling around, like, recently with—and again, this is just the torture myself—I did some 6502 Assembly for the Atari 2600. 6502 is a CPU that's been used in many things, including the Commodore 64, the NES, and even a whole lot of Apple IIs, and whatnot. So, when you go down to the level of a computer that has 1.19 megahertz and it has only 128 bytes of RAM, you start to think about, okay, I can move these two numbers in memory in the following two ways: “Way number one will require four CPU cycles. Way number two will require seven CPU cycles. I'll go with way number one because it will save me three CPU cycles.”Corey: Oh, yeah. You take a look at some of the most advanced computer engineering out there and it's for embedded devices where—Darko: Yeah.Corey: You need to wind up building code to run in some very tight constraints, and that breeds creativity. And I remember those days. These days, it's well my computer is super-overpowered, what's it matter? In fact, when I go in and I look at customers' AWS bills, very often I'll start doing some digging, and sure enough, EC2 is always the number one expense—we accept that—but we take a look at the breakdown and invariably, there's one instance family and size that is the overwhelming majority, in most cases. You often a—I don't know—a c5.2xl or something or whatever it happens to be.Great. Why is that? And the answer—[unintelligible 00:10:17] to make sense is, “Well, we just started with that size and it seemed to work so we kept using it as our default.” When I'm building things, because I'm cheap, I take one of the smallest instances I possibly can—it used to be one of the Nanos and I'm sorry, half a gig or a gig of RAM is no longer really sufficient when I'm trying to build almost anything. Thanks, JavaScript. So okay, I've gone up a little bit.But at that point, when I need to do something that requires something beefier, well, I can provision those resources, but I don't have it as a default. That forces me to at least in the back of my mind, have a little bit of a sense of I should be parsimonious with what it is that I'm provisioning out there, which is apparently anathema to every data scientist I've ever met, but here we are.Darko: I mean, that's the thing, like, because we're so used to just having those resources, we don't really care about optimizations. Like, I'm not advocating that you all should go and just do assembly language. You should never do that, like, unless you're building embedded systems or you're working for something—Corey: If you need to use that level of programming, you know.Darko: Exactly.Corey: You already know and nothing you are going to talk about here is going to impact what people in that position are doing. Mostly you need to know assembly language because that's a weeder class and a lot of comp-sci programs and if you don't pass it, you don't graduate. That's the only reason to really know assembly language most of the time.Darko: But you know, like, it's also a thing, like, as a developer, right, think about the person using your thing, right? And they may have the 128 gig us—what is it you called it? Us-shitpost-1, right—that kind of power, kind of, the latest and greatest M2 Max Ultra Apple computer that just does all of the stuff. You may have a big ‘ol double Xeon workstation that does a thing.Or you just may have a Chromebook. Think about us with Chromebooks. Like, can I run your website properly? Did you really need all of those animations? Can you think about reducing the amount of animations depending on screen size? So, there's a lot of things that we need to kind of think about. Like, it goes back to the thing where ‘it works on my machine.' Oh, of course it works on your machine. You spent thousands of dollars on your machine. It's the best machine in the world. Of course, it runs smoothly.Corey: Wait 20 minutes and they'll release a new one, and now, “Who sold me this ancient piece of crap?” Honestly, the most depressing thing is watching an Apple Keynote because I love my computer until I watch the Apple Keynote and it's like, oh, like, “Look at this amazing keyboard,” and the keyboard I had was fine. It's like, “Who sold me this rickety piece of garbage?” And then we saw how the Apple butterfly keyboard worked out for everyone and who built that rickety piece of garbage. Let's go back again. And here we are.Darko: Exactly. So, that's kind of the thing, right? You know, like, your computer is the best. And if you develop for it, is great, but you always have to think other people who use it. Hence, containers are great to fix one part of that problem, but not all of the problems. So, there's a bunch of stuff you can do.And I think, like, for all of the developers out there, it's great what you're doing, you're building us so many tools, but always that take a step back and optimize stuff. Optimize, both for the end-user by the amount of JavaScript you're going to throw at me, and also for the back-end, think about if you have to run your web server on a Pentium III server, could you do it? And if you could, how bad would it be? And you don't have to run it on a Pentium III, but like, try to think about what's the bottom 5% of the capacity you need? So yeah, it's just—you'll save money. That's it. You'll save money, ultimately.Corey: So, I have to ask, what you do day to day is you're a senior developer advocate, which is, hmm, some words, yes. You spend a lot of your free time and public time talking about running ancient computers, but you also talk to customers who are looking forward, not back. How do you reconcile the two?Darko: So, I like to mix the two. There's a whole reason why I like old computers. Like, I grew up in Serbia. Like, when I was young in the '90s, I didn't have any of these computers. Like, I could only see, like, what was like a Macintosh from 1997 on TV and I would just drool. Like, I wouldn't even come close to thinking about getting that, let alone something better.So, I kind of missed all of that part. But now that I started collecting all of those old computers and just everything from the '80s and '90s, I've actually realized, well, these things are not that different from something else. So, I like to always make comparisons between, like, an old system. What does it actually do? How does it compare to a new system?So, I love to mix and match in my presentations. I like to mix it, mix and match in my videos. You saw my blog posts on deploying stuff. So, I think it's just a fun way to kind of create a little contrast. I do think we should still be moving forward. I do think that technology is getting better and better and it's going to help people do so much more things faster, hopefully cheaper, and hopefully better.So, I do think that we should definitely keep on moving forward. But I always have this nostalgic feeling about, like, old things and… sometimes I don't know why, but I miss the world without the internet. And I think that without the internet, I think I miss the world with dial-up internet. Because back then you would go on the internet for a purpose. You have to do a thing, you have to wait for a while, you have to make sure nobody's on the phone. And then—Corey: God forbid you dial into a long-distance call. And you have to figure out which town and which number would be long distance versus not, at least where I grew up, and your parents would lose their freaking minds because that was an $8 phone call, which you know, back in the '80s and early '90s was significant. And yeah, great. Now, I still think is a great prank opportunity to teach kids are something that it costs more to access websites that are far away, which I guess in theory, it kind of does, but not to the end-user. I digress.Darko: I have a story about this, and I'm going to take a little sidestep. But long-distance phone calls. Like in the '80s, the World Wide Web was not yet a thing. Like, the www, the websites all, just the general purpose internet was not yet a thing. We had things called BBSes, or Bulletin Board Systems. That was the extreme version of a dial-up system.You don't dial into the internet; you dial into a website. Imagine if you have a sole intent of visiting only one website and the cost of visiting such a website would depend on where that website currently is. If the website is in Germany and you're calling from Serbia, it's going to cost you a lot of money because you're calling internationally. I had a friend back then. The best software you can get were from American BBSes, but calling America from Serbia back then would have been prohibitively expensive, like, just insanely expensive.So, what this friend used to do, he figured out if he would be connected to a BBS six hours a day, it would actually reset the counter of his phone bill. It would loop through a mechanical counter from whatever number, it would loop back again to that number. So, it would take around six and some hours to complete the loop the entire phone counting metric—whatever they use back in the '80s—to kind of charge your bill, so it's effectively cost him zero money back then. So yeah, it was more expensive, kids, back then to call websites, the further away the websites were.[midroll 00:17:11]Corey: So, developer advocates do a lot of things. And I think it is unfair, but also true that people tend to shorthand those of those things do getting on stage and giving conference talks because that at least is the visible part of it. People see that and it's viscerally is understood that that takes work and a bit of courage for those who are not deep into public speaking and those who are, know it takes a lot of courage. And whereas writing a blog post, “Well, I have a keyboard and say dumb things on the internet all the time. I don't see why that's hard.” So, there's a definite perception story there. What's your take on giving technical presentations?Darko: So, yeah. Just as you said, like, I think being a DA, even in my head was always represented, like, oh, you're just on stage, you're traveling, you're doing presentations, you're doing all those things. But it's actually quite a lot more than that, right? We do a lot more. But still, we are the developer advocate. We are the front-facing thing towards you, the wonderful developers listening to this.And we tend to be on stage, we tend to do podcasts with wonderful internet personalities, we tend to do live streams, we tend to do videos. And I think one of the key skills that a DA needs to have—a Developer Advocate needs to have—is presentations, right? You need to be able to present a technical message in the best possible way. Now, being a good technical presenter doesn't mean you're funny, doesn't mean you're entertaining, that doesn't have to be a thing. You just need to take a complex technical message and deliver it in the best way possible so that everybody who has just given you their time, can get it fully.And this means—well, it means a lot of things, but it means taking this complicated topic, distilling it down so it can be digested within 30 to 45 minutes and it also needs to be… it needs to be interesting. Like, we can talk about the most interesting topic, but if I don't make it interesting, you're just going to walk out. So, I also lead, like, a coaching class within internally, like, to teach people how to speak better and I'm working with, like, really good speakers there, but a lot of the stuff I say applies to no matter if you're a top-level speaker, or if you're, like, just beginning out. And my challenge to all of you speakers out there, like, anybody who's listening to this and it has a plan to deliver a video, a keynote, a live stream or speak at a summit somewhere, is get outside of that box. Get outside of that PowerPoint box.I'm not saying PowerPoint is bad. I think PowerPoint is a wonderful tool, but I'm just saying you don't have to present in the way everybody else presents. The more memorable your presentation is, the more outside of that box it is, the more people will remember it. Again, you don't have to be funny. You don't have to be entertaining. You just have to take thing you are really passionate about and deliver it to us in the best possible way. What that best possible way is, well, it really depends. Like a lot of things, there is no concrete answer to this thing.Corey: One of the hard parts I found is that people will see a certain technical presenter that they like and want to emulate and they'll start trying to do what they do. And that works to a point. Like, “Well, I really enjoy how that presenter doesn't read their slides.” Yeah, that's a good thing to pick up. But past a certain point, other people's material starts to fit as well as other people's shoes and you've got to find your own path.My path has always been getting people's attention first via humor, but it's certainly not the only way. In many contexts, it's not even the most effective way. It works for me in the context in which I use it, but I assure you that when I'm presenting to clients, I don't start off with slapstick comedy. Usually. There are a couple of noteworthy exceptions because clients expect that for me, in some cases.Darko: I think one of the important things is that emulating somebody is okay, as you said, to an extent, like, just trying to figure out what the good things are, but good, very objectively good things. Never try to be funny if you're not funny. That's the thing where you can try comedy, but it's very difficult to—it's very difficult to do comedy if you're not that good at it. And I know that's very much a given, but a lot of people try to be funny when they're obviously not funny. And that's okay. You don't have to be funny.So, there are many of ways to get people's attentions, by again, just throwing a joke. What I did once on stage, I threw a bottle at the floor. I was just—I said, I said a thing and threw a bottle at the floor. Everybody started paying attention all of a sudden at me. I don't know why. So, it's going to be that. It can be something—it can be be a shocking statement. When I say shocking, I mean, something, well, not bad, but something that's potentially controversial. Like, for example, emacs is better than vim. I don't know, maybe—Corey: “Serverless is terrible.”Darko: Serverl—yeah.Corey: Like, it doesn't matter. It depends on the audience.Darko: It depends on the audience.Corey: “The cloud is a scam.” I gave a talk once called, “The Cloud is A Scam,” and it certainly got people's attention.Darko: Absolutely. So, breaking up the normal flow because as a participant of a show, of a presentation, you go there you expect, look, I'm going to sit down, Corey's going to come on stage and Corey says, “Hi, my name is Corey Quinn. I'm the CEO of The Duckbill Group. This is what I do. And welcome to my talk about blah.”Corey: Tactically, my business partner, Mike, is the CEO. I don't want to I don't want to step too close to that fire, let's be clear.Darko: Oh, okay [laugh]. Okay. Then, “Today's agenda is this. And slide one, slide two, slide three.” And that the expectation of the audience. And the audience comes in in this very autopilot way, like, “Okay, I'm just going to sit there and just nod my head as Corey speaks.”But then if Corey does a weird thing and Corey comes out in a bathtub. Just the bathtub and Corey. And Corey starts talking about how bathtubs are amazing, it's the best place to relax. “Oh, by the way, managing costs in the cloud is so easy, I can do it from a bathtub.” Right? All of a sudden, whoa [laugh], wait a second, this is something that's interesting. And then you can go through your rest of your conversation. But you just made a little—you ticked the box in our head, like, “Oh, this is something weird. This is different. I don't know what to expect anymore,” and people start paying more attention.Corey: “So, if you're managing AWS costs from your bathtub, what kind of computer do you use?” “In my case, a toaster.”Darko: [laugh]. Yes. But ultimately, like, some of those things are very good and they just kind of—they make you as a presenter, unpredictable, and that's a good thing. Because people will just want to sit on the edge of the seat and, like, listen to what you say because, I don't know what, maybe he throws that toaster in, right? I don't know. So, it is like that.And one of the things that you'll notice, Corey, especially if you see people who are more presenting for a longer time, like, they've been very common on events and people know them by name and their face, then that turns into, like, not just presenting but somebody comes, literally not because of the topic, but because they want to hear Corey talk about a thing. You can go there and talk about unicorns and cats, people will still come and listen to that because it's Corey Quinn. And that's where you, by getting outside of that box, getting outside of that ‘this is how we present things at company X,' this is what you get in the long run. People will know who you are people will know, what not to expect from your presentations, and they will ultimately be coming to your presentations to enjoy whatever you want to talk about.Corey: That is the dream. I really want to thank you for taking the time to talk so much about how you view the world and the state of ancient and modern technologies and the like. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Darko: The best way to find me is on twitch.tv/aws these days. So, you will find me live streaming twice a week there. You will find me on Twitter at @darkosubotica, which is my Twitter handle. You will find me at the same handle on Mastodon. And just search for my name Darko Mesaroš, I'm sure I'll pop up on MySpace as well or whatever. So, I'll post a lot of cloud-related things. I posted a lot of old computer-related things, so if you want to see me deploy Kubernetes through an Atari 2600, click that subscribe button or follow or whatever.Corey: And we will, of course, include a link to this in the show notes. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Darko: Thank you so much, Corey, for having me.Corey: Darko Mesaroš, senior developer advocate at AWS, Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry and insulting comment that you compose and submit from your IBM Selectric typewriter.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.

The History of Computing
The Story of Intel

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 16:51


We've talked about the history of microchips, transistors, and other chip makers. Today we're going to talk about Intel in a little more detail.  Intel is short for Integrated Electronics. They were founded in 1968 by Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore. Noyce was an Iowa kid who went off to MIT to get a PhD in physics in 1953. He went off to join the Shockley Semiconductor Lab to join up with William Shockley who'd developed the transistor as a means of bringing a solid-state alternative to vacuum tubes in computers and amplifiers. Shockley became erratic after he won the Nobel Prize and 8 of the researchers left, now known as the “traitorous eight.”  Between them came over 60 companies, including Intel - but first they went on to create a new company called Fairchild Semiconductor where Noyce invented the monolithic integrated circuit in 1959, or a single chip that contains multiple transistors.  After 10 years at Fairchild, Noyce joined up with coworker and fellow traitor Gordon Moore. Moore had gotten his PhD in chemistry from Caltech and had made an observation while at Fairchild that the number of transistors, resistors, diodes, or capacitors in an integrated circuit was doubling every year and so coined Moore's Law, that it would continue to to do so. They wanted to make semiconductor memory cheaper and more practical. They needed money to continue their research. Arthur Rock had helped them find a home at Fairchild when they left Shockley and helped them raise $2.5 million in backing in a couple of days.  The first day of the company, Andy Grove joined them from Fairchild. He'd fled the Hungarian revolution in the 50s and gotten a PhD in chemical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. Then came Leslie Vadász, another Hungarian emigrant. Funding and money coming in from sales allowed them to hire some of the best in the business. People like Ted Hoff , Federico Faggin, and Stan Mazor. That first year they released 64-bit static random-access memory in the 3101 chip, doubling what was on the market as well as the 3301 read-only memory chip, and the 1101. Then DRAM, or dynamic random-access memory in the 1103 in 1970, which became the bestselling chip within the first couple of years. Armed with a lineup of chips and an explosion of companies that wanted to buy the chips, they went public within 2 years of being founded. 1971 saw Dov Frohman develop erasable programmable read-only memory, or EPROM, while working on a different problem. This meant they could reprogram chips using ultraviolet light and electricity. In 1971 they also created the Intel 4004 chip, which was started in 1969 when a calculator manufacturer out of Japan ask them to develop 12 different chips. Instead they made one that could do all of the tasks of the 12, outperforming the ENIAC from 1946 and so the era of the microprocessor was born. And instead of taking up a basement at a university lab, it took up an eight of an inch by a sixth of an inch to hold a whopping 2,300 transistors. The chip didn't contribute a ton to the bottom line of the company, but they'd built the first true microprocessor, which would eventually be what they were known for. Instead they were making DRAM chips. But then came the 8008 in 1972, ushering in an 8-bit CPU. The memory chips were being used by other companies developing their own processors but they knew how and the Computer Terminal Corporation was looking to develop what was a trend for a hot minute, called programmable terminals. And given the doubling of speeds those gave way to microcomputers within just a few years. The Intel 8080 was a 2 MHz chip that became the basis of the Altair 8800, SOL-20, and IMSAI 8080. By then Motorola, Zilog, and MOS Technology were hot on their heals releasing the Z80 and 6802 processors. But Gary Kildall wrote CP/M, one of the first operating systems, initially for the 8080 prior to porting it to other chips. Sales had been good and Intel had been growing. By 1979 they saw the future was in chips and opened a new office in Haifa, Israiel, where they designed the 8088, which clocked in at 4.77 MHz. IBM chose this chip to be used in the original IBM Personal Computer. IBM was going to use an 8-bit chip, but the team at Microsoft talked them into going with the 16-bit 8088 and thus created the foundation of what would become the Wintel or Intel architecture, or x86, which would dominate the personal computer market for the next 40 years. One reason IBM trusted Intel is that they had proven to be innovators. They had effectively invented the integrated circuit, then the microprocessor, then coined Moore's Law, and by 1980 had built a 15,000 person company capable of shipping product in large quantities. They were intentional about culture, looking for openness, distributed decision making, and trading off bureaucracy for figuring out cool stuff. That IBM decision to use that Intel chip is one of the most impactful in the entire history of personal computers. Based on Microsoft DOS and then Windows being able to run on the architecture, nearly every laptop and desktop would run on that original 8088/86 architecture. Based on the standards, Intel and Microsoft would both market that their products ran not only on those IBM PCs but also on any PC using the same architecture and so IBM's hold on the computing world would slowly wither. On the back of all these chips, revenue shot past $1 billion for the first time in 1983. IBM bought 12 percent of the company in 1982 and thus gave them the Big Blue seal of approval, something important event today. And the hits kept on coming with the 286 to 486 chips coming along during the 1980s. Intel brought the 80286 to market and it was used in the IBM PC AT in 1984. This new chip brought new ways to manage addresses, the first that could do memory management, and the first Intel chip where we saw protected mode so we could get virtual memory and multi-tasking.  All of this was made possible with over a hundred thousand transistors. At the time the original Mac used a Motorola 68000 but the sales were sluggish while they flourished at IBM and slowly we saw the rise of the companies cloning the IBM architecture, like Compaq. Still using those Intel chips.  Jerry Sanders had actually left Fairchild a little before Noyce and Moore to found AMD and ended up cloning the instructions in the 80286, after entering into a technology exchange agreement with Intel. This led to AMD making the chips at volume and selling them on the open market. AMD would go on to fast-follow Intel for decades. The 80386 would go on to simply be known as the Intel 386, with over 275,000 transistors. It was launched in 1985, but we didn't see a lot of companies use them until the early 1990s. The 486 came in 1989. Now we were up to a million transistors as well as a math coprocessor. We were 50 times faster than the 4004 that had come out less than 20 years earlier.  I don't want to take anything away from the phenomenal run of research and development at Intel during this time but the chips and cores and amazing developments were on autopilot. The 80s also saw them invest half a billion in reinvigorating their manufacturing plants. With quality manufacturing allowing for a new era of printing chips, the 90s were just as good to Intel. I like to think of this as the Pentium decade with the first Pentium in 1993. 32-bit here we come. Revenues jumped 50 percent that year closing in on $9 billion. Intel had been running an advertising campaign around Intel Inside. This represented a shift from the IBM PC to the Intel. The Pentium Pro came in 1995 and we'd crossed 5 million transistors in each chip. And the brand equity was rising fast. More importantly, so was revenue. 1996 saw revenues pass $20 billion. The personal computer was showing up in homes and on desks across the world and most had Intel Inside - in fact we'd gone from Intel inside to Pentium Inside. 1997 brought us the Pentium II with over 7 million transistors, the Xeon came in 1998 for servers, and 1999 Pentium III. By 2000 they introduced the first gigahertz processor at Intel and they announced the next generation after Pentium: Itanium, finally moving the world to the 64 bit processor.  As processor speeds slowed they were able to bring multi-core processors and massive parallelism out of the hallowed halls of research and to the desktop computer in 2005. 2006 saw Intel go from just Windows to the Mac. And we got 45 nanometer logic technology in 2006 using hafnium-based high-k for transistor gates represented a shift from the silicon-gated transistors of the 60s and allowed them to move to hundreds of millions of transistors packed into a single chip. i3, i5, i7, an on. The chips now have over a couple hundred million transistors per core with 8 cores on a chip potentially putting us over 1.7 or 1.8 transistors per chip. Microsoft, IBM, Apple, and so many others went through huge growth and sales jumps then retreated dealing with how to run a company of the size they suddenly became. This led each to invest heavily into ending a lost decade effectively with R&D - like when IBM built the S/360 or Apple developed the iMac and then iPod. Intel's strategy had been research and development. Build amazing products and they sold. Bigger, faster, better. The focus had been on power. But mobile devices were starting to take the market by storm. And the ARM chip was more popular on those because with a reduced set of instructions they could use less power and be a bit more versatile.  Intel coined Moore's Law. They know that if they don't find ways to pack more and more transistors into smaller and smaller spaces then someone else will. And while they haven't been huge in the RISC-based System on a Chip space, they do continue to release new products and look for the right product-market fit. Just like they did when they went from more DRAM and SRAM to producing the types of chips that made them into a powerhouse. And on the back of a steadily rising revenue stream that's now over $77 billion they seem poised to be able to whether any storm. Not only on the back of R&D but also some of the best manufacturing in the industry.  Chips today are so powerful and small and contain the whole computer from the era of those Pentiums. Just as that 4004 chip contained a whole ENIAC. This gives us a nearly limitless canvas to design software. Machine learning on a SoC expands the reach of what that software can process. Technology is moving so fast in part because of the amazing work done at places like Intel, AMD, and ARM. Maybe that positronic brain that Asimov promised us isn't as far off as it seems. But then, I thought that in the 90s as well so I guess we'll see.        

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast
ThinkComputers Podcast #352 - HYTE Gaming Headset, Voodoo 5 6000 Resurfaces, RTX 4060 Specs & More!

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 62:44


This week on the podcast we talk about our reviews of the HYTE Eclipse HG10 Wireless Gaming Headset and Kingston Fury Renegade Gen4 Solid State Drive!  We also discuss a rare 3dfx Voodoo 5 6000 graphics card being sold, the RTX 4060 specifications, Intel's new XEON processors, Hogwarts Legacy launch & more!

#AskTheCEO Podcast
Solving Enterprise Security Challenges

#AskTheCEO Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 15:22


This episode is sponsored by Intel®. Discover how the 4th Gen Intel Xeon Processor is revolutionizing enterprise security with advanced threat protection, cloud security, and hardware security. Learn how to improve your IT infrastructure and protect your organization from cyber threats with this powerful solution. To learn more about how Intel solves enterprise security challenges, I had a conversation with Brian Richardson, who is the Security Marketing Lead for Intel Data Center & AI (DCAI) Marketing Product Strategy. The key takeaways of the conversation are as follows: • The main challenges that enterprises face in securing their infrastructure are the increasing number of cyberattacks, increasing regulation, and increased security spending. The traditional software approach to cyber security is no longer enough to stop attacks, which are becoming increasingly more sophisticated. • Confidential computing is a newer approach to protect data when it is in use, not just at rest or in transit, which is being focused on by Intel and the industry. • The fourth-generation Intel Scalable Processor addresses enterprise security needs by using technology, such as Intel SGX or Software Guard Extensions, to protect data in use. Contact Brian: Web: https://intel.com/ConfidentialComputing LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/richardsonbrian/ Twitter: @Intel_Brian Contact Avrohom: Web: https://asktheceo.biz LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/avrohom-gottheil/ Facebook: AvrohomGottheil Twitter: @avrohomg Instagram: @avrohomg INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS: [00:30] Intel just launched its 4th generation Xeon scalable processor, which is geared towards its Enterprise customer base. One of the topics on everyone's minds is security. As you know, data breaches are, unfortunately, a very common occurrence, and with that comes the risk of ransomware shutting down businesses and public services, not to mention the damage done to its reputation, which is virtually incalculable. With that on our minds, what are some of the challenges enterprises face when it comes to securing their infrastructure? [03:21] What are some of the ways enterprises go about solving their security challenges? [06:35] How does the 4th generation Intel scalable processor address enterprise security needs? [08:45] Can you share some case studies of the 4th generation Intel Xeon scalable processor in action? [12:57] How can people connect with you to learn more about the 4th generation Xeon scalable processor? [13:45] Do you have any parting words of wisdom to share with the audience? Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/i9PrWw4ljeg

Broken Silicon
189. Intel vs AMD Price War, Sapphire Rapids vs EPYC Genoa, i9-13900KS | Level1Techs

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 150:33


Wendell joins to discuss Xeon, EPYC, 13th Gen Releases, Threadripper, and more! [SPON: dieshrink = 3% off Everything, brokensilicon = 25% off Windows: https://biitt.ly/shbSk ] [SPON: Get 10% off Vite Ramen AND a FREE Pack w/ “MOORESLAW”: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] [SPON: Get 6% OFF Custom PCs & GPUs at https://www.silverknightpcs.com/ w/ brokensilicon] 0:00 Who is Wendell? What is a “Computer Janitor”? 10:27 i9-13900KS, i5-13500, DDR5-7200 Thoughts 16:30 Does Intel have anything to counter Zen 4 X3D & Ryzen non-X? 30:51 Sapphire Rapids - Is it actually competitive with Genoa? 38:13 Why Netflix and other customers don't want SPR's Accelerators… 48:09 Will licensing costs doom SPR? Would Wendell trade cores for accelerators? 58:53 Bergamo, Genoa-X, Siena Launch 2023 – Will SPR be Quadruple Teamed? 1:07:51 Can AMD get to 40% Server Market Share? Can Granite Rapids stop it? 1:16:16 Is AMD not being aggressive enough with Laptop and Threadripper? 1:22:27 Is AMD ROCm ready to take on Nvidia CUDA? 1:35:04 Threadripper vs Intel Fishhawk Falls 1:41:55 AMD's Strategy to take Laptop Market Share 1:52:31 6GHz Sever Chips, MI300, All-Cache Memory, X86 vs ARM 2:04:56 2023-2024 are Critical Years for determining Intel's Future… 2:20:20 Don't Forget – Incredible Performance Uplifts are Happening Yearly! https://www.youtube.com/@Level1Techs Wendell's i9-13900KS Review: https://youtu.be/rBexggqldDs Latest MLID Xeon Leak: https://youtu.be/h20inMLeDnE MLID Leak of Genoa Accelerators: https://youtu.be/6yFn85I5PbY?t=878 https://www.amazon.com/Best-Sellers-Computer-CPU-Processors/zgbs/pc/229189 https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-launches-sapphire-rapids-fourth-gen-xeon-cpus-and-ponte-vecchio-max-gpu-series https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/212287/intel-xeon-platinum-8380-processor-60m-cache-2-30-ghz/specifications.html https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/134586/intel-core-i512400-processor-18m-cache-up-to-4-40-ghz.html https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/230580/intel-core-i513500-processor-24m-cache-up-to-4-80-ghz/specifications.html https://www.screenhacker.com/intel-sapphire-rapids-xeon-4-tile-mcm-annotated/

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #707 - Intel Launches Core i9-13900KS, New Laptop RAM Standard, Monoprice Speakers, Apple M2 + MORE

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 63:24


This time we report, speculate, paraphrase, and pontificate on another week's worth of product launches, press releases, and insecurity news. Also, a burger.  Apple M2's many things, Intel does 13900KS and Gen 4 scalable Xeons, CAMM winns finally, 30TB of Micron and Monoprice small speakers.  See the timestamps below for all the rest!Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:11 Burger of the Week02:50 Intel launches Core i9-13900KS04:27 More Intel: the 4th Gen Xeon Scalable processors09:52 Apple announces M2 chips and things that use them18:58 CAMM might be the new laptop memory standard23:18 Put your Radeon RX 7900 XTX under water25:04 G.Skill Flare X5 6000 CL32 Ryzen memory29:53 Podcast sponsor - Rocket Money31:08 Razer NAGA v2 mouse33:14 Micron 9400 Pro enterprise SSDs36:23 Security Corner44:32 Gaming Quick Hits47:00 Monoprice DT-3BT desktop speaker review54:18 Picks of the Week1:02:33 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Gestalt IT Rundown
Sapphire Rapids Servers are Launched | Gestalt IT Rundown: January 18, 2023

Gestalt IT Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2023 25:43


Supermicro, Dell, HPE, Cisco, and others have introduced the first server lines based on Intel's recently-announced 4th generation Xeon processors. And of course Nvidia is also supporting these new processors with their H100 DGX platform. Let's take a look under the hood and see how Sapphire Rapids brings new capabilities to these devices! Time Stamps: 0:00 | Welcome to the Rundown 1:42 | Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Touts AWS Innovation 3:47 | Global IT Spending 1% Below Expectations in 2022 5:35 | Norton LifeLock Compromised Password Manager Accounts 7:26 | Pure Storage Introduces Energy Efficiency SLA 10:14 | ChatGPT is the hottest topic since sliced bread 12:26 | Sapphire Rapids Servers are Launched 23:47 | The Weeks Ahead 25:01 | Thanks for Watching Follow our hosts on Social Media Tom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerd Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Jon Myer: https://www.twitter.com/_JonMyer Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1789

Gestalt IT Rundown
Intel 4th Gen Xeon Rides the Rapids | Gestalt IT Rundown: January 11, 2023

Gestalt IT Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 35:07


If you were curious as to when Intel would launch their fourth generation Xeon processors you can satisfy that curiosity. Intel's long-rumored Sapphire Rapids architecture is now official as of this week. The biggest takeaways from the official coverage are the inclusion of accelerators on the CPU die to help increase performance for specific workloads such as SSL, 5G, and networking built around DPDK. This features comes alongside Intel On Demand, a service that allows you to purchase a CPU now and unlock accelerators in the future for a fee. There's even discussion of support for Optane and CXL! This and more on this week's Rundown. Time Stamps: 0:00 | Welcome to the Rundown 0:38 | WD and Kioxia Restart Merger Talks 4:05 | AWS Encrypts S3 By Default 7:23 | Microsoft Officially Has A Fungible Asset 10:19 | FAA Orders Airlines to Fix Altimeters for 5G 13:39 | Intel 4th Gen Xeon Rides the Rapids 33:17 | The Weeks Ahead 34:25 | 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/1789

Azure DevOps Podcast
A 2023 Happy New Year and 2022 Review - Episode 226

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 18:48


Happy New Year to all here in 2023. It's going to be a great year. It's a great time to be a programmer. A great time to be building with .NET; you are going to do great things this year. You have what it takes. You are smart, you have great tools, and you have a great team. You are a great leader. This episode is going to be all about remembering what happened this past year at the podcast.   Topics of Discussion:  [1:15] Jeffrey talks about the architect forums he's hosting and facilitating in 2023. You can register here. [1:46] Huge announcement in Microsoft Developer news including: - Android apps on Windows 11 - ARM processors getting big investments - Microsoft Dev Box — in preview — dev workstation in the cloud - Power Pages websites - Large SKU app service; up to 256GB RAM available for those who need it - Azure Arc, the new name of Hybrid Azure. And a single-node Azure Stack for remote locations but the programming model of Azure — looking forward to testing it at the right time. - Azure Container Apps tooling got better, and it became ready for prime time. Every team should be looking at this. - .NET 7 released. [4:11] What might the default application stacks and environments look like on the platform in 2023? - Windows 11 - Visual Studio 2022 w/ ReSharper - .NET 7 - Onion Architecture - Blazor for interactive applications - .NET service workers for back-end jobs and queue listeners - Entity Framework with Azure SQL — add on other storage services as per application. - Azure App Service for hosting while prototyping Azure Container Apps. - Application Insights with the Open Telemetry NuGet packages. - Azure Pipelines paired with Octopus Deploy (keep an eye on GitHub Actions as they fill out support for scenarios you need). - NordVPN for developer workstation work-from-home or remote Wi-Fi. [9:11] When it comes to developer workstations, desktop computers are still giving the most bang for the buck with power, and only a few laptops do the job really well. I have not reviewed all computers, and there are a lot out there. I can vouch for Alienware R series desktops. Liquid-cooled, so they are really quiet, even under full load. Dell Precision laptops are amazing for software engineers. I really wanted to love the Lenovo P1, but the fan was just too loud when it was under load. And we all know that cooling is so important in laptops. When a laptop gets too hot, your BIOS will slow down the processor to keep it from burning up. Then you no longer have a fast processor. And video calls use a good deal of processor, surprisingly — or not. For super mobile laptops that you can use for programming, I really do like the Microsoft Surface Laptop. I wanted to like the Surface Studio laptop, but they inverted the cooling and the battery placement, so it's very uncomfortable on my lap and my wrists unfortunately under load. The wrist wrest gets really hot. Normally the battery is under the wrist rest, but Microsoft swapped it on this one, so it's not fun using it as a laptop on your lap or even on a desk while hot and under load. [13:11] Highlighting some past episodes that will be interesting:  - Highlighting some past episodes over the year that might be interesting. - With Microsoft Orleans providing a new implementation of the Actor design pattern, we have a two-part series interview with Aaron Stannard, the creator of Akka.NET, episodes 172 and 173. - On the IoT front, Wilderness Labs has been trucking along creating system-on-a-chip options that run .NET natively and easily. I interviewed founder and CEO Bryan Costanich. - For those educating themselves for a career in software engineering, my interview with Henry Quillin might be useful. He talks about a programming internship and his education journey, his work earning his Eagle Scout, and how he became a working programmer even as he is just starting university. - More on embedded. Kevin Kirkus was with us in episode 186. He runs a testing team at Intel doing automated testing for their Xeon processor line. The design necessary for testing in this specialized environment gives us all plenty to think about. - For team leaders out there, I interviewed Mark Seemann. He wrote a recent book, Code That Fits In Your Head. He talks about the principles that are in the book. I subsequently bought and read the book, and I wish I had this book earlier in my career. Would have saved me a great deal of time. - On distributed systems, Udi Dahan is always a fascinating gentleman to listen to. Check out episode 192. As the founder and CEO of Particular Software, and the creator of NServiceBus, he is one of the world's leading experts on distributed systems, microservices, and messaging architectures. - Time-tested ideas are continually useful. I had the pleasure of interviewing Philippe Kruchten. He worked at Rational Software back when they were at the forefront of the software process in the 1990s. He published a paper outlining a framework for emergent, agile architecture. He didn't call it that. He called it the 4+1 Architecture, but only because it predated the agile manifesto. If you are an architect, and you aren't aware of this approach to architecture, give episode 195 a listen. - For the Blazor developers, I had Steve Sanderson on in episode 202. Steve is the original designer of Blazor, which has become the new default web application on .NET. He shared about the future of Blazor and WebAssembly. - Because there is so much going on in this space, Daniel Roth also joined me to discuss more Blazor Futures. - GitHub Actions is being talked about quite a bit. While loads of people are using it for builds, people are scratching their heads about where it fits in regarding deployments. Damian Brady, on the GitHub team and a former employee of Octopus Deploy, sheds light on this in episode 206. - Scott Hunter joined me in episode 211. He announced his new role at Microsoft running more of Azure development and .NET. He shared quite a bit behind the scenes regarding Microsoft's strategy there. - For the UX people. Mark Miller is the Chief Architect of DevExpress, the big UI components company. He has a brilliant user experience mind, and I was able to get him talking in episode 212. - Telemetry. We all need it to keep our software stable in production. The Serilog and AutoFac maintainer, Nicholas Blumhardt, joined me to discuss the fundamentals of modern logging and telemetry. Check out episode 217 for that. - More on the testing front, Eduardo Maltez, a software engineer doing some really interesting full system test work shares his thoughts on what makes tests reliable, stable, and fast — and how to fight brittle tests. Episode 224. - We closed out the year on the security front. With LastPass getting hacked and now Rackspace having a hacking-induced major outage, we all need to take action. Troy Vinson, a multi-certified security professional and certified ethical hacker, gave his perspective on the Rackspace breach and what every .NET team should learn from it.   Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! Jeffrey Palermo's YouTube Jeffrey Palermo's Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Programming with Palermo programming@palermo.network   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

mixxio — podcast diario de tecnología
Quién necesita bots cuando tienes humanos

mixxio — podcast diario de tecnología

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 17:59


Somos más baratos y desechables / Ganar las elecciones con WhatsApp / Bloqueo total de semiconductores a China / El fundador de Terra/Luna fugado en Serbia Patrocinador: Ahorra de hasta 40 céntimos por litro en BP. Y si estás en Canarias, con la tarjeta Dino BP: cada 30€ de compra en los establecimientos HiperDino, te regalan 1€ para repostar en BP. Y viceversa, por cada 30€ en las estaciones BP, te dan un 1€ para HiperDino. Siempre ganas. Somos más baratos y desechables / Ganar las elecciones con WhatsApp / Bloqueo total de semiconductores a China / El fundador de Terra/Luna fugado en Serbia

Science (Video)
Co-Packaged Optics in Future Server Designs with Ram Huggahalli

Science (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 15:07


Ram Huggahalli is a Principal Hardware Engineer in Microsoft's Azure Hardware Systems and Infrastructure group. His focus areas are hyper-scalar systems architecture, SoC/platform-level interconnects and accelerator architecture strategies for the next 2-4 years. Prior to Microsoft, Ram has been with Intel Corporation contributing to memory and I/O subsystem directions in various Xeon processors and platforms, large scale HPC interconnect product roadmaps and system level simulation methodologies. Ram has MS degrees in Electrical Engineering and Engineering Management from Missouri University of Science and Technology. Series: "Institute for Energy Efficiency" [Science] [Show ID: 38464]

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)
Co-Packaged Optics in Future Server Designs with Ram Huggahalli

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 15:07


Ram Huggahalli is a Principal Hardware Engineer in Microsoft's Azure Hardware Systems and Infrastructure group. His focus areas are hyper-scalar systems architecture, SoC/platform-level interconnects and accelerator architecture strategies for the next 2-4 years. Prior to Microsoft, Ram has been with Intel Corporation contributing to memory and I/O subsystem directions in various Xeon processors and platforms, large scale HPC interconnect product roadmaps and system level simulation methodologies. Ram has MS degrees in Electrical Engineering and Engineering Management from Missouri University of Science and Technology. Series: "Institute for Energy Efficiency" [Science] [Show ID: 38464]

Energy (Video)
Co-Packaged Optics in Future Server Designs with Ram Huggahalli

Energy (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 15:07


Ram Huggahalli is a Principal Hardware Engineer in Microsoft's Azure Hardware Systems and Infrastructure group. His focus areas are hyper-scalar systems architecture, SoC/platform-level interconnects and accelerator architecture strategies for the next 2-4 years. Prior to Microsoft, Ram has been with Intel Corporation contributing to memory and I/O subsystem directions in various Xeon processors and platforms, large scale HPC interconnect product roadmaps and system level simulation methodologies. Ram has MS degrees in Electrical Engineering and Engineering Management from Missouri University of Science and Technology. Series: "Institute for Energy Efficiency" [Science] [Show ID: 38464]

Vidas en red Spreaker
Isla Xeon, Converso artificial y SQ3 la apuesta ARM de Microsoft

Vidas en red Spreaker

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 19:00


Isla2 difusión: https://t.me/+M46yiWO_BJU2NzkySuscríbete a mi podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/user/vidasenredMi canal en Odysee: https://odysee.com/@vidasenred:8En Pocket Cast: https://pca.st/podcast/38707740-c7a5-012f-7f6b-723c91aeae46Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@juliomm1¿Cómo apoyar Vidas en red?https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/VidasenredPaypal juliommd@hotmail.comAmazon (Enviar cheque regalo a vidasenred@gmail.com)Cripto monedas (BItcoin) MW4T2qAAtaubxA7aUhAv4aozy5sQyUHQYiWaylet: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mdf.repsol&hl=es&gl=USDate de alta en Waylet y ahorra dinero con este código: 4v2v2232Dashcam, cámara para coche: https://amzn.to/3mpJGaJHuawei Mediapad M6: https://amzn.to/3fRDeqyRaspberry Pi MOd4: https://amzn.to/3eXC2G6Acer Chromebook: https://amzn.to/3f0fIMcSlim PC Nvidia 1050: https://amzn.to/3Sw2jJwSurface Pro X: https://amzn.to/3xu1AA7Samsung S22 Ultra: https://amzn.to/3zm53mFZoom H2n https://amzn.to/3wUudpwRode Wireless Go2 https://amzn.to/3GnwZbdSurface Pro 8: https://amzn.to/3wR6IPCMi teclado Logitech K380: https://amzn.to/2Rv6yeZMacBook Air M1 (2020): https://amzn.to/3zSQSUBMi grabadora digital: https://amzn.to/3D8gVahSamsung Tab S7+: https://amzn.to/3v4ulC8MicroSD al mejor precio: https://amzn.to/3JywJ9sMi iPad Pro 2021 11": https://amzn.to/3vjHJRKLa funda de mi iPad Pro: https://amzn.to/3v8aEImMi webcam: https://amzn.to/3sNlx0TMi micrófono: https://amzn.to/3sBlt4cMicrofóno de solapa usb C YOTTO: https://amzn.to/3jadZTKLa Surface Go 3 es la "ultra Surface" un modelo pequeño y ligero para llevar a todos lados, que se desempeña de maravilla con las distintas aplicaciones y que vale apenas 440 Euros: https://amzn.to/33cTtw5Persepolis: https://amzn.to/3Mip3v5El hombre en busca de sentido (libro): https://amzn.to/2WSf6ibLas meditaciones de Marco Aurelio: https://amzn.to/3n5S3vmCómo ser un estoico: https://amzn.to/31Ry77fManual de vida (Epícteto): https://amzn.to/33m3ozDInvicto: https://amzn.to/3fdL7HwPor si las voces vuelven: https://amzn.to/34oEfEP"Yo estoy vivo y vosotros estáis muertos" https://amzn.to/3J5uZVv"En busca de Phillip K. Dick" https://amzn.to/3JgldzZEl proyecto Hail Mary: https://amzn.to/3KOwpVTEl Marciano: https://amzn.to/3osBdqD Barras de calistenia: https://amzn.to/3uCxoTjBandas elásticas: https://amzn.to/33cwZvMMancuernas de neopreno: https://amzn.to/3VE7gTcBarra de dominadas: https://amzn.to/3TDAsYBChaleco lastrado: https://amzn.to/3TqRwS3Paralelas de calistenia: https://amzn.to/3gtfKg1Jaula de entrenamiento: https://amzn.to/3CP6dapEquipo de supervivencia y primeros auxilios: https://amzn.to/3tpBsEuRaciones de supervivencia: https://amzn.to/3pzwAeOGuía de supervivencia: https://amzn.to/35I5BXhYa está aquí mi nuevo libro "El año de la pandemia" en Amazon: https://amzn.to/3odqWv7Date de alta en Binance y gana dinero: https://www.binance.com/es/register?ref=77498333Consigue increibles ofertas en Amazon: https://www.amazon.es/shop/converso72?listId=39CGPOD9CMLX1

Vidas en red Spreaker
Proyectos para el kit Xeon de Vidas en red

Vidas en red Spreaker

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2022 14:40


Isla2 difusión: https://t.me/+M46yiWO_BJU2NzkySuscríbete a mi podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/user/vidasenredMi canal en Odysee: https://odysee.com/@vidasenred:8En Pocket Cast: https://pca.st/podcast/38707740-c7a5-012f-7f6b-723c91aeae46Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@juliomm1Raspberry Pi MOd4: https://amzn.to/3eXC2G6Acer Chromebook: https://amzn.to/3f0fIMcSlim PC Nvidia 1050: https://amzn.to/3Sw2jJw¿Cómo apoyar Vidas en red?https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/VidasenredPaypal juliommd@hotmail.comAmazon (Enviar cheque regalo a vidasenred@gmail.com)Cripto monedas (BItcoin) MW4T2qAAtaubxA7aUhAv4aozy5sQyUHQYi

Broken Silicon
174. Zen 4 w/ B650 vs Raptor Lake, 34C Xeon Xtreme, A770 Reviews, 4090 & 4070 Leaks

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2022 140:21 Very Popular


We discuss the latest Nvidia Lovelace leaks, Intel Workstation whispers, and RDNA 3! SPON: dieshrink = 3% off Everything, brokensilicon = 25% off Windows: https://biitt.ly/shbSk SPON: Get 10% off Healthy, High Protein Ramen w/ code “brokensilicon”: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 0:00 Broken Deadbolts, Reesie Health Update (Intro Banter) 3:39 Nvidia Just-In-Time (Corrections) 6:24 Final Thoughts on Zen 4 Reviews & Launch 18:14 Was the thick IHS a mistake? How can AMD keep momentum going? 24:52 Intel Raptor Lake Performance & Pricing Unveiled 33:34 Is platform longevity actually an important factor? 42:58 34C Intel Fishhawk Falls Confirmed - Is Threadripper in trouble? 52:38 A770 & A750 Reviews & Supply Whispers 1:03:53 Is ARC actually helping the market? What would save AXG? 1:11:23 RTX 4090 Launch Volume, 4070 Pictures, Titan Cancellation 1:26:10 RDNA 3 Expectations 1:37:25 PS5 gets Dieshrink to 6nm – Oberon Plus! 1:45:35 Google Kills Stadia without even Warning Devs 1:54:20 RTX 6000 lacks NVLink, AMD Earnings, TSMC Price Hikes (Wrap-Up) 1:59:20 Nvidia Reflex, DLSS 3, GPU Performance Floor (Final Reader Mail) https://youtu.be/k-kdEVfF2T8 https://youtu.be/WU7RvW0hW5c https://youtu.be/uAmfLXDhwVs https://youtu.be/_vLq2PjmIx0 https://youtu.be/_WubXd2tXOA https://youtu.be/nRaJXZMOMPU https://youtu.be/Imm91w1xXOE https://www.techpowerup.com/review/amd-ryzen-9-7950x/28.html https://www.newegg.com/p/pl?d=Intel+Raptor+Lake https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/events/on-event-series/innovation.html https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/events/on-event-series/innovation.html https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-13th-gen-core-raptor-lake-cpu-pricing-leaked-by-newegg-i9-13900k-for-660-i7-13700k-450-i5-13600k-at-330 https://www.reddit.com/r/intel/comments/xpmc9q/whats_up_with_intels_marketing_seems_like_theyre/ https://www.overclockers.co.uk/asus-prime-x670e-pro-wifi-socket-am5-ddr5-atx-motherboard-mb-6jb-as.html https://www.computerbase.de/2022-09/amd-ryzen-7950x-7900x-7700x-7600x-test/2/#abschnitt_effizienz_bei_reduzierter_tdp_inkl_ecomode https://seekingalpha.com/news/3886446-chips-mixed-as-intel-unveils-new-data-center-gpus-gelsinger-bemoans-existing-offerings https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-z790-motherboards-are-now-listed-in-germany-prices-from-e309-to-e1399 https://www.angstronomics.com/p/monolithic-sapphire-rapids https://youtu.be/2XiWGuEFCbE https://youtu.be/XTomqXuYK4s https://youtu.be/nEvdrbxTtVo https://youtu.be/nEvdrbxTtVo https://www.newegg.com/gigabyte-geforce-rtx-3060-gv-n3060eagle-oc-12gd/p/N82E16814932531?Description=RTX%203060&cm_re=RTX_3060-_-14-932-531-_-Product https://www.newegg.com/p/pl?d=RX+6650+XT https://youtu.be/OP58L3Akbko https://youtu.be/GCsy75Mtg5Y https://youtu.be/nETQGtt024k https://www.hardwaretimes.com/intel-blacklisting-reviewers-for-negative-coverage-of-arc-gpus-including-cancellation-rumors/ https://youtu.be/_Wih0h8ps44 https://www.techspot.com/news/96164-nvidia-clarifies-power-supply-requirements-rtx-40-series.html https://twitter.com/tomwarren/status/1578107479392923648 https://www.angstronomics.com/p/ps5-refresh-oberon-plus https://blog.google/products/stadia/message-on-stadia-streaming-strategy/ https://www.pcgamer.com/stadia-game-developers-had-no-idea-google-was-killing-stadia/ https://www.theverge.com/2019/6/6/18654632/google-stadia-price-release-date-games-bethesda-ea-doom-ubisoft-e3-2019 https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1575598543506898944 https://www.ebay.com/itm/275476381772 https://www.pny.com/nvidia-rtx-6000-ada https://www.techspot.com/news/96192-nvidia-cease-all-activities-russia-relocate-employees.html www.amd.com https://www.techspot.com/news/96186-apple-reluctantly-agrees-tsmc-price-increases.html https://twitter.com/OnDeck/status/1578088497759793152?t=fzysWCabOeYHPzCTUDGvFg&s=19 https://seekingalpha.com/news/3887555-semiconductors-mixed-as-sector-deals-with-fallout-from-micron-spending-cuts

Decoder with Nilay Patel
Pat Gelsinger came back to turn Intel around. Here's how it's going.

Decoder with Nilay Patel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 70:33


Today I'm talking to Pat Gelsinger, the CEO of Intel. I've been excited to have this conversation for a very long time – ever since Pat took over as CEO a little over a year and a half ago. After all. Intel is a very important company with a huge series of challenges in front of it. It's still the largest chip manufacturer by revenue, and makes more chips than any other company in the United States. In fact there are basically only three major chip manufacturers: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, which is in Taiwan, Samsung, based in South Korea. And Intel, here in the United States. The Intel Pat took over was struggling, and was losing ground to in a variety of markets. But in the past year and a half, Pat's restructured the company, turned over almost all of its leadership positions, opened a new line of business that would compete with TSMC and make chips for other companies including Intel's competitors, and generally tried to reset Intel's famous engineering culture around engineering. Glossary: IFS - Intel Foundry Service. Raptor Lake - codename for intel's Gen 13 processors that were just the day before we had our conversation. Sapphire Rapids - the codename for Intel's 4th generation Xeon server processors. 20A and 18A - 20A is a rebranding of what was intel's 5nm process scheduled to debut in 2024 and 18A is a rebranding of Intels 5nm+ node due out in 2025. Packaging - integrated circuit packaging is the last step of semiconductor fabrication. It's where a block of semiconductor material is put into a case. The case, is known as a "package" and that is what allows you put a circuit on a board. Wafers - When a processor is made they make processors you make hundreds of them at once on a giant wafer.  EUV - is Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography. It's the most advanced way to make chips.  ASML - Is the company that makes the machines that lets you make chips. They are the only company that makes EUV machines. RibbonFET - A new transistor technology that Intel developed. ISV - Independent Software Vendors. PDK - Process Design Kit is a set of files that have data and algorithms that explain the manufacturing parameters for a given silicon process. EDA tools - stands for Electronic Design Automation tools. Basically software tools that are used to design and validate the semiconductor manufacturing process. Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore - the founders of Intel. Andy Grove - employee #3 who went on to become one of their most successful CEOs. Links: Moore's Law Intel is replacing its CEO in February Intel has to be better than ‘lifestyle company' Apple at making CPUs, says new CEO Apple is switching Macs to its own processors starting later this year Apple MacBook Air with M1 review: new chip, no problem  What we know about Intel's $20 billion bet on Ohio Intel is building a new €17 billion semiconductor manufacturing hub in Germany Intel delays ceremony for Ohio factory over lack of government funding Intel needs 7,000 workers to build its $20 billion chip plant in Ohio Biden signs $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act President Joe Biden speaks after groundbreaking for Intel's $20 billion semiconductor plant Intel's top Arc A770 GPU is priced at $329, available October 12th Intel's 13th Gen processors arrive October 20th with $589 flagship Core i9-13900K Transcript: https://www.theverge.com/e/23149693 Credits: Decoder is a production of The Verge, and part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Today's episode was produced by Creighton DeSimone and Jackie McDermott and it was edited by Callie Wright. The Decoder music is by Breakmaster Cylinder. Our Sr Audio Director is Andrew Marino and our Executive Producer is Eleanor Donovan.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.
142: Flanders Is Dead. Long Live Neddy

Brad & Will Made a Tech Pod.

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 71:08 Very Popular


Will's longtime home server Flanders has finally given up the ghost, and now he's streamlined his life by moving to an integrated Synology box. After significant hands-on time, we get into the ins and outs of what it's like running network storage in this sort of turnkey, integrated box, including ease of setup, hardware specs and limitations, Will's possibly controversial feelings about Docker, Brad's slow descent into madness on the extreme other end of the NAS hardware spectrum, and more.Support 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

Cyber Security Inside
97. What That Means with Camille: Confidential Computing with Amy Santoni, Intel Fellow

Cyber Security Inside

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 24:52


In this episode of Cyber Security Inside What That Means, Camille breaks down and defines confidential computing with Amy Santoni, Intel Fellow, Design Engineering Group, and Chief Xeon Security Architect, Datacenter Processor Architecture. The conversation covers: -  What confidential computing is and why it is important. -  Why confidential computing is a focus of cybersecurity development right now. -  What a trusted execution environment is. -  What to put in a trusted execution environment and what data is safe to stay out. ...and more. Don't miss it!   The views and opinions expressed are those of the guests and author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Intel Corporation. Here are some key takeaways: -  Xeon is a line of processors in the server space that Intel produces. This is what Amy works in. -  Confidential computing is about protecting data as it is being processed. It is protecting it while it is processing in the CPU. Experts have really figured out how to protect data where it is stored and while it is being transmitted, so now it is about while it is in use. -  The reason we are getting to this now, is that it follows how the attacks have happened. The attacks started at what is on your disks, then intercepting in transit, and now this is where attacks are happening. -  An example of this happening that is current is COVID x-rays. There are many x-rays, and AI models have been trained to look at those x-rays and automate and improve the accuracy of diagnosis. The data for training these AI models is coming from hospitals, while preserving the privacy of the patients. But securing that data and information while training and using the AI is part of confidential computing. -  There are many layers to this protection, including protecting the environment from being tricked by someone. For example, we don't want an environment to think it's running on a secure Intel server when it is not. And we need protections to keep that from happening. -  So why not put everything in a trusted execution environment? There are a few reasons. The first is that it is not free. Another is that there is a lot of software enabling to make this work, and it isn't the simplest process. There is a balance of resources and how much the data needs to be protected. -  There are different types of trusted execution environments that work at different levels of your software and hardware. It could be at the app level, or the OS level. You can choose what parts of your data and even parts of your software go into these environments. -  There is a lot of hesitancy for people using the cloud for storing their data, because it is in a place with many other people's data. Confidential computing is important for this, because it makes each person's lock, or walls around their data, unique. So even if my data and your data are next to each other, I can't access yours and you can't access mine. -  COVID helped us realize that we needed agility in computing, but there was a push to do this before COVID as well. The desire to protect data at every part of the process, including when it is being processed, has been being looked at for a while. Even during the Snowden times. -  It is difficult to predict how much of our hardware and software will be in these environments, and the projections for growth vary widely. However, it is all growth projections, and all of them are large increases. - Another industry trend is standardizing communication from how diverse it is across servers so that all the components work together. Another is working on the safety of computer memory, and how the software and hardware work together on that. -  Physical protection has also become increasingly important as technology increases in our world. From Facebook and phones to the mall and the football stadium to a console, this has become very important. As data travels, it needs to be protected as well from someone physically trying to access the data.   Some interesting quotes from today's episode: “Confidential computing is really focused on while [data] is being used. So the other ones we've solved, and then confidential computing, the new part, is: ‘hey, while I'm computing this data, let's make sure it's confidential and it's protected.'” - Amy Santoni   “It followed the attack vectors. If you think about how malware started, it started corrupting things on your disk. And then people started putting sniffers or using things at the network site to intercept things between point A and point B. So this is where the attacks are going and where we need to start protecting.” - Amy Santoni   “That's the trusted execution environment. It's a new environment and new hardware protections to protect the code and data within that trusted execution environment. Secure enclaves is a particular trusted execution environment.” - Amy Santoni   “You can split your app into these trusted and untrusted parts, but again, the level of detail and the level of software enabling is greater in that second case. It reduces the attack surface to the smallest possible one, because you're just cutting out part of your app and saying, ‘this is the most critical part that I want to protect.' And all the rest of the app is untrusted. It can't get to that data.” - Amy Santoni   “What confidential computing is bringing is extra confidence that I can take these things that maybe I wasn't comfortable taking to cloud before, and move them to cloud. And I have this extra hardware layer of protection to keep my data private from other people running on the same machine, but also from the cloud service provider, from that virtual machine monitor that happens to be running.” - Amy Santoni   “I think that there was a push for this even before COVID, the move to protect the data while it's being computed. I think people have recognized that for a while. I don't know that I have a good example of a catalyst other than the one I'm familiar with, which is, like I said, we've called it the Snowden effect. When people realized that the government could get to some data that they didn't think they could get to.” - Amy Santoni   “We've heard Microsoft say they think that the majority of their cloud, let's call it infrastructure, as a service will be running in some trusted execution environment this decade. So that's the projections - like the growth projections for the growth of confidential compute vary from 5x to 20x.” - Amy Santoni   “What we're trying to do is make sure that all of those processing places along the path have, again, from a security centric point of view, have a trusted execution environment. They don't all have to be the same necessarily, but have some protection. So whether I'm processing here or processing there, I have some protection for my data.” - Amy Santoni

Broken Silicon
152. RX 6950 XT Reviews, MI300, Phoenix & Dragon Range, ZEN 4 96C TR vs 112C Xeon-W

Broken Silicon

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 132:01 Very Popular


The AMD RX 6950 XT, RX 6750 XT, and RX 6650 XT are all out! Also, HEDT is getting interesting! SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with Code “brokensilicon” at: https://bit.ly/3oyv4tR SPON: brokensilicon = -25% off Windows, dieshrink = -3% off Everything: https://biitt.ly/shbSk 0:00 Colds vs COVID, MLID's Reach (Intro Banter) 6:59 RX 6950 XT, RX 6750 XT, and RX 6650 XT Reviews & Availability 16:35 Intel ARC A750, A580 and A380 GPU Launch Rumors 27:18 Lovelace Rumors Update – 900w?! Triple Performance?! 36:52 Where does Nvidia go with Chiplets? 38:44 AMD RDNA 3 Navi 31 and MI300 Leak 50:35 Why can't Nvidia use 3D Stacking? When will HBM be used again? 54:47 AMD Confirms Dragon Range & Phoenix for 2023 1:06:50 Intel 24-Core & 112-Core Fishhawk Falls Leaked 1:16:15 AMD Zen 4 Raphael & Threadripper vs Fishhawk Falls 1:22:48 Is TSMC 3nm gets delayed, can Intel catch up? 1:34:32 Zen 6 Venice Early Details Leak 1:38:43 AMD Locks OC'ing, Intel 4 & Meteor Lake, FTC vs Sony/MS (Wrap Up) 1:50:30 Will 16GB VRAM become the min? Will DDR5 get cheap? Disable E-Cores? (Final RM) https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-radeon-rx-6950xt-to-cost-1099-rx-6750xt-549-rx-6650xt-399 https://wccftech.com/amd-radeon-rx-6950-xt-1099-usd-faster-rtx-3090-rx-6750-xt-549-usd-faster-rtx-3070-rx-6650-xt-399-usd-faster-rtx-3060-gaming-benchmarks-prices-leak/ https://wccftech.com/amd-radeon-rx-6950-xt-rx-6750-xt-rx-6650-xt-rdna-2-refresh-graphics-cards-being-advertised-by-retailers-worldwide-prior-to-launch/ https://wccftech.com/amd-radeon-rx-6950-xt-1099-usd-faster-rtx-3090-rx-6750-xt-549-usd-faster-rtx-3070-rx-6650-xt-399-usd-faster-rtx-3060-gaming-benchmarks-prices-leak/ https://videocardz.com/newz/official-radeon-rx-6x50xt-series-gaming-performance-leaks-out-rx-6950xt-is-4-faster-than-rx-6900xt https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-radeon-rx-6950xt-features-navi-21-kxtx-gpu-supports-hynix-and-samsung-18gbps-memory https://wccftech.com/intel-arc-graphics-ready-for-showtime-a750-a580-and-a380-gpu-sales-embargo-msrp-and-positioning/ https://wccftech.com/intel-arc-alchemist-gaming-graphics-cards-delay-late-summer-drivers-problematic/ https://youtu.be/NGdu6v9jERc https://www.pcgamer.com/nvidias-next-gen-gpu-ada-lovelace-is-no-longer-a-simple-ampere-refresh-rumours-suggest/ https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1518337344948035587 https://youtu.be/uVcJ3X8eU5s https://www.theverge.com/2022/5/3/23056024/amd-dragon-range-zen-4-extreme-gaming-laptop-cpu-ryzen https://youtu.be/bGXa_ECv7dQ https://mlech26l.github.io/pages/images/cpus.png https://youtu.be/psdGqYZdYnA https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-epyc-with-zen6-architecture-is-allegedly-codenamed-venice https://www.techpowerup.com/review/msi-radeon-rx-6400-aero-itx/38.html https://wccftech.com/nvidia-h100-80-gb-pcie-accelerator-with-hopper-gpu-is-priced-over-30000-us-in-japan/ https://twitter.com/witeken/status/1521428223896211457?s=21&t=7OjXe2ii25MiOkcutGFurQ https://www.techpowerup.com/294535/amd-announces-ryzen-5000c-zen-3-processors-for-chromebooks https://twitter.com/IanCutress/status/1522591128838623234 https://wccftech.com/amd-ryzen-7000-5nm-zen-4-desktop-cpus-am5-platform-september-launch-rumor/ https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-alder-lake-hx-specifications-leaked-up-to-16-cores-with-overclocking-and-pcie-5-0-support-for-enthusiast-class-laptops https://hothardware.com/news/intel-purchase-siru-innovations https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1520120577893281792 https://www.techspot.com/news/94504-nvidia-lhr-limiter-has-bypassed-enabling-full-mining.html https://www.protocol.com/bulletins/activision-blizzard-microsoft-deal-approved https://www.theinformation.com/articles/ftc-opens-inquiry-into-sonys-3-6-billion-bungie-gaming-purchase

EEVblog
EEVblog 1466 – Dumpster Dive Xeon Server

EEVblog

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 18:58


It's been a while since the dumpster has delivered a computer. Today we get a HP Proliant ML350p Gen8 xeon server. Does it work? Forum: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-1466-dumpster-dive-xeon-server/ Youtube: Odysee: Utreon: