Category Archives: News

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The complicated case of Threes, 2048, and the giants that ripped everyone off in the end

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Article note: I have a whole set of thoughts about this stuff: 1. Most games (and ...everything...) are situations where there are several similar creations around the same time, and which one gains traction is not easily predetermined. It's usually not the first or most sophisticated one. See Minecraft for example, there were a plague of blockworld games around that time, and it was not the first or fanciest. Likewise most Apple products. And, you know, transistors. 2. The 2048/Threes situation (FOSS, similar but not exact clone, made for fun/education, under a different name, distributed for free) and Wordle and appstore clone called Wordle (Trying to hustle a quick buck on someone elses' idea _and_ name recognition) are substantially different things. I don't really have a problem with making Free replacements for any thing where it is technically easy to do so. I played a ton of the https://www.fiveletters.xyz/ clone that isn't a one-a-day, and a little of the "I wrote Wordle in a tiny bash reading from the system spellchecker dictionary" stunt doing the rounds the other day. 3. I get yelled at for this one, but 2048 is a more satisfying idle game than Threes. The absolute regularity of 2048 makes it meditative. The powers-of-two thing tickles computer people. 4. The simultaneous, unavoidable rentseeking and gatekeeping by the large incumbent tech players is a menace to society.
Illustration by Claudia Chinyere Akole

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery — and the most profitable way to make a mobile game

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‘At least’ 6.5 exabytes lost after contamination hits Kioxia/WD 3D NAND fabs

Source: The Register

Article note: 6.5_Exa_bytes of Flash memory ICs unusable due to contamination in a factory. That's hard to think about. At least it's not a single-supplier item.

Operations at Yokkaichi and Kitakami affected

Production at Kioxia and Western Digital's 3D NAND fabrication facilities in Japan is being disrupted by chemical contamination, with at least 6.5 exabytes of capacity lost.…

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‘Futurama’ is being revived again, by the grace of Hulu

Source: Engadget

Article note: Oohh. More Futurama with most of the original people. Yes please.

Disney’s Hulu is bringing Futurama back. According to Variety, the streamer has ordered 20 new episodes of the animated series. Series creator Matt Groening will return to lead the project alongside writer and producer David X. Cohen. The entire voice cast outside of one critical player has agreed to reprise their roles. John DiMaggio hasn’t signed on to voice Bender again. The good news on that front is that Hulu is reportedly finalizing his deal, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

As you might imagine, Futurama’s creators are excited to return to the series. “It’s a true honor to announce the triumphant return of Futurama one more time before we get canceled abruptly again,” Groening said.

For those counting, this latest revival will mark the fourth time the series has come back after supposedly ending. After it was canceled in 2003 following an initial four-season run on Fox, Comedy Central ordered four direct-to-DVD Futurama films. In 2008, the network re-edited those movies into what’s now considered the show’s fifth season. It then went on to fund two additional seasons that aired between 2010 and 2013. The fact it will continue on Hulu is fitting given that you’ve been able to watch all 140 episodes and four films of Futurama on the platform since 2017.

Production on the new episodes is expected to start this month. They're currently scheduled to debut sometime in 2023. 

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OpenSCAD 3D rendering just got an order of magnitude faster

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oh hell yeah. OpenSCAD is a super handy tool, and it's really easy to make models that render it obnoxiously slow. This isn't general parallelism, but it gets a ton of other chokepoints _and_ removes barriers to parallel processing.
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The unlimited storage that Google promised my university is being discontinued

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I have the better part of a terabyte of encrypted incremental backups rclone'd into my university institutional google drive as a remote, because it was advertised as "unlimited". I haven't heard anything, but I should probably expect to.
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$66 billion deal for Nvidia to purchase Arm collapses

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Excellent. An independent ARM is currently important for the industry.
Extreme close-up promotional image of computer component.

Enlarge (credit: Arm)

SoftBank’s $66 billion sale of UK-based chip business Arm to Nvidia collapsed on Monday after regulators in the US, UK, and EU raised serious concerns about its effects on competition in the global semiconductor industry, according to three people with direct knowledge of the transaction.

The deal, the largest ever in the chip sector, would have given California-based Nvidia control of a company that makes technology at the heart of most of the world’s mobile devices. A handful of Big Tech companies that rely on Arm’s chip designs, including Qualcomm and Microsoft, had objected to the purchase.

SoftBank will receive a break-up fee of up to $1.25 billion and is seeking to unload Arm through an initial public offering before the end of the year, said one of the people.

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IRS stops requiring selfies after facial recognition system is widely panned

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: I don't understand what kind of buys-security-products-they-saw-in-an-airport-ad useless middle-manager decision making lead to them getting involved with ID.me in the first place.
A man using a smartphone to take a selfie. The illustration has lines extending from the phone to his face to indicate that facial recognition is being used.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | imaginima)

The Internal Revenue Service is dropping a controversial facial recognition system that requires people to upload video selfies when creating new IRS online accounts.

"The IRS announced it will transition away from using a third-party service for facial recognition to help authenticate people creating new online accounts," the agency said today. "The transition will occur over the coming weeks in order to prevent larger disruptions to taxpayers during filing season. During the transition, the IRS will quickly develop and bring online an additional authentication process that does not involve facial recognition."

The IRS has been using the third-party system ID.me for facial recognition of taxpayers. Privacy and civil rights advocates and lawmakers from both major parties have objected to the system. The IRS wasn't demanding ID.me verification for filing tax returns but was requiring it for accessing related services, such as account information, applying for payment plans online, requesting transcripts, and the Child Tax Credit Update Portal.

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NEC V20: Inspiring, Inconspicuous

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I click-holed about the NEC V20/V30 8080-alike family a while ago. They really were shockingly impressive parts for how little attention they get. Some of their extensions were awesome and well-conceived, their BCD system is sort of unbelievably sophisticated, and the trapping in- and out- of compatibility mode trick is awesome.
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“Deprioritized” Google Stadia to pivot to “Google Stream” white-label service

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Well, that's going exactly as expected. The controller I got as a freebie will be a fun bit of ephemera one day in the not-too-distant future.
Cartoon of a burning parachute with a Stadia logo.

Enlarge / How much longer can Stadia stay aloft? (credit: Google / Aurich Lawson)

As Stadia continues to cling to life inside Google, a new report from Business Insider's Hugh Langley sheds light on what the cloud gaming division has been up to for the past few months. As usual, the report is not promising.

According to the BI report, the "Stadia consumer platform" has been "deprioritized" inside Google and now only takes up an estimated 20 percent of the Stadia division's time. After Google closed its only first-party studio last year (before it had ever produced a game!), a blog post hinted that a white-label service would be Stadia's future. We saw a bit of what that would look like in October when AT&T released a cloud version of Batman: Arkham Knight that was secretly powered by Google Stadia. BI reports that service will be called "Google Stream" and that "the focus of leadership is now on securing business deals for Stream."

The white-label Stadia service would work a lot like the way Google Cloud Platform works—companies that don't want to run their own cloud gaming service could just use Google's back end and distribute their games however they want. Like with Batman, presumably there are no branding requirements necessary and no need to plug into the Stadia store or the rest of the Stadia ecosystem.

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Lawmakers Press Amazon on Sales of Chemical Used in Suicides

Source: NYT > Health

Article note: It took me a minute to figure out what they were going on about about because the article is all emotional pleas no content. They're talking about Sodium Nitrite. The extremely common preservative/curing agent used in meat curing and sausage making (its why hot dogs have that pink color). Its LD50 is like 71mg/kg, it's less dangerous than most cleaning products.
Even as grieving families tried to warn Amazon and other e-commerce sites of the danger, there were more purchases and more deaths.
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