Category Archives: News

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Microsoft’s “1‑bit” AI model runs on a CPU only, while matching larger systems

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: This is one of the only lines of AI research I'm excited about, and I've been excited since that 2023 paper. Most of the even vaguely neuromorphic stuff should work approximately as well as with floats on essentially 1-2 bits per signal (basically just positive,negative, and maybe 0), and that should be _markedly_ cheaper compute-wise, making it likely to actually be worthwhile without the hype and burn-barrels full of investor money. I'm also my graduate advisor's academic offspring and find the idea of variable bit-width/bitserial/packed architectures generally intriguing, and this continuing to work out would favor that design family.

When it comes to actually storing the numerical weights that power a large language model's underlying neural network, most modern AI models rely on the precision of 16- or 32-bit floating point numbers. But that level of precision can come at the cost of large memory footprints (in the hundreds of gigabytes for the largest models) and significant processing resources needed for the complex matrix multiplication used when responding to prompts.

Now, researchers at Microsoft's General Artificial Intelligence group have released a new neural network model that works with just three distinct weight values: -1, 0, or 1. Building on top of previous work Microsoft Research published in 2023, the new model's "ternary" architecture reduces overall complexity and "substantial advantages in computational efficiency," the researchers write, allowing it to run effectively on a simple desktop CPU. And despite the massive reduction in weight precision, the researchers claim that the model "can achieve performance comparable to leading open-weight, full-precision models of similar size across a wide range of tasks."

Watching your weights

The idea of simplifying model weights isn't a completely new one in AI research. For years, researchers have been experimenting with quantization techniques that squeeze their neural network weights into smaller memory envelopes. In recent years, the most extreme quantization efforts have focused on so-called "BitNets" that represent each weight in a single bit (representing +1 or -1).

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PDCurses – for environments that don’t fit the termcap/terminfo model

Source: Hacker News

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Anti-Spying Phone Pouches Offered To EU Lawmakers For Trip To Hungary

Source: Slashdot

An anonymous reader shares a report: Members of the European Parliament were offered special pouches to protect digital devices from espionage and tampering for a visit to Hungary this week, a sign of rising spying fears within Europe. Five lawmakers from the Parliament's civil liberties committee traveled to Hungary on Monday for a three-day visit to inspect the EU member country's progress on democracy, the rule of law and fundamental rights. One lawmaker on the trip confirmed to POLITICO that the Parliament officials joining the delegation were offered Faraday bags -- special metal-lined pouches that block electromagnetic signals -- by the Parliament's services and were also advised to be cautious about using public Wi-Fi networks or charging facilities.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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NEW PRODUCT – Adafruit USB Type C CC Resistor Fixer

Source: adafruit industries blog

Article note: It has been hard to find these gadgets, but it's an obvious fix for all the extremely shittily implemented things that use a USB-C connector to accept 5V power input without the required sense resistors.

NEW PRODUCT – Adafruit USB Type C CC Resistor Fixer


Do you have any devices with USB C connections that don’t seem to power or work when plugged into another USB C port? Chances are, the designers skimped a few pennies or just forgot to put in the two 5.1K CC resistors required for C-to-C connections at 5V. It can drive you batty because some computers care and some don’t!

That’s why we designed the Adafruit USB Type C CC Resistor Fixer, a collab between our  sunken USB socket and USB Plug breakout. It’s the only product we hope we can discontinue one day, sooner rather than later! This small PCB assembly fits onto a cable or into the mis-designed port. It passes through the two data pins and the Vbus and Ground power lines, while adding the missing 5.1K resistors on the port side and a power good LED.

Note that the USB plug pinout doesn’t carry the sideband wires or the high speed pins, so this is good for USB charge/sync but not for high speed or specialty protocols. If you’re not sure, then it’s very unlikely you need them: those products aren’t going to mess up the CC resistors.

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Google loses ad tech monopoly trial, faces additional breakups

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: This is going to be interesting.

The verdict is in, and Google has been found to illegally hold online ad tech monopolies.

For over a decade, "Google has willfully engaged in a series of anticompetitive acts to acquire and maintain monopoly power in the publisher ad server and ad exchange markets for open-web display advertising," tying its publisher ad server and ad exchange together "to establish and protect its monopoly power in these two markets," the ruling said.

At trial, the DOJ argued that Google's ad business expanded to choke out competitors and benefit only Google. They argued that Google "rigged" ad auctions, allegedly controlling "multiple parts" of services used to place ads all over the Internet, unfairly advantaging itself in various markets.

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A 1980s toy robot arm inspired modern robotics

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I got an Armatron at a yard sale as a kid, they are delightful toys that are really good at making you think about task complexity/dof/etc.
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Slopsquatting

Source: Schneier on Security

Article note: I've been seeing tales of this, the "Slopsquatting" name is ...fabulous. I hope it takes.

As AI coding assistants invent nonexistent software libraries to download and use, enterprising attackers create and upload libraries with those names—laced with malware, of course.

EDITED TO ADD (1/22): Research paper. Slashdot thread.

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Intel flogs off majority stake in Altera to private equity for $4B

Source: The Register

Article note: That seemed inevitable.

Buy high, sell low: FPGA biz cost x86 giant $16B decade ago

A decade after gobbling up Altera, Intel is loosening its grip. On Monday, the x86 giant said it's flogging a 51 percent stake in the FPGA slinger to private equity firm Silver Lake.…

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SSD1306 display drivers and font rendering

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Neat, I've driven those displays from a couple stacks, and like U8G2 the best of the driver software I've used, but this provides a more comprehensive picture of the landscape.
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Electronics exempted from reciprocal tariffs will soon be subject to new semiconductor tariffs instead

Source: Engadget

Article note: I... guess someone managed to communicate that this dumb shit would crash both economies?

US Customs and Border Protection on Friday night published a list of products excluded from Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, including smartphones, computers and memory chips, along with other electronic devices and components. But in an interview with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl on Sunday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the move doesn't mean these products will be exempt from tariffs altogether — they're just getting their own category. “Those products are going to be part of the semiconductor sectoral tariffs, which are coming,” Lutnick said. 

It all comes shortly after Trump imposed a 125 percent tariff on goods from China, which the administration confirmed to CNBC and other outlets is in addition to the 20 percent tariff put in place earlier this year, bringing it to a total of 145 percent. Trump had previously announced higher reciprocal tariffs for other countries, too, but walked this back with a 90-day “pause” earlier this week. The pause does not apply to China, though, and there’s still a 10 percent tariff on imports from almost all countries. Electronics imports in particular are expected to be hit hard by the new rules, and we’ve already seen companies like Nintendo and Razer changing up their plans around upcoming product launches in the US.

The newly published exclusions would exempt many devices and parts from both the 10 percent global tariff and the steeper tariff on China, according to the notice published on Friday. Lutnick told ABC News’ Jonathan Karl that, in doing this, the president was “just making sure everyone understood that all of these products are outside the reciprocal tariffs and they are going to have their own separate way of being considered.” The move is meant to “make sure that those products get reshored,” Lutnick said, or in other words, made in America. “So what he’s doing is, he’s saying they’re exempt from the reciprocal tariffs but they’re included in the semiconductor tariffs, which are coming in probably a month or two,” Lutnick said. 

Update, April 13 2025, 1:43PM ET: This story has been updated to include new information about a separate semiconductor tariff from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick that was shared in an ABC News interview on Sunday.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/smartphones-computers-and-other-electronics-are-exempt-from-trumps-reciprocal-tariffs-for-now-153139830.html?src=rss
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