Monthly Archives: February 2025

PowerPC Windows NT made to run on GameCube and Wii

Source: OSNews

Article note: This is fuckin goofy, and I love it.

Remember about half a year ago, when the PowerPC versions of Windows NT were made to run on certain models of PowerPC Macs? The same developer responsible for that work, Rairii, took all of this to the next level, and it’s now possible to run the PowerPC version of Windows NT on the GameCube, Wii, Wii U, and a few related development boards.

NT 3.51 RTM and higher. NT 3.51 betas (build 944 and below) will need kernel patches to run due to processor detection bugs. NT 3.5 will never be compatible, as it only supports PowerPC 601. (The additional suspend/hibernation features in NT 3.51 PMZ could be made compatible in theory but in practise would require all of the additional drivers for that to be reimplemented.)

↫ Windows NT for GameCube/Wii GitHub page

As you may have expected, there are some issues, such as instability and random reboots, USB hotplugging doesn’t work, and some other, smaller issues, but none of that takes away from just how awesome and impressive this really is. There’s framebuffer support for the Flipper GPU, full support for the controllers ports and a ton of compatible controllers and related input devices, including support for the N64 mouse and keyboard, although said support is untested.

The GameCube and Wii (U) are PowerPC computers, after all, running IBM processors, so it shouldn’t be surprising that running Windows NT on them is possible. Still, it’s an impressive feat of engineering to get this to work at all, let alone in as complete a state as it appears to be.

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Fabric and craft retailer Joann to go out of business, close all of its stores

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Bummer. Especially since the craft market has the divide with Joann and Michaels being "inclusive craft supplies" to distinguish themselves from Hobby Lobby and their "Bigotry, also kitsh and craft supplies" public presence.
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Educational tech company Chegg sues Google over AI Overviews

Source: Engadget

Article note: Companies trying to rensteek on third party content squabble over who gets to collect the rent. Plus the usual "If you turn in the wrong semester's assignment that you found from Chegg or your bro, I'll give you a zero and make fun of you."

Educational tech company Chegg has sued Google in federal court claiming that its "AI Overviews" that appear ahead of search results have hurt its traffic and revenue. In order to be included in Google's search results, Chegg alleges, it must "supply content that Google republishes without permission in AI-generated answers that unfairly compete for the attention of users on the internet in violation of antitrust laws of the United States." 

Previously, publishers like The New York Times have sued AI companies over copyright infringement, accusing them of training large language models (LLMs) on IP material without permission. However, Chegg is taking another approach, instead accusing Google of abusing its monopoly position to force companies to supply materials for its "AI Overviews" on its search page. Failing to do so, it says, means it could effectively be excluded from Google Search altogether. 

Chegg included a screenshot of a Google AI Overview that takes details from Chegg's website without attribution, though the page in question appears lower down in the search results.

Google told CNBC that it would defend itself against the suit. "Every day, Google sends billions of clicks to sites across the web, and AI Overviews send traffic to a greater diversity of sites," a spokesperson said.

Google's use of its monopoly power in this way "amounts to a form of unlawful reciprocal dealing that harms competition in violation of the Sherman Act," Chegg claimed, while citing a federal judge's ruling from last year that Google is a monopolist in search. The tech-ed company said that it is particularly affected by these practices because the "breadth, depth, quality and volume of Chegg's educational content holds enormous value for artificial intelligence applications." 

Chegg is the latest in a long list of companies suing Google over alleged misappropriation of IP content, though as mentioned, using the Sherman Act is a novel approach. As of January 2025, 38 copyright lawsuits related to AI have been filed in the US, according to a site keeping track of the claims — so far with mixed results. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/educational-tech-company-chegg-sues-google-over-ai-overviews-133017759.html?src=rss
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Larry Ellison’s half-billion-dollar quest to change farming

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Wasting unimaginable amounts of resources on harebrained schemes in areas in which they have _no domain knowledge_ and refuse to listen to experts is a tech bro tradition, but now they think their halfassed regression tools and chatterbots are a substitute for/better than domain knowledge, which seems to be making it dumber. At least this case just wasted their own money on land they've already bought.
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Humane is shutting down the AI Pin and selling its remnants to HP

Source: OSNews

Article note: Dumb-AI hustle meets dumb Internet of Shit hustle, everyone and everything loses except some valleybros who ride off into the sunset with siphoned VC money.

Humane is selling most of its company to HP for $116 million and will stop selling AI Pin, the company announced today.

AI Pins that have already been purchased will continue to function normally until 3PM ET on February 28th, Humane says in a support document. After that date, Pins will “no longer connect to Humane’s servers.” As a result, AI Pin features will “no longer include calling, messaging, AI queries / responses, or cloud access.” Humane is also encouraging users to download any pictures, videos, and notes stored on their Pins before they are permanently deleted at that shutdown time.

↫ Jay Peters at The Verge

I can’t think of a better example of “AI” being a planet-cooking hype bubble than the Humane failure everybody saw coming from a mile away.

HP can add this useless acquisition next to the Palm one.

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Half-Life 2 and Dishonored art lead Viktor Antonov has died

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Oh, sad. I never knew they had the same art lead, just that they were both extremely aesthetic and full of visual story telling in their respective generations.
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The Iconic 3DBenchy Enters the Public Domain

Source: Hacker News

Article note: After the little burst of drama, this is a nice outcome. It's merely an "OK" test print, but a uniformly adopted "OK" is better than everyone picking a benchmark they excel at.
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The DOGE website is seemingly so insecure it can be edited by anyone

Source: Engadget

Article note: Overconfident morons gonna overconfident moron. A few folks are pretending this is 4D-chess find-the-dissidents bait but... no, they're not nearly that clever, and they're the kind of people who would have fucked with it to dunk on authority figures themselves.

According to researchers, anyone who knows where to look can spray digital graffiti on the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) website. Two web development experts said the site doesn’t seem to be hosted on government servers and that the database it pulls from can be modified by those who locate it. At the time of writing, a message reading “these ‘experts’ left their database open - roro” is still visible on the DOGE site.

DOGE chief and President Trump consigliere Elon Musk said on Tuesday that his team would be as transparent as possible, with updates on its actions shared to an X account and website. As 404 Media notes, the DOGE website was pretty much blank at the time. Since then, it's been hurriedly assembled to show a feed of posts from the entity’s X account, along with details about the federal workforce.

The researchers told 404 that the site appeared to be built on Cloudflare Pages instead of government servers. After looking at the site’s architecture and API endpoints, one was able to locate the database containing stats on government employees. They made changes to database entries that were reflected on the DOGE website.

It's not the first time that a federal website operating under the Trump administration has appeared to have been slapped together. Just this week, the waste.gov was locked after it was reported that the site displayed a dummy WordPress page, complete with placeholder text.

DOGE does acknowledge that there are possible issues with its web presence. “This is DOGE's effort to create a comprehensive, government-wide org chart,” a footnote on the DOGE website reads. “This is an enormous effort, and there are likely some errors or omissions. We will continue to strive for maximum accuracy over time.”

However, it doesn’t exactly inspire confidence that a team tasked with making sweeping cuts to government spending and allegedly barging its way into federal systems that contain sensitive data on federal employees and citizens can’t secure its own website. Perhaps gutting the Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency wasn't the wisest idea.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/the-doge-website-is-seemingly-so-insecure-it-can-be-edited-by-anyone-160612228.html?src=rss
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The History of S.U.S..E

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I've enjoyed SuSE since ~2000 (I spent a LOT of time with a commercial box/books/CDs 7.2 install set in my formative years), and vaguely knew most of that history, but had never seen it assembled into a narrative. Even fleshed out, it's one of the cleaner "good people doing good stuff" stories in the software world.
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Oasis: a small, statically-linked Linux system

Source: OSNews

Article note: This is pretty neat, very BSD in the design, but with interestingly curated modern parts. Conspicuously simple init.

You might think the world of Linux distributions is a rather boring, settled affair, but there’s actually a ton of interesting experimentation going on in the Linux world. From things like NixOS with its unique packaging framework, to the various immutable distributions out there like the Fedora Atomic editions, there’s enough uniqueness to go around to find a lid for every pot. Oasis Linux surely falls into this category. One of its main unique characteristics is that it’s entirely statically linked.

All software in the base system is linked statically, including the display server (velox) and web browser (netsurf). Compared to dynamic linking, this is a simpler mechanism which eliminates problems with upgrading libraries, and results in completely self-contained binaries that can easily be copied to other systems.

↫ Oasis GitHub page

That’s not all it has to offer, though. It also offers fast and 100% reproducible builds, it’s mostly ISO C conformant, and it has minimal bootstrap dependencies – all you need is a “POSIX system with git, lua, curl, a sha256 utility, standard compression utilities, and an x86_64-linux-musl cross compiler”. The ISO C-comformance is a crucial part of one of Oasis’ goals: to be buildable with cproc, a small, very strict C11 compiler. It has no package manager, but any software outside of Oasis itself can be installed and managed with pkgsrc or Nix.

Another important goal of the project is to be extremely easy to understand, and its /etc directory is honestly a sight to behold, and as the project proudly claims, the most complex file in there is rc.init at a mere 16 lines. The configuration files are indeed incredibly easy to understand, which is a breath of fresh air compared to the archaic stuff in commercial UNIX or the complex stuff in modern Linux distributions that I normally deal with.

I’m not sure is Oasis would make for a good, usable day-to-day operating system, but I definitely like what they’re putting down.

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