Tech
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UK gives Openreach £289M for 4 rural broadband contracts • The Register
www.theregister.com UK gives Openreach £289M for 4 rural broadband contractsNation's dominant broadband plumber wins ahead of altnets
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RISC-V is making moves, but how will it hit the mainstream? • The Register
www.theregister.com RISC-V is making moves, but how will it hit the mainstream?Can it topple x86 and Arm, or is the gap too wide to close?
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Next-gen Wi-Fi to focus on giving users the best connection • The Register
www.theregister.com Next-gen Wi-Fi to focus on giving users the best connectionEighth generation of the standard is all about ultra reliability
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David Gerard: "Microsoft refuses pull request to put documentation in readable table form because LLMs are bad at parsing tables…"
circumstances.run David Gerard (@[email protected])Microsoft refuses pull request to put documentation in readable table form because LLMs are bad at parsing tables https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/WSL/pull/2021
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Open source projects drown in bad bug reports penned by AI • The Register
www.theregister.com Open source projects drown in bad bug reports penned by AIPython security developer-in-residence decries use of bots that 'cannot understand code'
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Google unveils 'mind-boggling' quantum computing chip - BBC News
www.bbc.co.uk Google unveils 'mind-boggling' quantum computing chipIt solves in five minutes a problem computers now would need 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years to work out, Google says.
- spectrum.ieee.org Scientists Make First Mechanical Qubit
It's similar to a drum skin that is simultaneously vibrating and still
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Automattic creates website tracking WP Engine departures • The Register
My earnest hope is that all of the former WordPress community supporters and contributors, swivel and start investing their time and effort into WriteFreely.
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The RVA23 profile is now ratified, so RISC-V gets satisfied • The Register
www.theregister.com The RVA23 profile is now ratified, so RISC-V gets satisfiedNo longer an underdog - it now challenges Arm and x86
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Cloudflare beats patent troll so badly it basically gives up • The Register
www.theregister.com Cloudflare beats patent troll so badly it basically gives upNetworking giant pockets $225K, foe promises to stop suing and abandons IP
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Pragmatic Semiconductor bends RISC-V into new markets • The Register
www.theregister.com Pragmatic Semiconductor bends RISC-V into new marketsIt won't smash any benchmarks, but it will go where most others can't
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Coding whiz had another talent: inappropriate insults • The Register
www.theregister.com Coding whiz had another talent: inappropriate insultsThen he stopped being a coding whiz, which is when the trouble started
- servo.org Building a browser using Servo as a web engine! - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine
Let's build another web browser based on Servo!
- phys.org Smartphone-based microscope rapidly reconstructs 3D holograms
Researchers have developed a new smartphone-based digital holographic microscope that enables precision 3D measurements. The highly portable and inexpensive microscope could help bring 3D measurement capabilities to a broader range of applications, including educational uses and point-of-care diagno...
cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/25531
- www.independent.co.uk Mushroom learns to crawl after being given robot body
Biohybrid machine ushers new era of robotics, scientists say
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/20057289
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Google insists it's easy to add Rust code to your firmware • The Register
www.theregister.com Google insists it's easy to add Rust code to your firmwareNot so much when trying to convert coding veterans
- arstechnica.com Imperfect Linux-powered DIY smart TV is the embodiment of ad fatigue
DIYer picks a "little insane"-looking setup for less tracking, more control.
Escaping the smart tv doom.
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CockroachDB scuttles away from open source Core offering • The Register
www.theregister.com CockroachDB scuttles away from open source Core offeringDistributed database biz doesn't like bigger customers using the free version of its software
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Converting devices to USB Type-C
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
> USB Type C is great! ...unless you have to use dongles anyway.
I liked the style of this video
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ICANN approves use of .internal domain for your network • The Register
www.theregister.com ICANN approves use of .internal domain for your networkVint Cerf revealed Google already uses the string, as do plenty of others
- www.ifixit.com Why Is Your Old Phone Battery Swollen? | iFixit News
What causes batteries in old electronics to swell, and what you can do to prevent it.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/26470153
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DARPA suggests turning legacy C code automatically into Rust • The Register
www.theregister.com DARPA suggests turning legacy C code automatically into RustWho wants to make a TRACTOR pull request?
- www.technologynetworks.com 3D-Printed Ceramic Ink Removes “Forever Chemicals” From Water
Engineers have invented a new way to remove health-harming "forever chemicals" from water – using 3D printing.
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Self-driving pods to offer mobility autonomy at Vancouver International Airport
globalnews.ca Self-driving pods to offer mobility autonomy at Vancouver International Airport - BC | Globalnews.caYVR is partnering with A&K Robotics, which is a company founded by three UBC graduates, to introduce new, self-driving pods to help people with mobility issues.
cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/1149
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Scientists create ‘MRI’ tool to image atoms million times smaller than hair - Built a single molecule high resolution quantum sensor that can measure electric and magnetic fields in atoms.
interestingengineering.com Scientific milestone achieves atomic-scale imaging in a world-firstA single molecule quantum sensor allows researchers to probe atoms from an extremely close distance never achieved before.
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What are Passkeys and how do they work? | Passkeys allow for a simple, yet extremely secure, sign-in experience. Learn more about what they are and how they work in this article.
clerk.com What are passkeys and how do they work?Passkeys allow for a simple, yet extremely secure, sign-in experience. Learn more about what they are and how they work in this article.
A tech service named Clerk put together a nice breakdown of how Passkeys work on a technical level. I've found many other explanations too focused on technical definitions rather than a conceptional overview or so simplistic they were unhelpful for me. This one feels like a nice balance between not enough information and too much.
The article is broken down into the sections below: >- What are passkeys? >- How does public key crypto work? >- A practical use of public-key cryptography >- How are passkeys more secure than a username and password? >- Clerk supports passkeys [this last section is irrelevant to anyone not interested in the service provided by Clerk]
Clerk provides some sort of user management service; I don't know nor care if it's any good.
- arstechnica.com The first GPT-4-class AI model anyone can download has arrived: Llama 405B
"Open source AI is the path forward," says Mark Zuckerberg, misusing the term.
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CrowdStrike’s Falcon Sensor linked to Linux crashes, too • The Register
www.theregister.com CrowdStrike’s Falcon Sensor linked to Linux crashes, tooRapid restore tool being tested as Microsoft estimates 8.5M machines went down
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Open-source and privacy focused offline translation in your browser
Hi everyone. I'm launching Linguist Translate, an open-source, full-featured translation solution with an embedded offline translator based on the Bergamot Project created by Mozilla.
Site: https://linguister.io
GitHub: https://github.com/translate-tools/linguist
Today, Linguist is launched on ProductHunt. Support the project who really care about privacy: https://www.producthunt.com/posts/linguist-translate
Linguist is not just a wrapper over Google Translator like many other extensions. You can use any translation service with Linguist, thanks to custom translators! You may even deploy any machine translation (like LibreTranslate) on your localhost and then add this service to Linguist.
All features are included: text translation, full-page translation, selected text translation, Text-To-Speech, dictionary, history, and even more.
- www.theverge.com This prototype turns your car’s windshield into a giant AR display
An intriguing prototype with a lot of rough edges.
Ooooh... car BSOD vibes...
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Remove Polyfill.io code from your website immediately • The Register
www.theregister.com Remove Polyfill.io code from your website immediatelyScripts turn malicious, infect webpages after Chinese CDN swallows domain
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Alibaba Cloud exports Chinese AI models, in translation • The Register
www.theregister.com Alibaba Cloud exports Chinese AI models, in translationLike Bedrock or Azure OpenAI Studio – but with the added fun of geopolitical risk
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Researchers leverage shadows to model 3D scenes, including objects blocked from view | This technique could lead to safer autonomous vehicles, more efficient AR/VR headsets, or faster warehouse robots
news.mit.edu Researchers leverage shadows to model 3D scenes, including objects blocked from viewA new technique can model an entire 3D scene, including areas hidden from view, from just one camera image. The method, developed by MIT and Meta researchers, relies on image shadows, which provide information about the geometry and location of hidden objects.
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Robotic ‘Third Thumb’ expands hand’s range of motion, carrying capacity | Study showed, 98 percent of participants successfully manipulated objects with the Third Thumb, with only 13 unable to perform
interestingengineering.com Robotic ‘Third Thumb’ helps perform challenging tasks single-handedlyStudy showed that 98 percent of participants successfully manipulated objects using the Third Thumb within the first minute.
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AMD won Computex by extending AM5 support and launching new AM4 CPUs
...which is why i prefer AM for hardware longevity.
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Post-YouTube: Why Aren't We Embracing IPFS?
With YouTube leveraging its dominance to make the service shittier and shittier, we're forced to consider our future. Yeah we have Peertube, but Peertube is shitty. I consider myself techy and I can't find a peertube instance that's not just one single users' "boring" videos.
So in order to move away from YouTube, we're facing two major issues. No three!
- Service: Even in its state of enshittification, the YouTube app is still a million times better than Vimeo, DailyMotion, etc. Introduce ReVanced into the equation and YouTube has a lock-in.
- Hosting: Hosting video is expensive as hell and that's a major hurdle to toppling Big Tech.
- Audience: People stay where the people are, because that's how they generate money. Peertube sucks because I can't just put in a URL and find random content. Without audience you don't have discoverability, without discoverability, you don't have monetization, without monetization, you only get "boring" videos.
Okay, so the third point is a bigger one and I actually think we need to adopt the Blendle-esque model, until we overthrow capitalism and live our post monetary wealth utopia.
What's this Blendle-esque model you speak of? Blendle was a great app idea that was blocked by corporate greed. The idea was that if you wanted to read an article from a newspaper, rather than pay a subscription, you could just pay 10 pence for the pleasure of reading the article. Win-win? Wrong! Most newspapers wanted a subscription or nothing.
Okay, so how does that work with videos? The idea is that users would put money into a pot. So let's say I have £10 in my pot, at the end of the month, the app would divide that £10 across all the videos I watched in the month and send it to all the videographers. If my pot was £1 the share would be smaller and if it was £100 it would be larger.
Okay, so the service issue. When are they going to finally make Peertube user friendly and discoverable? Wouldn't they be forced to if content creators were attracted? Because it can't just continue to suck right? Anakin? Seriously, search for a video on the Peertube main site and someone in their infinite wisdom thought it would be great to give you a wall of text! Mate!
So now that we got all that out of the way, think of it like salad, this is the real meal now. Let's talk about hosting. Hosting video is expensive and its the barrier to toppling Big Tech. Though middle-size tech should've been trying to do it. If Vimeo added Peertube support, it would be a hegemon, but I digress… Pick the pitchforks back up and re-light the torches! Hosting videos is a huge resource expense. It's why we don't see a crazy number of videos posted to Lemmy, Mastodon and even PixelFed. But what if we could solve that? Not the Fediverse video bit (yes, Peertube, you are a joke to me, kidding!), that's just a byproduct, but what if we could all chip in and distribute the cost? Well, I recently, literally just before I started waffling in your eye. But I present the Interplanetary File System! IPFS for short. Think of it like torrenting, but more user friendly and more seamless. Anyway, I'm thinking this could be the missing piece and it could be the building block that allows video to return to the embrace of the open web? What do you think? Why aren't we leveraging this?
More info on IPFS here: https://ipfs.tech/developers/
For the record, I'm not affiliated with any project, protocol, entity or anything. Peertube didn't kill my puppy and I don't even think my mum even subscribes to my YouTube, so I'm totally looking from the outside in.