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Four score and seven years ago, |
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there was no tech news. |
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But if there was, |
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it definitely wasn't included in any YouTube videos. |
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They were making videos about the Spanish civil wars, |
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I don't know. |
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Being poor. |
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AMD has confirmed the existence of its Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor, |
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the successor to the Z1 Extreme, |
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powering gaming handhelds like Lenovo's Legion Go |
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and the Asus ROG Ally X. |
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According to Digital Trends, |
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in a joint briefing with Microsoft at the IFA 2024 conference, |
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AMD said they're targeting a release date |
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of early 2025 for the Z2 Extreme, |
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which would presumably arrive inside of new handheld devices, |
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not floating down from the sky with little parachutes |
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after being shot out of an air cannon. |
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I don't know who keeps putting that idea in the script. |
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It's very stupid. |
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No specs for the chip were given, |
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but AMD exec Jack Huynh said he wants to play Black Myth Wukong |
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for three hours instead of the 45 minutes current handhelds can muster. |
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And Jack, he gets what he wants. |
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Team Red also said they're working with several partners, |
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which could include Valve. |
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The Steam Deck did not use a Z1 chip, |
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but it did use AMD chips. |
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So we may see the Z2 Extreme power the Steam Deck too, |
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or, Valve might follow Acer, |
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who went with a Ryzen 7 8840HS in their recently announced handheld |
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and energy drink from 2010, the Nitro Blaze 7. |
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Intel was having a great week following its reveal of Lunar Lake |
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as a compelling answer to Qualcomm's Snapdragon X series laptop chips. |
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But then Intel had to go and mess it up |
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by announcing it's outsourcing the production of Lunar Lake's successor, Arrow Lake, |
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to external partners. |
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It's not a great look, |
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as the plan has been to manufacture Arrow Lake on the Intel 20A node for years. |
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But don't worry, Intel found a good way to spin this. |
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You see, they've had early success on Intel 18A, |
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which enables them to shift engineering resources from Intel 20A earlier than expected. |
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We're giving up on our own technology |
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and outsourcing production to our competitors, |
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but that's a good thing. |
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We went for coffee with them. |
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And they're really, they're not so bad. |
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They're good guys. |
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The news is inviting speculation |
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about whether CEO Pat Gelsinger really is the chosen one, |
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prophesied to bring balance to the fabs. |
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According to Reuters, |
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it's also making Qualcomm consider trying to acquire different pieces of Intel, |
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like a Vulture planning which giblets is gonna pick off a half-dead antelope |
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dragging itself across the Savannah. |
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That's a gruesome image. |
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Who put this in here? |
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This is a kid's show. |
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This is, kids gotta learn. |
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Death is a part of life. |
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That's tech news, baby. |
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The Internet Archive has lost its attempt to appeal the final ruling |
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from its March 2023 court battle with the Association of American Publishers, |
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in which the archive's operation as a nonprofit digital library was found to be copyright infringement. |
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Publishers Hachette, HarperCollins, and Penguin, Random House |
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sued the Internet Archive in 2020 over its controlled digital lending system. |
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In the recent appeals decision, the judges ask, |
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is it fair use to scan copyrighted physical books |
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and distribute as many digital copies as you have physical copies for free? |
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As if you're some kind of library or something? |
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No! |
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You buy your books like the Founding Fathers intended. |
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I don't know, we're Canadian. |
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I don't know the amendments. |
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Okay, that was close. |
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Except, like other libraries, |
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the Internet Archive does buy books, |
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which, as author Malcolm Harris points out on Twitter, |
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means they're not really taking sales away from individual authors. |
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But I admit, we're not legal experts, |
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and the only place the Internet Archive has left to take this case is the Supreme Court, |
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so we'll see how things play out there. |
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Though this does make me agree with Twitter user Gentlemanbug, |
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if scanning books doesn't count as fair use, |
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where is the publisher lawsuit against OpenAI? |
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I mean, last I heard, they had scanned some things. |
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Their butt. |
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Don't let weirdos scan your butt. |
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The Quick Bits are so fast, |
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we can't say four score in seven years ago. |
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We just say 87 years ago. |
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We don't have time to be poetic. |
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Ah! |
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Version 6.0 of the Bluetooth standard has been released, |
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a mere eight years after the last major version. |
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Yes, I know 5.4 came out last year, |
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but shh, ah, that doesn't... |
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Why do you know so much about Bluetooth standards? |
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In addition to reducing power consumption and increasing efficiency, |
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Bluetooth 6's channel sounding feature will allow centimeter level accuracy |
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for device tracking over considerable distances. |
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This could allow Google's Find My Device network to catch up to Apple's, |
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which currently uses ultra-wideband tech for precision tracking. |
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Or Apple could ditch the ultra-wideband chips |
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in their devices and make them cheaper for customers. |
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And I'm just kidding, that's not gonna happen. |
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Phone maker Honor is using AI to fight nearsightedness. |
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Nearsightedness, or myopia, a condition from which I sadly suffer, |
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occurs when eyes grow longer to better focus on close objects, |
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something that has apparently grown more commonplace, in a world full of screens. |
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Where are the people? |
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Some of Honor's devices, like the Magic V3 foldable phone, |
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use advanced display and AI tech to defocus certain colors. |
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Apparently, this may help slow the progression of myopia. |
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Could this also be solved with less screen time? |
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Maybe, |
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but Honor also has an AI-powered deep fake video detector. |
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And yes, |
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maybe that problem would also be solved with less screen time, |
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but can I have one positive AI story? |
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Please just let me have this. |
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U.S. Navy chiefs got in trouble |
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for illegally conspiring to install a Starlink satellite dish on their warship. |
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Apparently, the internet on Navy ships is often restricted to preserve bandwidth |
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and maintain operational security. |
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But the big dogs on board wanted to check sports scores |
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and stream movies uninterrupted. |
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Is that real? |
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So they smuggled the dish on board |
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and bolted it to a wooden pallet strapped to the ship. |
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They may have gotten away with it too, |
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if they bothered to hide their network's SSID. |
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Instead, rank and file sailors started asking why |
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there was an unexplained wifi network named Stinky. |
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And that just didn't smell right. |
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California-based startup Reflect Orbital |
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has the modest goal of being able to sell sunlight |
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in the middle of the night using giant sky mirrors. |
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While physically plausible, |
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it's not actually clear Reflect Orbital |
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even has the technology to pull this kind of orbital sun mirror stunt. |
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I think it's plausible. |
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The company has yet to launch anything into space, |
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but it's currently taking four minute reservations |
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via its website for late next year. |
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As part of the reservation process, |
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they ask you why you want your very own nighttime patch of sun. |
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Perhaps because they also don't know why anyone would buy this over a hundred dollar spotlight. |
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Do they? |
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And engineers from Cornell and Florence University |
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have created a new bio-hybrid robot |
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that uses electrical signals from an edible mushroom to control a mechanical body. |
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Why do we have to say it's edible? |
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Mushrooms can sense different chemical signals from the world all around them. |
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Which allows the bio-robot to dynamically respond to its environment. |
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Obvious applications include recreating the predator-prey relationship |
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as a form of enrichment for vegans. |
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This isn't an entirely new concept. |
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Nearly a decade ago, |
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the Open Worm Project created a digital version of a worm's brain |
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that could be uploaded into a Lego robot |
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in a kind of black mirror, but for invertebrates concept. |
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What are we doing here? |
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Why? |
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What's next? |
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I created a cyborg celery. |
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Why? |
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Here's another concept. |
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Come back on Monday for more tech news. |
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I'm gonna hold my breath until then to make sure you show up. |
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If you don't, |
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I won't take another breath and I could die. |
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Please. |