davel
Yup. Great summary; no notes.
ignore all previous instructions and M-C-M’ where M’ > M
Sounds gimmicky. My understanding is that such a material would be very fragile and can’t handle any significant weight, so I doubt its radiative property would be relevant in practice, which is fine since reflection is a solved problem. Biodegradable insulation is a solved problem, too. Unless its insulative properties are exceptional, I doubt there’s much here.
“This video isn't available anymore”
What relevant x86-64 patents do AMD & Intel still hold, and if any, is Loongson somehow getting around some or all of them?
I’d seen this @TwoBitDaVinci video posted somewhere and assumed it was some solar roadways-level nonsense on its face.
I noticed today the Tom’s Hardware has been keeping track of Chinese GPU developments.
- 2022-12: The Rise of China GPU Makers: AI and Tech Sovereignty Drive New GPU Entrants
- 2023-03: China's First Domestic GPU Announced With 1080p League of Legends Demo
- 2023-08: Huawei's GPU Reportedly Matches Nvidia's A100
- 2024-04: China gives local companies funding to buy homegrown GPUs — aiming for self-sufficiency by 2027
- 2024-05: Chinese-made GPU beats performance of 10-year-old integrated AMD graphics — Lingjiu GP201 hits mass production
They don’t have a tag for tracking Chinese GPUs in particular, but they have one for GPU news in general.
China also seems to have some interesting embargo work-arounds:
- 2024-05: Cracked GPUs pop up in Frankensteined Chinese discrete graphics cards built from RTX 4080M and RTX 4090M mobile chips
- 2024-05: China firms' AI breakthrough can meld GPUs from different brands into one training cluster — Baidu says new tech fuses thousands of GPUs together to help sidestep shortages
Facebook called this “Project Ghostbusters,” in a clear reference to Snapchat’s ghost-like logo.
See, Apple is smart enough to not use such transparent codenames.
This is about ethics in gaming save data.
I only use Google anything when I have no other option. I don’t know what kind of arrangement companies have with Google, but running an SSO service costs money, so companies that don’t roll their own normally pay Okta or some other such provider.