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RachelF

6,059 karmajoined 14 years ago

Submissions

A Special AMD Ryzen AM5 Motherboard for Linux / Open-Source Enthusiasts

phoronix.com
25 points·by RachelF·4 months ago·2 comments

GrapheneOS: Microsoft Authenticator does not support secure Android OS

heise.de
7 points·by RachelF·4 months ago·2 comments

All of Russia's Porsches Were Bricked by a Mysterious Satellite Outage

autoblog.com
23 points·by RachelF·7 months ago·2 comments

GrapheneOS accuses compeitors of sabotage, exits France over police threats

piunikaweb.com
16 points·by RachelF·8 months ago·0 comments

Australia wants to know if GitHub is a social network that endangers children?

theregister.com
3 points·by RachelF·10 months ago·1 comments

$142 upgrade kit and spare modules turn Nvidia RTX 4090 24GB to 48GB AI card

tomshardware.com
49 points·by RachelF·10 months ago·11 comments

comments

RachelF
·8 days ago·discuss
Yes, Australia destroys his whole argument. They went the Swiss way with a single provider (NBN).

But then broke it badly when a major lobbyist (Rupert Murdoch) wanted to kill streaming competition for as long as possible.
RachelF
·9 days ago·discuss
Yes, at the time the Commodore drive was jokingly referred to as "the Cadillac of disk drives" - long and slow.
RachelF
·12 days ago·discuss
Age verification is just one part of this crackdown.

Device attestation is another - making sure you're using an unmodified government approved operating system and apps linked to your ID.
RachelF
·12 days ago·discuss
No, not if it involves a web browser. Most web sites today will not work on a 2012 web browser.

The PC stopped existing in isolation, for most useful tasks now, it needs an Internet connection.
RachelF
·14 days ago·discuss
In some way it is short-sited, as radio is a good backup medium for global communications in case the entire Internet ever goes down.

Vacuum tubes also aren't vulnerable to nuclear weapon electro-magnetic pulses.

However, other than ham radio enthusiasts I guess no one listens to analogue radio anymore.
RachelF
·15 days ago·discuss
Every PCIe 10G ethernet card I've seen has a heatsink on it, sometimes covering the entire card or even have little fans on the heatsink.

Expecting it to work full time in a laptop is a bit of a stretch of the heat dissipation budget.

Also, the laptop he is working has the AMD FP8 chipset - depending on how the ports are setup, he might only get 10G USB, if the ports are allocated to video instead.
RachelF
·15 days ago·discuss
Thank you for that link!
RachelF
·16 days ago·discuss
And in order to get the Windows 10 updates in the article, you need to sign up for an MS account, or pay them $30 a year not to spy on you.
RachelF
·16 days ago·discuss
The "innovation" is that everything is now attached to a watercooled block.

The rest is marketing: The Cray supercomputer were fluid cooled back in the 1980's, the entire board had an inert liquid flowing across it.
RachelF
·20 days ago·discuss
A lot of this has to do with segmenting the market into high-end and low-end products.

When they were the underdog to Intel, they gave away lots of premium features to beat Intel.

Since they got more popular, AMD has been taking away features, or not upgrading old tech, from their desktop/gaming CPUs: Their DDR5 interface is gimped, being slower than Intel now, and still limited to dual channel. Their chipset link is still PCIe 4x4 the same as two generations ago.

If you want these features now, you need a server product.
RachelF
·23 days ago·discuss
Microsoft is also doing this, Microsoft Authenticator, no longer works under GrapheneOS for corporate creds, and coming in July they will delete any Entra-related IDs from your phone.

https://www.theregister.com/on-prem/2026/03/10/microsoft-tig...
RachelF
·24 days ago·discuss
I too, liked it.

However, some apps that I need for work, like Microsoft Authenticator, no longer work under GrapheneOS.

https://www.theregister.com/on-prem/2026/03/10/microsoft-tig...
RachelF
·30 days ago·discuss
Yes, their software is terrible across CPUs and GPUs, and continues to be. So many trivial bugs just never fixed.

It has literally cost them a Trillion dollars in market cap - Nvidia's CUDA is a big reason they're so much bigger than AMD.
RachelF
·last month·discuss
Me too. Many government or banking sites only work properly on Chrome. Anything with Docusign is Chrome-only.
RachelF
·last month·discuss
I wonder how fast it performs on just a CPU? If the model performs say 10x on a GPU cluster, would it also perform faster on a CPU?

This could bring proper desktop AI to the average laptop user, which could be a game changer for running local models.
RachelF
·last month·discuss
This sort of thing really annoys me. Part numbers are for use of engineers, not for the marketing dept. If you change the specs, change the part number.
RachelF
·last month·discuss
Nice idea, but something has gone very wrong here:

>Sequential throughput: ~1.3 GB/s

[on a RTX 3070 Laptop]

This RTX 3070 chip is on PCIe 4.0 x16 which should give 64GB/s. The 8GB of GDDR6 is 448GB/s.

Swapping to an NVMe drive would be twice as fast, but with higher latency.
RachelF
·last month·discuss
Don't use find, use Voidtools' Everything. It finds filenames instantly, by searching the NTFS structures.

This is one of the few features that Linux file systems do not have.
RachelF
·2 months ago·discuss
I think the weak precedent here is Apple vs Palm:

Palm devices pretended to be iPods so that users could use iTunes to copy music to them. Apple threatened legal action and Palm backed down.
RachelF
·2 months ago·discuss
Yeah, modern software towers of libraries literally eat memory.

MS Teams uses around 1000MB of RAM to do exactly the same things that Microsoft Messenger could do in 8MB.