datacenter liquid cooling solution
Hi,
I'm building a homelab watercooled unix server.
I don't want to buy expensive overpriced pre-mixes from ekwb or aquatuning.
What cooling solution do datacenters use for water cooling?
What is the chemical solution? Does anyone know?
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Microsoft Used China-Based Support for Multiple U.S. Agencies, Potentially Exposing Sensitive Data
Microsoft says it will no longer use China-based engineers to support the Pentagon. But ProPublica found that the tech giant has relied on its global workforce for years to support other federal clients, including the Justice Department.
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Recensione : Yaya Bey – Do It Afraid
Recensione : Yaya Bey – Do It Afraid
Coding and Gaming on AR Glasses
cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/33701868
Backstory
I have quite an old LCD monitor and wanted to buy a new one for quite some time.
But I was planning to travel and wouldn't be able to bring the monitor with me.
Then a friend of mine shared an article with an intriguing title:
I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses.I had never heard of AR glasses before. Turns out they're basically a "dumb" monitor with a USB‑C connection, but the image is projected into your eyes, so it looks like it's floating. No additional software is required, and I can take it anywhere with me. So I decided to order one. The same friend later asked me for a review, but I decided to post it here and just share the link - maybe someone else will also find it useful.
Impressions
I went for the Xreal One. They are quite pricy, but I wanted to try something cutting-edge. There's also a Pro version, but according to this review on Reddit and review on YouTube, it has several drawbacks - mainly reduced sharpness, which is important for coding.The glasses aren't as comfortable as regular sunglasses — they're a little bit heavier, but I got used to them. They also generate quite a bit of heat on the top part of the frame. It can cause slight discomfort when it touches face, but I've gotten used to wearing them properly to avoid that.
They have three levels of electrochromatic dimming (the lenses physically get darker). On the lowest setting (disabled), it's not fully transparent —
more like a sunglasses with a slight dimming. At the maximum level, it's extremely dark; even in a well‑lit room I can't see what's on the edges.
With dimming disabled, it looks the coolest — like an actual floating screen with a bit of transparency.
But the darkening is useful for a more immersive experience since it removes that transparency.
They also have "Auto transparency" option that automatically disables dimming when you turn your head away from the screen.
Also, the brighter the room is, the more noticeable the reflection on the bottom of the glasses due to the lens's prism design.
It's not an issue with the Pro version, but I didn't find it distracting at all, even in a well-lit room.The screen is great. From video reviews, I was a bit worried that the colors would look like from a projector, but it's just impossible to capture this properly on camera.
In reality, the colors are nice. They also allow you to configure the color temperature, and I found the coldest setting the most comfortable.
The picture isn't very sharp — there's a bit of motion blur when I move my head around, and thin red or pink text on a black background looks slightly off.
I think it's a limitation of the technology, plus the screen is only 1080p. But it's not as bad as it sounds — I can still use it comfortably for coding.By default, the screen is 16:9 with 120Hz, but you can switch to 32:9 or 21:9 with 60Hz.
I use 16:9 for gaming and 32:9 for productivity — 32:9 is so large, it's like two monitors glued together. I usually keep my browser on one side and something else on the other.
I also love playing retro games, and I can say that 4:3 content looks great. Since the screen is OLED, the black pixels don't emit any light, so the letterboxes fully transparent.However, it's not the same as having an actual ultra‑wide monitor. The screen doesn't fill the entire surface of the glasses — that's what the FOV is about.
On my model, it's 50 degrees, which is quite large. But in ultra‑wide mode, I still have to rotate my head to see the other half of the screen.
So there's no peripheral vision like there would be on an actual ultra‑wide monitor.
Also, other people can't see what you're seeing, even if they're close — which can be both a good and a bad thing.You can also configure how far the screen appears — anywhere from 1m to 10m — and its size in inches.
There are five size levels, and the values depend on the selected distance and whether ultra‑wide mode is enabled.
I usually use 1m for productivity and 4m for gaming and multimedia. My preferred size is the "middle" (third) level,
which is designed to fit the entire screen without me needing to rotate my head (except when ultra‑wide mode is enabled).
For 1m these sizes are 35″ for 16:9 and 64″ for 32:9; at 4m they're 140″ and 255″ respectively. The large screen feels very immersive — it's like being in a cinema.The glasses also have three view modes:
- Anchor. I can rotate my head freely and The screen stays fixed in space. However, if I walk around, the screen moves with me (which is what 3 DoF means). This is the mode I use most of the time.
- Follow. The screen rotates along with your head. I don't use this mode much.
- Side view. Similar to Follow, but the screen is positioned in the corner. I use it when I'm doing chores and want to watch something.
They also have a stabilizer enabled by default, which smooths the screen movement when you move your head.To use the glasses, you need a USB‑C video output. My motherboard supports it, but to enable it I had to connect my video card to the motherboard via DisplayPort.
I never heard about a connection like this before, but it's from my motherboard manual. It does make sense, though — the GPU provides the video output,
and the motherboard wouldn't know about it otherwise. Software‑wise, it works out of the box with my KDE Plasma setup on Arch Linux.
The only issue I'm noticing is some small visual glitches for the first few seconds after connecting. On PC I use it together with my regular monitor.
The mentioned "Auto transparency" pairs nicely with it. However, it's not perfect, since I'm still looking at the second screen through what's basically
a pair of light sunglasses. So I usually don't put anything important on it.As for phones, neither mine nor my wife's supports video output. But from reviews, I think it wouldn't be very convenient to use with a phone anyway.
First, the phone's screen has to stay on, otherwise the glasses won't display anything. Second, you can't interact with the phone through the glasses, so you have to look at the phone itself.But I found a great option to use the glasses with. I have a Retroid Pocket Flip 2 — a pocketable retro console that runs Android and supports video output.
Unlike a regular phone, it automatically turns off its built‑in display when a second screen is connected. It also has physical controls, so I don't need to use a touchscreen.
The Android UI isn't perfect for a gamepad, but it works. Streaming to it also works great because, even though the screen is disabled, the touch input still works — so it basically becomes a touchpad. Since the device is a clamshell, I sometimes use an 8BitDo Micro as an input device to avoid opening it, which is especially convenient for quickly pausing videos. This gamepad can also act as a keyboard via a special switch on it, so it works nicely when I stream from my PC too.I also have a Steam Deck, but there's not much to add — it just works without any issue.
The glasses also have built-in speakers. I like their design: you don't put anything inside your ears — the speakers are integrated into the frame near where your ears are, so they kind of "whisper" to you. Others can hear them only at high volume. This affects the sound quality, so music doesn't sound as good as on quality headphones, but I think it's a worthy compromise. And it's still possible to wear regular headphones with the glasses.
They also have a shortcut button on the frame. I assigned screen off on regular press and ultra-wide mode on hold.
The firmware is proprietary, but it doesn't use the internet. And what I liked is that updates are installed through a web browser.
However, it has to be a Chromium‑based browser on Windows or Mac.
Luckily, I have a dual‑boot, so I rebooted to update the firmware.
The update added support for 16:9, so it looks like it's not just for bug fixes.The glasses can be equipped with prescription lenses, but I wear contact lenses and those work as well.
They also have a camera add‑on called Xreal Eye. It's a small camera that unlocks 6 DoF tracking and can also take photos and record videos. The media is stored directly on the glasses, which have 2GB of space, and can later be transferred to a phone or PC over a cable. I haven't bought it yet, but I'm considering it since I'm interested in having 6 DoF.
Conclusion
I love these glasses, it's easily my favorite portable option. It's a huge screen I can take anywhere with me. I don't mind that it's only 1080p, none of my portable devices can fully handle 4k anyway.Since they are better then my current monitor, I use them with my PC too. But I don't think it's a proper replacement.
If you don't need portability, regular screen will be better and cheaper.
Coding and Gaming on AR Glasses
cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/33701868
Backstory
I have quite an old LCD monitor and wanted to buy a new one for quite some time.
But I was planning to travel and wouldn't be able to bring the monitor with me.
Then a friend of mine shared an article with an intriguing title:
I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses.I had never heard of AR glasses before. Turns out they're basically a "dumb" monitor with a USB‑C connection, but the image is projected into your eyes, so it looks like it's floating. No additional software is required, and I can take it anywhere with me. So I decided to order one. The same friend later asked me for a review, but I decided to post it here and just share the link - maybe someone else will also find it useful.
Impressions
I went for the Xreal One. They are quite pricy, but I wanted to try something cutting-edge. There's also a Pro version, but according to this review on Reddit and review on YouTube, it has several drawbacks - mainly reduced sharpness, which is important for coding.The glasses aren't as comfortable as regular sunglasses — they're a little bit heavier, but I got used to them. They also generate quite a bit of heat on the top part of the frame. It can cause slight discomfort when it touches face, but I've gotten used to wearing them properly to avoid that.
They have three levels of electrochromatic dimming (the lenses physically get darker). On the lowest setting (disabled), it's not fully transparent —
more like a sunglasses with a slight dimming. At the maximum level, it's extremely dark; even in a well‑lit room I can't see what's on the edges.
With dimming disabled, it looks the coolest — like an actual floating screen with a bit of transparency.
But the darkening is useful for a more immersive experience since it removes that transparency.
They also have "Auto transparency" option that automatically disables dimming when you turn your head away from the screen.
Also, the brighter the room is, the more noticeable the reflection on the bottom of the glasses due to the lens's prism design.
It's not an issue with the Pro version, but I didn't find it distracting at all, even in a well-lit room.The screen is great. From video reviews, I was a bit worried that the colors would look like from a projector, but it's just impossible to capture this properly on camera.
In reality, the colors are nice. They also allow you to configure the color temperature, and I found the coldest setting the most comfortable.
The picture isn't very sharp — there's a bit of motion blur when I move my head around, and thin red or pink text on a black background looks slightly off.
I think it's a limitation of the technology, plus the screen is only 1080p. But it's not as bad as it sounds — I can still use it comfortably for coding.By default, the screen is 16:9 with 120Hz, but you can switch to 32:9 or 21:9 with 60Hz.
I use 16:9 for gaming and 32:9 for productivity — 32:9 is so large, it's like two monitors glued together. I usually keep my browser on one side and something else on the other.
I also love playing retro games, and I can say that 4:3 content looks great. Since the screen is OLED, the black pixels don't emit any light, so the letterboxes fully transparent.However, it's not the same as having an actual ultra‑wide monitor. The screen doesn't fill the entire surface of the glasses — that's what the FOV is about.
On my model, it's 50 degrees, which is quite large. But in ultra‑wide mode, I still have to rotate my head to see the other half of the screen.
So there's no peripheral vision like there would be on an actual ultra‑wide monitor.
Also, other people can't see what you're seeing, even if they're close — which can be both a good and a bad thing.You can also configure how far the screen appears — anywhere from 1m to 10m — and its size in inches.
There are five size levels, and the values depend on the selected distance and whether ultra‑wide mode is enabled.
I usually use 1m for productivity and 4m for gaming and multimedia. My preferred size is the "middle" (third) level,
which is designed to fit the entire screen without me needing to rotate my head (except when ultra‑wide mode is enabled).
For 1m these sizes are 35″ for 16:9 and 64″ for 32:9; at 4m they're 140″ and 255″ respectively. The large screen feels very immersive — it's like being in a cinema.The glasses also have three view modes:
- Anchor. I can rotate my head freely and The screen stays fixed in space. However, if I walk around, the screen moves with me (which is what 3 DoF means). This is the mode I use most of the time.
- Follow. The screen rotates along with your head. I don't use this mode much.
- Side view. Similar to Follow, but the screen is positioned in the corner. I use it when I'm doing chores and want to watch something.
They also have a stabilizer enabled by default, which smooths the screen movement when you move your head.To use the glasses, you need a USB‑C video output. My motherboard supports it, but to enable it I had to connect my video card to the motherboard via DisplayPort.
I never heard about a connection like this before, but it's from my motherboard manual. It does make sense, though — the GPU provides the video output,
and the motherboard wouldn't know about it otherwise. Software‑wise, it works out of the box with my KDE Plasma setup on Arch Linux.
The only issue I'm noticing is some small visual glitches for the first few seconds after connecting. On PC I use it together with my regular monitor.
The mentioned "Auto transparency" pairs nicely with it. However, it's not perfect, since I'm still looking at the second screen through what's basically
a pair of light sunglasses. So I usually don't put anything important on it.As for phones, neither mine nor my wife's supports video output. But from reviews, I think it wouldn't be very convenient to use with a phone anyway.
First, the phone's screen has to stay on, otherwise the glasses won't display anything. Second, you can't interact with the phone through the glasses, so you have to look at the phone itself.But I found a great option to use the glasses with. I have a Retroid Pocket Flip 2 — a pocketable retro console that runs Android and supports video output.
Unlike a regular phone, it automatically turns off its built‑in display when a second screen is connected. It also has physical controls, so I don't need to use a touchscreen.
The Android UI isn't perfect for a gamepad, but it works. Streaming to it also works great because, even though the screen is disabled, the touch input still works — so it basically becomes a touchpad. Since the device is a clamshell, I sometimes use an 8BitDo Micro as an input device to avoid opening it, which is especially convenient for quickly pausing videos. This gamepad can also act as a keyboard via a special switch on it, so it works nicely when I stream from my PC too.I also have a Steam Deck, but there's not much to add — it just works without any issue.
The glasses also have built-in speakers. I like their design: you don't put anything inside your ears — the speakers are integrated into the frame near where your ears are, so they kind of "whisper" to you. Others can hear them only at high volume. This affects the sound quality, so music doesn't sound as good as on quality headphones, but I think it's a worthy compromise. And it's still possible to wear regular headphones with the glasses.
They also have a shortcut button on the frame. I assigned screen off on regular press and ultra-wide mode on hold.
The firmware is proprietary, but it doesn't use the internet. And what I liked is that updates are installed through a web browser.
However, it has to be a Chromium‑based browser on Windows or Mac.
Luckily, I have a dual‑boot, so I rebooted to update the firmware.
The update added support for 16:9, so it looks like it's not just for bug fixes.The glasses can be equipped with prescription lenses, but I wear contact lenses and those work as well.
They also have a camera add‑on called Xreal Eye. It's a small camera that unlocks 6 DoF tracking and can also take photos and record videos. The media is stored directly on the glasses, which have 2GB of space, and can later be transferred to a phone or PC over a cable. I haven't bought it yet, but I'm considering it since I'm interested in having 6 DoF.
Conclusion
I love these glasses, it's easily my favorite portable option. It's a huge screen I can take anywhere with me. I don't mind that it's only 1080p, none of my portable devices can fully handle 4k anyway.Since they are better then my current monitor, I use them with my PC too. But I don't think it's a proper replacement.
If you don't need portability, regular screen will be better and cheaper.
Coding and Gaming on AR Glasses
Backstory
I have quite an old LCD monitor and wanted to buy a new one for quite some time.
But I was planning to travel and wouldn't be able to bring the monitor with me.
Then a friend of mine shared an article with an intriguing title:
I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses.
I had never heard of AR glasses before. Turns out they're basically a "dumb" monitor with a USB‑C connection, but the image is projected into your eyes, so it looks like it's floating. No additional software is required, and I can take it anywhere with me. So I decided to order one. The same friend later asked me for a review, but I decided to post it here and just share the link - maybe someone else will also find it useful.
Impressions
I went for the Xreal One. They are quite pricy, but I wanted to try something cutting-edge. There's also a Pro version, but according to this review on Reddit and review on YouTube, it has several drawbacks - mainly reduced sharpness, which is important for coding.
The glasses aren't as comfortable as regular sunglasses — they're a little bit heavier, but I got used to them. They also generate quite a bit of heat on the top part of the frame. It can cause slight discomfort when it touches face, but I've gotten used to wearing them properly to avoid that. I can wear them for quite a long time, but I wouldn't use them for 100% of my screen time.
They have three levels of electrochromatic dimming (the lenses physically get darker). On the lowest setting (disabled), it's not fully transparent —
more like a sunglasses with a slight dimming. At the maximum level, it's extremely dark; even in a well‑lit room I can't see what's on the edges.
With dimming disabled, it looks the coolest — like an actual floating screen with a bit of transparency.
But the darkening is useful for a more immersive experience since it removes that transparency.
They also have "Auto transparency" option that automatically disables dimming when you turn your head away from the screen.
Also, the brighter the room is, the more noticeable the reflection on the bottom of the glasses due to the lens's prism design.
It's not an issue with the Pro version, but I didn't find it distracting at all, even in a well-lit room.
The screen is great. From video reviews, I was a bit worried that the colors would look like from a projector, but it's just impossible to capture this properly on camera.
In reality, the colors are nice. They also allow you to configure the color temperature, and I found the coldest setting the most comfortable.
The picture isn't very sharp — there's a bit of motion blur when I move my head around, and thin red or pink text on a black background looks slightly off.
I think it's a limitation of the technology, plus the screen is only 1080p. But it's not as bad as it sounds — I can still use it comfortably for coding.
By default, the screen is 16:9 with 120Hz, but you can switch to 32:9 or 21:9 with 60Hz.
I use 16:9 for gaming and 32:9 for productivity — 32:9 is so large, it's like two monitors glued together. I usually keep my browser on one side and something else on the other.
I also love playing retro games, and I can say that 4:3 content looks great. Since the screen is OLED, the black pixels don't emit any light, so the letterboxes fully transparent.
However, it's not the same as having an actual ultra‑wide monitor. The screen doesn't fill the entire surface of the glasses — that's what the FOV is about.
On my model, it's 50 degrees, which is quite large. But in ultra‑wide mode, I still have to rotate my head to see the other half of the screen.
So there's no peripheral vision like there would be on an actual ultra‑wide monitor.
Also, other people can't see what you're seeing, even if they're close — which can be both a good and a bad thing.
You can also configure how far the screen appears — anywhere from 1m to 10m — and its size in inches.
There are five size levels, and the values depend on the selected distance and whether ultra‑wide mode is enabled.
I usually use 1m for productivity and 4m for gaming and multimedia. My preferred size is the "middle" (third) level,
which is designed to fit the entire screen without me needing to rotate my head (except when ultra‑wide mode is enabled).
For 1m these sizes are 35″ for 16:9 and 64″ for 32:9; at 4m they're 140″ and 255″ respectively. The large screen feels very immersive — it's like being in a cinema.
The glasses also have three view modes:
- Anchor. I can rotate my head freely and The screen stays fixed in space. However, if I walk around, the screen moves with me (which is what 3 DoF means). This is the mode I use most of the time.
- Follow. The screen rotates along with your head. I don't use this mode much.
- Side view. Similar to Follow, but the screen is positioned in the corner. I use it when I'm doing chores and want to watch something.
They also have a stabilizer enabled by default, which smooths the screen movement when you move your head.
To use the glasses, you need a USB‑C video output. My motherboard supports it, but to enable it I had to connect my video card to the motherboard via DisplayPort.
I never heard about a connection like this before, but it's from my motherboard manual. It does make sense, though — the GPU provides the video output,
and the motherboard wouldn't know about it otherwise. Software‑wise, it works out of the box with my KDE Plasma setup on Arch Linux.
The only issue I'm noticing is some small visual glitches for the first few seconds after connecting. On PC I use it together with my regular monitor.
The mentioned "Auto transparency" pairs nicely with it. However, it's not perfect, since I'm still looking at the second screen through what's basically
a pair of light sunglasses. So I usually don't put anything important on it.
As for phones, neither mine nor my wife's supports video output. But from reviews, I think it wouldn't be very convenient to use with a phone anyway.
First, the phone's screen has to stay on, otherwise the glasses won't display anything. Second, you can't interact with the phone through the glasses, so you have to look at the phone itself.
But I found a great option to use the glasses with. I have a Retroid Pocket Flip 2 — a pocketable retro console that runs Android and supports video output.
Unlike a regular phone, it automatically turns off its built‑in display when a second screen is connected. It also has physical controls, so I don't need to use a touchscreen.
The Android UI isn't perfect for a gamepad, but it works. Streaming to it also works great because, even though the screen is disabled, the touch input still works — so it basically becomes a touchpad. Since the device is a clamshell, I sometimes use an 8BitDo Micro as an input device to avoid opening it, which is especially convenient for quickly pausing videos. This gamepad can also act as a keyboard via a special switch on it, so it works nicely when I stream from my PC too.
I also have a Steam Deck, but there's not much to add — it just works without any issue.
The glasses also have built-in speakers. I like their design: you don't put anything inside your ears — the speakers are integrated into the frame near where your ears are, so they kind of "whisper" to you. Others can hear them only at high volume. This affects the sound quality, so music doesn't sound as good as on quality headphones, but I think it's a worthy compromise. And it's still possible to wear regular headphones with the glasses.
They also have a shortcut button on the frame. I assigned screen off on regular press and ultra-wide mode on hold.
The firmware is proprietary, but it doesn't use the internet. And what I liked is that updates are installed through a web browser.
However, it has to be a Chromium‑based browser on Windows or Mac.
Luckily, I have a dual‑boot, so I rebooted to update the firmware.
The update added support for 16:9, so it looks like it's not just for bug fixes.
The glasses can be equipped with prescription lenses, but I wear contact lenses and those work as well.
They also have a camera add‑on called Xreal Eye. It's a small camera that unlocks 6 DoF tracking and can also take photos and record videos. The media is stored directly on the glasses, which have 2GB of space, and can later be transferred to a phone or PC over a cable. I haven't bought it yet, but I'm considering it since I'm interested in having 6 DoF.
Conclusion
I love these glasses, it's easily my favorite portable option. It's a huge screen I can take anywhere with me and put where I want. I don't mind that it's only 1080p, none of my portable devices can fully handle 4k anyway.
Since they are better then my current monitor, I use them with my PC too. But I don't think it's a proper replacement.
If you don't need portability, regular screen will be better and cheaper.
I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses — here’s what happened
My whole desk setup now easily fits into a backpack and I can take it anywhereAnthony Spadafora (Tom's Guide)
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nice! I was looking at these too, after I have seen another review about it here on Lemmy.
how do you change its settings, like the aspect ratio, the dimming or the distance?
how does it know where is forward in anchor mode? if you are sitting in a vehicle that is turning, can you keep it using as if nothing has happened?
how do you do chores with it? I mean, what do you connect it to, and where do you place it so that it's not in the way?
what do you do to not get tangled in the cable, and to not get stuck on something?
how do you change its settings, like the aspect ratio, the dimming or the distance?
They have an OSD like in a regular monitor. You press the mode switch button twice to bring it and navigate using the +- brigness buttons.
For dimming you hold the brightness rocker to start adjusting the dimming. For everything else there is an OSD menu like in a regular monitor. You bring it by double pressing the switch button and navigate with the brightness buttons.
how does it know where is forward in anchor mode? if you are sitting in a vehicle that is turning, can you keep it using as if nothing has happened?
It's only 3 DoF without the eye add-on, so when you move, the monitor moves with you.
how do you do chores with it? I mean, what do you connect it to, and where do you place it so that it’s not in the way?
I just connect it to my Retroid Pocket Flip and put it into my pocket. Then I just enable side mode in the glasses, so it displays the image in the corner. And use my 8BitDo to navigate in the device.
what do you do to not get tangled in the cable, and to not get stuck on something?
The default cable is just very short 😀 It's a distance from the glasses to my pocket with about extra 15-20 cm.
US criticizes French inquiry into social media platform X
US criticizes French inquiry into social media platform X
The investigation follows two January complaints that alleged the X algorithm had been used for foreign interference in French politics. The social media company last week denied the allegations, calling them 'politically motivated.'Le Monde with AFP (Le Monde)
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Technology reshared this.
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While this is "nice", I guess, I also can't fathom how naive this generally seems.
X is a proprietary black box and X or L.Ron Musk can change the algorithm literally at will, what they show which persons and when and when not. There is NO time ever where users have have any control over it, and to perform a statistical analysis on an online service blackbox is also kind of pointless because the blackbox can change randomly, at any point in time, possibly right after the analysis has concluded, or right before. I mean it's not like the blackbox is in your hands so that you can actually study inputs/outputs and get consistent results. Every time you visit any X URL, there's potentially a fresh blackbox version deployed to you (you don't know and you can't know). That makes it rather pointless IMHO. And it's just as pointless to believe what X claims about these issues. Of course they'll always claim that they don't manipulate. And you can never prove or disprove it, because of a complete lack of control over it from the user's end. So they can do what they want, as long as they do it sneakily enough that no one notices.
For example if this study comes to the conclusion that there was no manipulation during the time of the study, that's meaningless because it could have happened before and it could happen afterwards. If it comes to the conclusion that there was manipulation at a certain time, then X can always claim that they've already "fixed" the issue and then it's again a new black box and no one knows when the next manipulation is being activated.
The ONLY solution to this is to ONLY use open source platforms where not a single company or host is able to do what they want with the complete service. Or in other words, the only solution is to avoid X and other proprietary social media platforms like the plague that they are. Because communication should not be controlled by any big company.
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People will fall over each other to explain exactly why these devices are no match for nvidia’s top cards like H100/B100, but that’s besides the point. For a lot of people out there top tier nvidia products are basically unobtainium anyway.
If they manage to actually get this into peoples hands, this is a VERY big deal.
I edited with a bit more context. They are mostly just product identifiers.
Unobtainium just nerd speak for “things that are nominally available but impossible to actually get your hands on”. It’s rooted in sci fi tropes that are in themselves very interesting but besides the point right now.
Let me rephrase my question: Please fall over yourself to explain to me why these devices are no match for Nvidia’s top cards like the H100/B100. I wish to understand.
Cheers
When making high performance chips, the main figure of merit is how small you can make individual switching elements. Smaller means faster switching but also less energy needed per switch, which in turns means less heat generation etc.
The smallest transistors can only be made by a specific company in Taiwan, and companies like nvidia and apple compete for every single wafer (unassembled chips) that comes out of that factory. This company sits at the end of a global supply chain: basically these chips can only be made if a bunch of countries all work together. One of the main policy goals of the western allies in the last decade or so has been to shut China out of this industry to prevent them from developing this capability.
If you don’t have access to the smallest transistors, you are going to have to make some pretty dire trade offs. Slower chips. Fewer cores per chip. That kind of stuff. That’s the problem Huawei is facing: no matter how good of a chip they design, it will always be at a disadvantage unless they can access the technology to make smaller transistors.
The catch here is that that factory is operating at capacity and big firms are snapping up most supply as soon as/before it hits the market. And that’s before we take into account various sanctions. So for many users, a slower chip that you can get will always beat the fast one that you can’t get.
Just to add to this, the biggest moat Nvidia has is not transistor density, but their software ecosystem.
Every since like the GTX 200 series in 2008, Nvidia stuff has been the standard for academic research, and it basically only works on their GPUs. Anything for research is done on Nvidia GPUs, which is tweaked for enterprise deployment on GPUs... if you want it on something else, you basically have to start from scratch. And dump a tremendous amount of brainpower put into optimization.
AMD's in an interesting position here because they've been making Nvidia GPU competitors for literally decades. Their architectures are actually quite similar, hence it's easier to 'emulate' Nvidia on AMD than pretty much anything else.
...That being said, the Chinese have made tremendous progress busting out of the Nvidia software ecosystem, hence these chips are actually being used for real work.
If they manage to actually get this into peoples hands
To be clear, I think they're talking about mega-pricey server products, where the minimum size is usually 8 of them in a box. This isn't a home lab kind of thing.
It's not theoretical. They've already released an 300B LLM dubbed Pangu Pro, trained on Huawei NPUs:
huggingface.co/papers/2505.214…
And it's open weights!
huggingface.co/IntervitensInc/…
It's actually a really neat model: the experts are split into 8 'groups' and routed so that the same number are active in each group at any given time. In other words, it's specifically architected for 8X Huawei NPU servers, so that there's no excessive cross-communication or idle time between them.
So yeah, even if it's not a B200, proof's in the puddin, and huge models are being trained and run on these things.
Paper page - Pangu Pro MoE: Mixture of Grouped Experts for Efficient Sparsity
Join the discussion on this paper pagehuggingface.co
This aerogel and some sun could make saltwater drinkable
Previous aerogels didn’t work on a scale that was large enough to matter.
Archived version: archive.is/newest/arstechnica.…
Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.
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Vertical Aerospace eVTOL completes historic airport-to-airport flight
Vertical Aerospace has notched a world's first for its VX-4 eVTOL hybrid-electric air taxi prototype, completing the first flight between two airports through public airspace for an aircraft of its type during the Royal International Air Tattoo.
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Sike, Hades 2 devs Supergiant had another pre-full release patch hiding under their himation
Hades 2 devs Supergiant have put out another early access patch for the game, having said the previous one would likely be the last before full release.
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- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Remembering Descent, the once-popular, fully 3D 6DOF shooter
Descent is a big part of gaming history, but not many people talk about it.
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Billionaire Peter Thiel backing first privately developed US uranium enrichment facility in Paducah
Billionaire Peter Thiel backing first privately developed US uranium enrichment facility in Paducah
A California-based company with ties to billionaire investor and Trump ally Peter Thiel announced plans Friday to build America’s first U.S.-owned, privately developed facility to enrich uranium in far western Kentucky.Derek Operle (WKMS)
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Under the Radar: Iran’s ‘Stealth’ Presence on the Balkans
Under the Radar: Iran’s ‘Stealth’ Presence on the Balkans
Iran's disinformation operations have drawn attention, but their presence on the Balkans remains out of focus while not without the potential for harm.Kiril Avramov and Ruslan Trad (The Globe Post)
Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Ormai ci sono tantissime marche e sono veramente squisiti, oltre che la maggior parte sono #biologici come #formaggi #vegan e anche artigianali.
La mia marca preferita fin'ora è #Pangea che produce il #Gondino che se me lo ritrovo davanti lo mangio a morsi ahah :joy:
P.S. Lo uso anche per la #Carbonara veg :call_me_hand:
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Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Che tu sappia, di cosa è fatto un formaggio vegan?
Se non c'è il latte vaccino, forse useranno un latte vegetale...
Posso chiederti il perché della scelta di non mangiare formaggio tradizionale?
Oppure 'anche' tradizionale, cioè di essere onnivoro...
Ciao...
Ps: capisco, ripensandoci, che tu ti riferisca alla questione dello sfruttamento animale. Io stavo pensando più al prodotto in sé che non a questo fatto.
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Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Jonat ha detto in Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀:
> Che tu sappia, di cosa è fatto un formaggio vegan?
> Se non c'è il latte vaccino, forse useranno un latte vegetale...
Ciao :relaxed:
Hai fatto tutte ottime domande e ti rispondo con piacere dato che son anche interessanti :blush:
I formaggi vengono fatti con la lavorazione di materie prime come frutta secca fino a crearne un latte vegetale che poi viene trasformato in formaggio. Non conosco tutto il processo ma per esempio la prima formaggeria vegan di Roma, con il suo negozio fisico, condivide spesso sui social video di come fanno i loro formaggi artigianali e pure biologici (che adoro! :grimacing: ) loro si chiamano Fermaggio .
Fermaggio | Organic Maps
Free Android & iOS offline OSM (OpenStreetMap) maps app for travelers, tourists, drivers, hikers, and cyclists from creators of MAPS.ME (MapsWithMe).omaps.app
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Jonat ha detto in Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀:
> Posso chiederti il perché della scelta di non mangiare formaggio tradizionale?
> Oppure 'anche' tradizionale, cioè di essere onnivoro...
Anche questa è una bella domanda.
Per tanti motivi e cioè:
1) Etica, lo sfruttamento animale come di ogni essere vivente è contro il mio approccio di vita antispecista;
2) Il formaggio tradizionale in realtà fa molto male e uno studio recente di un'università (se lo ritrovo te lo invio) ha identificato il motivo del consumo delle ossa con annesse malattie e cioè una proteina che si trova nel latte animale che va a causare osteoporosi e tanto altro... Ma essendoci dietro un business di miliardi non la divulgano come notizia fondamentale per prevenire le malattie alle persone;
3) Impatto ambientale, la produzione di latte crea allevamenti intensivi che hanno un gravissimo impatto sull'ambiente;
4) Le condizioni di salute di quei animali è drastica e il loro latte contiene pus e tantissimi antibiotici per tenerli in vita quindi di conseguenza preferisco evitare di alimentare il mio corpo con ciò dato che è l'unico corpo che ho;
5) Il latte è fatto solo per le mamme per i loro cuccioli e me ne nutrirei e mangerei formaggio da latte animale se l'animale fosse cresciuto e vissuto in totale libertà senza alcun abuso e il latte gli fosse stato prelevato per una salvaguardia di salute dell'animale come per esempio la mastite, e che ciò ovviamente eviti di privare del latte ad altri cuccioli. Allora in quel caso si perché sarebbe un bene che andrebbe sprecato.
6) Trovo il latte vegetale, biologico e senza zuccheri aggiunti, come anche il formaggio vegan buonissimo! Anzi io adoravo i formaggi e ritrovarli vegan, sani, etici, bio ecc. ecc. mi da gratificazione sia quando li mangio ma anche quando supporto aziende etiche.
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Una curiosità sul punto 1.
Io sono stato per diversi anni in Trentino e ricordo queste mucche che passavano la giornata sdraiate sull'erba del pascolo a guardare noi turisti che passavamo. Poi la sera se ne tornavano nella stalla e la mattina dopo erano di nuovo al pascolo a guardarci.
Ecco, il latte di animali così, perché no? Mi riferisco solo al punto 1, gli altri punti sono molto più complicati per me.
Ciao,
Max
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
MAD7
Grazie per le risposte Mad...
Io bevo da anni 'latte di riso' ma lo alterno al latte vaccino intero, quello parzialmente scremato non mi piace. Io non sono vegano, mangio un pò di tutto, anche se condivido il principio per cui se un animale da allevamento fosse trattato con dignità, i prodotti che derivano da lui sarebbero migliori.
Ci sono tanti tipi di formaggi, alcuni di fanno il formaggio in casa, quindi la questione della sua genuinità cambia a seconda di dove provenga il prodotto, se da un supermercato o da qualcun'altro. Un pò come i pomodori di un orto personale, senza sostanze chimiche.
Inoltre è da considerare la quantità. Per quanto uno cerchi di proteggersi, lo scorrere del tempo avviene comunque, la vecchiaia, la malattia e la morte, quindi trovo più giusto, almeno per me, ritagliarmi un momento di piacere con un alimento che mi piace e che, senza abuso, non aiuta più di tanto i principi contrari alla salute.
Se uno potesse, dovrebbe fare i suoi acquisti direttamente da quelle persone che, avendo scelto di tornare a vivere in campagna, fanno molto da sé fuori da ogni logica di profitto, solo per il gusto di fare cose buone e in modo indipendente.
Ciao...
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Jonat ha detto in Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀:
> animale da allevamento fosse trattato con dignità,
Ciao :blush: spesso c'è tanta mancanza di informazione e lo capisco perché il marketing di queste grandi aziende ha distorto la visione e mai ci potrebbero essere esseri viventi da allevamento trattati con dignità... Pensa solo al fatto che per fare il latte devono esser mamme e vengono ingravidate artificialmente, il latte sottratto, i cuccioli rubati e l'animale emotivamente e fisicamente è distrutto perché sono mammiferi come noi... Capisco ciò che dici ma allo stesso tempo mi piace anche poco raccontare la verità che c'è dietro, un po' come per l'etica digitale quando ti dicono che google, amazon, meta e compagnia bella non sono il male :lying_face:
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Jonat ha detto in Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀:
> Ci sono tanti tipi di formaggi, alcuni di fanno il formaggio in casa, quindi la questione della sua genuinità cambia a seconda di dove provenga il prodotto, se da un supermercato o da qualcun'altro. Un pò come i pomodori di un orto personale, senza sostanze chimiche.
Sui formaggi solito discorso, sicuramente quelli artigianali è differente ma valli a trovare i pascoli all'aperto, son rarissimi... Comunque io rimango per le alternative in cui alcun essere vivente è stato sfruttato e/o abusato in nessun modo e già questo porta un'apertura importante, o almeno a me ha cambiato il modo di vedere la vita in generale migliorandomela :blush:
Re: Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀
Jonat ha detto in Quali formaggi vegan conoscete? 🧀:
> Se uno potesse, dovrebbe fare i suoi acquisti direttamente da quelle persone che, avendo scelto di tornare a vivere in campagna, fanno molto da sé fuori da ogni logica di profitto, solo per il gusto di fare cose buone e in modo indipendente.
Sicuramente è il male minore, capisco ciò che dici, ciao ciao :call_me_hand:
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Intervista a Moira Sorrisi
Progetti passati e futuri, un’estate che si preannuncia indimenticabile, Moira Sorrisi, si racconta all'Ufficio Stampa Mp di Salvo de Vita.
Puoi farci un piccolo bilancio dei tuoi ultimi programmi: soddisfatta dei risultati? C’è qualcosa che porterai con te da questa esperienza?
Quest'anno un bilancio di successo perché sono stata al timone della conduzione di un nuovo programma televisivo su Canale 10 che si occupa di cucina e si chiama Sorrisi in Cucina e mi ha dato tante soddisfazioni perché ho avuto l'opportunità di girare tantissimi ristoranti, conoscere tanti chef, ma soprattutto conoscere un'ottima cucina, un programma che veramente mi ha preso il cuore e mi ha dato veramente tante soddisfazioni.
Ho avuto la fortuna di essere stata al fianco di Giovanni Ciacci in un nuovo programma che si chiama Pic Mag Show Nazionale in onda su Canale Italia e poi da quindici anni sempre al fianco di Carlo Senes però come opinionista a Punto e Virgola, in onda su Canale 10, infine sempre come opinionista per Lazio TV con L'occasione Giusta sempre al fianco di Tiziano Soddimo. Quindi è stato un anno ricco di tante sorprese, di emozioni e ricco di lavoro in cui abbiamo avuto anche l'opportunità di girare tanto d'Italia di andare tra serate eventi.
Cosa porto con me? porto con me la soddisfazione di arrivare al timone della conduzione di programmi televisivi, dopo anni e anni che faccio televisione, accompagnata da un bagaglio ricco, comunque, di soddisfazioni.
Programmi, vacanze, nuove sfide: cosa bolle in pentola per la tua estate 2025?
Abbiamo chiuso il palinsesto televisivo e siamo alle porte ormai dell'estate già aperta quindi ci saranno serate in giro per il Sud Italia dalla Calabria alla Sicilia e in più sarò sul palco di una nuova manifestazione che sarà realizzata nelle piazze del Sud Italia che si chiamerà “80 voglia di 90” dove io sarò la speaker e faremo ballare tanta gente nelle piazze, ovviamente l'organizzatore di tutto ciò è Marino Anzani Ciliberti nonché il mio manager.
Dopo l’estate, quali progetti hai in cantiere per l’autunno e l’inverno? Nuove trasmissioni, collaborazioni o sorprese in arrivo?
Dopo l'estate sarò nuovamente al timone della conduzione di Pic Mag Show insieme a Giovanni Ciacci e a Naomi, credo per tutta la stagione invernale, poi come opinionista di Punto e Virgola di Carlo Senes, il conduttore del programma, ed infine, verso l'autunno, dovrebbe partire un nuovo programma televisivo che condurrò io su Canale 10 che si chiamerà Smile, quindi, sicuramente metto nel cassetto l'esperienza fatta in Sorrisi in Cucina, per iniziare con questo programma nuovo che si chiamerà appunto, Smile, dove regaleremo un sorriso a tutte quelle persone che si vogliono regalare un giorno in un centro estetico, a chi un giorno si vuole regalare un'acconciatura un colore in un negozio di parrucchieri, a chi si vuole regalare una manicure un pedicure, a chi si vuole regalare una cena romantica, sarà un programma tutto nuovo dove, come ho già detto, regaleremo sorrisi alle persone.
Questi sono i programmi già assegnati e poi chissà, speriamo che sarà un anno ricco di sorprese e che comunque ci darà tante soddisfazioni.
Nel tempo, anche attraverso i social, il tuo personaggio pubblico ha acquisito nuove sfumature. Come valuti questa evoluzione e che ruolo hanno avuto le piattaforme digitali nella tua crescita personale e professionale?
Le piattaforme digitali ormai danno più successo della televisione e i social, lo dico sempre, saranno la televisione del futuro, dico questo perché vedo che, comunque, quando cammini per strada la gente ti riconosce più come personaggio tiktoker, che come personaggio televisivo e quindi, ovviamente, ci dedichiamo a queste piattaforme dove la gente ci nota di più. Su TikTok ci mettiamo in gioco e ci divertiamo tantissimo, perché tiriamo fuori l'ironia e nello stesso tempo, ci mettiamo una maschera, nascondiamo noi stessi e ci rendiamo ridicoli perché oggigiorno piace molto il trash..... la gente si fa due risate... e siamo più seguiti, mentre, se trattiamo argomenti sensibili, cambia subito pagina.
Per quanto riguarda Instagram o Facebook sono due piattaforme dove pubblichiamo tutto quello che è il nostro lavoro giornaliero e la pubblicità dei nostri programmi, dei miei programmi televisivi eccetera eccetera e a volte anche la nostra vita privata.
Dietro al personaggio pubblico si nasconde una persona umile che ama molto gli animali puoi raccontarci di più?
Un personaggio abbastanza umile, direi, questo grazie ai miei genitori mi hanno insegnato educazione, rispetto ed umiltà, dobbiamo sempre ricordare che noi siamo una lampadina, ma il faro che ci illumina è il pubblico, è la gente e quindi non bisogna mai montarsi la testa perché il lavoro che facciamo è un lavoro come tutti gli altri lavori, non c'è nulla di diverso l'unica differenza è che sei davanti alla telecamera e ti rende pubblico, ma per il resto è un lavoro come tanti perchè nessuno è nessuno e ogni lavoro va svolto con umiltà e professionalità, ma soprattutto sempre con il massimo rispetto.
Per quanto riguarda gli animali, li amo ne ho cinque anche se adesso sono diventati quattro perché da poco la piccola Sofia, che aveva quattordici anni, è venuta a mancare, è stato un dolore immenso, perché, i cani, alla fine fanno parte della nostra vita perché, dopo quattordici anni, al tuo fianco diventano come figli, quindi nel momento in cui vengono a mancare è un grande dolore, però ho la fortuna di poter ancora coccolare gli altri quattro pelosetti, Chanel, Asia, Eva e Luna.
Se l’amore fosse un colore, una melodia, un quadro… come lo descriveresti?
Allora l'amore, quello vero, quello bello, lo vedo un colore fucsia, un colore abbastanza acceso, ma ad oggi lo vedo di colore nero perché comunque, oggi come oggi ,trovare l'amore è veramente difficile, non è più l'amore dei nostri nonni o dei nostri genitori, perchè oggi la donna è indipendente..... l'uomo a volte si perde... e siamo sempre con questi cellulari in mano i quali creano sempre dei fili non connessi a livello sentimentale.... e quindi, oggi come oggi, l'amore lo vedo in questi colori. Sono attualmente e puntualizzo felicemente single, ma felicemente perché sto bene come sto, perché amo talmente me stessa che, al momento, al mio fianco non vorrei nessuno... però nello stesso tempo sono una persona, che se capita, ben venga, l'importante è che mi faccia sorridere più di quanto sorrido adesso. Se dovessi associarlo ad un quadro,invece, lo vedrei come un quadro di Picasso... bello per chi ci crede. Infine come melodia direi un brano di Serena Brancale perché mi piace tantissimo mette tanta allegria perché l'amore quando arriva, quando c'è, ed è vero, deve essere quella melodia che comunque ti diverte.
Articolo: Dott.ssa Mietto Elisa
Dirigente del servizio: Dott. Salvo De Vita
Supervisore e Resp. Pubblicazione: Ufficio Stampa e Produzioni MP
Distribuzione: Urban Dream di Mietto Elisa
Why did our friends stop posting on social media?
After two decades of sharing more online, it looks like we've decided to share less. New polling shows that nearly a third of all social media users post less than they did a year ago. That trend is especially true for adults in Gen Z.
YouTube interview:
Why did our friends stop posting on social media?
BBC Special Correspondent Katty Kay and writer Kyle Chayka discuss the ways that social media is changing – and what that means for how we live our lives online.Katty Kay (BBC)
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Google Photos Gets a New Tool That Turns Your Photos into Videos
Google Brings New Video AI Features to Google Photos and YouTube Shorts
Google today announced that it is bringing new AI video editing tools to both Google Photos and YouTube Shorts. Google Photos is gaining a...Juli Clover (MacRumors.com)
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Google AI Overview is just affiliate marketing spam now
Beware of the Google AI salesman and its cronies
Exposing the overly salesy AI Overviews that will push you to buy bad products and exploring the system making it possible.Gisele Navarro (HouseFresh)
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How Google is killing independent sites like ours - HouseFresh
And why you shouldn’t trust product reviews from big media publishers ranking at the top of Google.Gisele Navarro (HouseFresh)
Annuso, perciò distruggo: il sofisticato linguaggio chimico di una terribile stella marina - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
Annuso, perciò distruggo: il sofisticato linguaggio chimico di una terribile stella marina - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
La guerra infuria sotto i flutti, lontano dagli occhi umani che potrebbero tentare di giudicarla. Quietamente operosa, la colonia tende all’espansione in base a linee guida chiaramente definite dall’esperienza.Jacopo (Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri)
Vauda di Rocca Canavese (To): 23° Sagra della Pesca Ripiena, dal 2 al 9 agosto 2025
Dal 2 al 9 agosto torna a Vauda di Rocca Canavese la Sagra della Pesca Ripiena, evento molto atteso organizzato dall’associazione La Baraca, con il patrocinio della Città metropolitana di Torino. Immersa tra boschi e vigneti, Vauda è al centro dell’altipiano delle Vaude, tra le Valli di Lanzo e il Canavese, e richiama ogni anno migliaia di visitatori per la festa patronale.
Al centro della sagra c’è la pesca ripiena, cucinata secondo l’antica ricetta della nonna e cotta nel forno a legna. Lo stand gastronomico propone esclusivamente piatti tipici piemontesi: acciughe al verde, tomini, peperoni di Carmagnola, salame di turgia, agnolotti, fagioli con le cotiche nelle tofeje di Castellamonte, carni alla brace, salsiccia artigianale e Toma di Lanzo, accompagnati da vini locali come Barbera, Bonarda e Arneis. Un’occasione per riscoprire i sapori autentici della tradizione contadina.
Domenica 3 agosto, alle 16, si terrà la 10ª edizione del raduno di auto storiche, con esposizione, giro turistico e cena alla sagra.
Ma Vauda è anche sinonimo di musica e ballo. Ogni sera è prevista animazione con artisti di punta del liscio e non solo:
Sabato 2: Musicanti di Ceres + Federica Cocco
Domenica 3: orchestra Matteo Bensi
Lunedì 4: cabaret “Non si vede un Kansas” con Marco & Mauro
Martedì 5: orchestra I Rodigini
Mercoledì 6: Omar Codazzi
Giovedì 7: Francesca Mazzuccato
Venerdì 8: live show “Voglio tornare negli anni ’90”
Sabato 9: Cristina D’Avena chiude la festa
Aggiornamenti sul programma: facebook.com/sagradellapescaripiena.it
Info e prenotazioni: info@sagradellapescaripiena.it | Tel. 335-1984892 – 345-2951674
Vauda di Rocca Canavese (To): 23° Sagra della Pesca Ripiena, dal 2 al 9 agosto 2025 - ViaggieMiraggi
Da sabato 2 a sabato 9 agosto 2025 a Vauda di Rocca Canavese torna la Sagra della Pesca Ripiena, organizzata dall’associazione La Baraca e patrocinata dalla Città metropolitana di Torino. Vauda di Rocca è al centro dell’altipiano delle Vaude, al...Redazione (ViaggieMiraggi)
qui comprai la stellanica base per fare il gransupertagliamento…
Ieri mattina tardi (e ovviamente ne scrivo solo il giorno dopo, ops) mi sono fatta coraggio e, nonostante il forno acceso fuori in tutta la città, sono andata al casalinghi cinese a comprare questo affare plasticoso che ogni volta che mi metto a tagliare la carta mi ricordo sempre sarebbe il caso di utilizzare, ma […]
Hackers prove age verification systems on pornography sites can be bypassed in seconds
Using widely available technology, well-known ethical hackers Chris Kubecka and Paula Popovici quickly accessed numerous pornography sites without ever verifying their ages.
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Please verify if you are 18 or over by clicking YES to read this comment.
- YES
- NO
Looks like a bunch of under 18 year old hackers found out how to click YES.
Copyright Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Pirating Adult Films for AI Training
Adult film producers Strike 3 Holdings and Counterlife Media have filed a significant copyright infringement lawsuit against tech giant Meta. A complaint filed at a California federal court alleges that their films were downloaded via BitTorrent for AI training purposes. With at least 2,396 movies at stake, potential damages could exceed 350 million dollars.
Copyright Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Pirating Adult Films for AI Training * TorrentFreak
Adult film producers have filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Meta alleging their movies were downloaded for AI training purposes.Ernesto Van der Sar (TF Publishing)
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1k di aumento al mese per tutti gli italiani?
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.youtube.com
The National - Trouble Will Find Me (2013)
Se nel classico garage di turno di New York City, una qualsiasi band talentuosa si mettesse a suonare con l’intenzione di fare un disco alla National, con buona probabilità quel disco sarebbe “Trouble Will Find Me”... Leggi e ascolta...
Ana Ribeiro nova prezidanto de TEJO
TEJO elektis novan prezidanton kaj estraron, dum la eksigita prezidanto denove kaj ripete postulis demision de ĉiuj estraranoj. Tiuj laŭ li malhelpas al la komitato fari sian laboron.
US should be ashamed of its groundless accusations against China: Chinese envoy
US should be ashamed of its groundless accusations against China: Chinese envoy
The United States should be ashamed of its repeated groundless accusations against China at the UN Security Council this week, said a Chinese envoy on Friday.www.globaltimes.cn
US should be ashamed of its groundless accusations against China: Chinese envoy
US should be ashamed of its groundless accusations against China: Chinese envoy
The United States should be ashamed of its repeated groundless accusations against China at the UN Security Council this week, said a Chinese envoy on Friday.www.globaltimes.cn
Brits can get around Discord's age verification thanks to Death Stranding's photo mode, bypassing the measure introduced with the UK's Online Safety Act. We tried it and it works—thanks, Kojima
Brits can get around Discord's age verification thanks to Death Stranding's photo mode, bypassing the measure introduced with the UK's Online Safety Act. We tried it and it works—thanks, Kojima
The UK's new act blocks access to adult content without identification. Turns out, you only need a copy of Death Stranding and a phone to get around it.Jacob Ridley (PC Gamer)
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As we've seen, the current system is incredibly easy to bypass. There are plenty of ways to game or avoid the age checks.
The current implementation also uses multiple different age verification services, on a per-site basis. This proposed one reduces data exposure vulnerabilities to a fraction.
Microsoft exec admits it 'cannot guarantee' data sovereignty
Microsoft admits it 'cannot guarantee' data sovereignty
: Under oath in French Senate, exec says it would be compelled – however unlikely – to pass local customer info to US adminPaul Kunert (The Register)
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After BlackSuit is taken down, new ransomware group Chaos emerges
After BlackSuit is taken down, new ransomware group Chaos emerges
As BlackSuit’s dark web site goes dark, Chaos is already around to pick up the slack.Dan Goodin (Ars Technica)
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AdGuard is yet another app to block Windows Recall
AdGuard is yet another app to block Windows Recall
Recall, a controversial Windows 11 productivity feature, is now available to more users. At the same time, more privacy-focused apps are blocking it.Taras Buria (Neowin)
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"Opt out of" or disable/block?
To me, "block" or "disable" seems like it blocks/disables the feature machine-wide, when it just says "pretty please, make me black after you take that screenshot".
Cloudflare gets involved in the battle against piracy, blocking streaming websites in the UK — and VPNs won't help
Cloudflare cracks down on UK piracy – and VPN users are getting caught in the crossfire
VPNs used to be the go-to solution to bypass ISP blocks, but Cloudflare just ramped things upMonica J. White (TechRadar)
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Cloudflare gets involved in the battle against piracy, blocking streaming websites in the UK — and VPNs won't help
Cloudflare cracks down on UK piracy – and VPN users are getting caught in the crossfire
VPNs used to be the go-to solution to bypass ISP blocks, but Cloudflare just ramped things upMonica J. White (TechRadar)
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This doesn't make sense.
They say "endpoint in the UK" and "VPN Server in the UK", and that they could not confirm whether outside the UK would still block.
Cloudflare blocks UK requests. If you use a VPN you choose which country you send the requests from.
Cloudflare as a separate entity from the VPN provider can't know where requests originally came from. That's the whole point of the VPN.
There is nothing new here. The article seems to misunderstand and to misrepresent.
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Brits can get around Discord's age verification thanks to Death Stranding's photo mode, bypassing the measure introduced with the UK's Online Safety Act. We tried it and it works—thanks, Kojima
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Dragonero ...
Se vi piace il genere fantasy... con bei paesaggi incontaminati piene di gente normale, anormale e di strane creature, un mondo fiabesco di storie attorno ad un fuoco, e l'immancabile manipolo di eroi ognuno con la sua storia, la sua personalità e le proprie speranze... Dragonero della italiana 'Sergio Bonelli' fa per voi.
La stessa casa editrice di Tex e Dylan Dog, per intenderci, qualora foste curiosi (e curiose) ma poco frequentanti questo mondo..
sergiobonelli.it/sezioni/42/dr…
Dragonero - Sergio Bonelli
Martedì 22 luglio, alle ore 18:00, il Bonelli Store di Milano ospita Stefano Vietti e Ivan Calcaterra in occasione dell'approdo in libreria del nuovo volume di Senzanima: Maleficio!www.sergiobonelli.it
Canada’s Bill C-2 Opens the Floodgates to U.S. Surveillance
Canada’s Bill C-2 Opens the Floodgates to U.S. Surveillance
The Canadian government is preparing to give away Canadians’ digital lives—to U.S. police, to the Donald Trump administration, and possibly to foreign spy agencies.Electronic Frontier Foundation
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51dusty
in reply to awky • • •is liquid ~~cooking~~ cooling really necessary? critical data centers I have worked in use swamp coolers. cheaper, more efficient, more reliable, uses same water as your house...
edit: d'oh! 😀
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over_clox
in reply to 51dusty • • •liquid cooking?
Haha, stupid sexy autocorrect, or honest typo, either way I got a good chuckle!
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nocturne
in reply to 51dusty • • •ramielrowe
in reply to nocturne • • •Practically all even semi-modern DCs are built for servers themselves to be air cooled. The air itself is cooled via a heat exchanger with a separate and isolated chiller and cooling tower. The isolated chiller is essentially the swamp cooler, but it's isolated from the servers.
There are cases where servers are directly liquid cooled, but it's mostly just the recent Nvidia GPUs and niche things like high-frequency-trading and crypto ASICs.
All this said... For the longest time I water cooled my home lab's compute server because I thought it was necessary to reduce noise. But, with proper airflow and a good tower cooler, you can get basically just as quiet. All without the maintenance and risk of water, pumps, tubing, etc.
morbidcactus
in reply to nocturne • • •Industrial cooling towers are usually evaporative in my experience, smaller ones are large fans moving air over a stack of slats that the return water is sprayed or piped over and the collects in well for recirculation, larger ones afaik (like what you'd see at power plants) operate the same idea. Top ups and water chemistry is all automated.
Those systems have operation wide cooling loops that individual pieces of equipment tap into, some stuff uses it directly (see that with things like industrial furnaces) but smaller stuff or stuff that's sensitive you'll see heat exchangers and even then the server & PLC rooms were all air cooled, the air cons for them were all tied into the cooling water loops though.
From a maintenance POV though, way easier to air cool, totally seen motor drive racks with failed cooling fans that have had really powerful external blowers rigged up to keep them going to the next maintenance window. Yeah, industrial POV but similar idea.
just_another_person
in reply to awky • • •like this
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gray
in reply to awky • • •There’s basically no reason ever to do water cooling on a home system unless you’re trying to do overclocking.
Air is cheaper, more reliable, and typically quieter because you don’t need pumps.
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IsoKiero
in reply to awky • • •the_q
in reply to awky • • •like this
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DominusOfMegadeus
in reply to the_q • • •tal
in reply to the_q • • •You don't, but it's considerably quieter to use a liquid cooler on current high-end CPUs because of the amount of heat they dissipate. My current CPU has a considerably higher TDP than my last desktop's. I finally broke down and put an AIO cooler on the new one, and all the fans on the radiator can run at a much lower speed than my last CPU because the radiator is a lot larger than one hanging directly off the CPU, can dump heat to the air a lot more readily.
The GPU on that system, which doesn't use liquid cooling, has to have multiple slots and a supporting rail to support the weight because it has a huge heatsink hanging on a PCI slot that was never intended to support that kind of load, and the fans are far more spun up when it heats up.
The amount of power involved these days is getting pretty high. My early PCs could manage with entirely passive cooling, just a heatsink. Today, the above CPU dumps 250W and the above GPU 400W. I have a small space heater in the same room that, on low, runs at 400W.
Frankly, if I had a convenient mounting point in the case for the radiator, with the benefit of hindsight, I'd seriously have considered sticking an AIO liquid-cooled GPU in there --- there are a few manufacturers that do those. The GPU is a lot louder than the CPU when both are spun up.
I will kind of agree on the RGB LEDs, though. It's getting obnoxiously difficult to find desktop hardware that doesn't have those. My last build, I was having difficulty finding DIMMs that didn't have RGB LEDs; not normally a component that I think of anyone wanting to make visible.
I'm kind of wondering whether we'll get to the point where one just has a standard attachment point for liquid and just hooks the hardware's attachment into a larger system that circulates fluid. Datacenters would become quiet places.
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jubilationtcornpone
in reply to awky • • •They typically don't. The servers are air cooled and the room is conditioned with a Liebert or similar HVAC system.
Liquid cooling servers is not practical or warranted for most situations.
wildbus8979
in reply to jubilationtcornpone • • •That's not entirely true, some do in fact use water cooling. There's even "of the shelf" solutions from Supermicro.
supermicro.com/en/solutions/li…
It's not widespread, but it's not inexistent.
Supermicro Liquid Cooling Solutions
www.supermicro.comGlitchvid
in reply to wildbus8979 • • •Expanding on that, direct water cooling becomes more common the higher power density the racks are.
So as you get into 35kW+ racks it becomes the only way to get that much heat out, lots of GPU compute racks are water cooled by default now, the El Capitan super computer is entirely cooled through direct liquid interfaces, for example.
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thisbenzingring
in reply to awky • • •like this
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Romkslrqusz
in reply to awky • • •I don’t have a direct answer to your question, but expensive premixes aren’t really necessary outside of achieving a certain aesthetic.
Distilled water, biocide and corrosion inhibitors. Make sure your metals are all compatible.
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lakeeffect
in reply to awky • • •qupada
in reply to awky • • •In ours, the coolant is referred to as "PG25" (distilled water with 25% propylene glycol, plus corrosion inhibitors and other additives). It's widely available, and pre-mixed so it just gets poured straight in.
Your problem is going to be quantity. it might be cheaper per unit, but buying less than a 200 litre drum (if not a 1000 litre IBC) will prove to be a challenge.
I'd suggest a rethink, honestly.