This Month’s Quote
Knowledge isn’t free. You have to pay attention.
Richard Feynman
Bye Intel, hi AMD! I’m done after 2 dead Intels
- Hacker News;
- Lobsters.
:::
Bye Intel, hi AMD! I’m done after 2 dead Intels
The Intel 285K CPU in my high-end 2025 Linux PC died again! 😡 Notably, this was the replacement CPU for the original 285K that died in March, and after reading through the reviews of Intel CPUs on my electronics store of choice, many of which (!) men…Michael Stapelberg
Technology Channel reshared this.
Google shuting down sideoading name of security
Google is shutting down Android sideloading in the name of security
All apps need to come from verified developers now.Alex Perry (Mashable)
reshared this
Israeli Arms Maker Shuts Site After Sustained Anti-Genocide Protests
Israeli arms producer Elbit Systems closed its site in Bristol, UK, after years of protests by Palestine Action, The Guardian reported on 6 September.
Israeli arms manufacturer closes UK facility targeted by Palestine Action
Exclusive: Elbit Systems UK Bristol site was subject of protest days before direct action group was proscribedHaroon Siddique (The Guardian)
like this
KDE Linux entra in fase alpha
KDE Linux la distribuzione immutabile entra in fase alpha
KDE ha rilasciato la prima alpha della sua distribuzione Linux immutabile: KDE Linux, basata su Arch, con aggiornamenti atomici, supporto Flatpak e SnapFerramosca Roberto (Linux Easy)
reshared this
Genocide by remote control: Israel's explosive robots devastate Gaza
cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/35532736
Israeli forces deploy explosive robots at 'unprecedented pace', obliterating homes and displacing families
Genocide by remote control: Israel's explosive robots devastate Gaza
Hamza Shabaan woke up mid-air. A massive blast had hurled him off his mattress, leaving him disoriented and shocked.Mohammed al-Hajjar (Middle East Eye)
like this
don't like this
Errori UZL 11
Salve,
ho provato a recuperare la password del forum di UZL ma non ricevo niente via email.
Gli aggiornamenti di UZL 11 funzionano eccetto che per il firmware linux dove ottengo l'errore :
W: Errore nello scaricare archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool…
Connessione non riuscita [IP: 91.189.91.81 80]
oppure da terminale:
E: Impossibile recuperare security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/poo… 500 Internal Server Error [IP: 185.125.190.39 80]
Teen girls are being used as hitwomen in Sweden's organized crime wars: "Young kids are thirsty for blood"
cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/48030154
"I had a case involving a 15-year-old girl recruited to shoot someone in the head," Stockholm prosecutor Ida Arnell told AFP. "She was able to choose the type of mission she wanted, in other words, to aim at the guy's door or his head. She chose the head."
Teen girls are being used as hitwomen in Sweden's organized crime wars: "Young kids are thirsty for blood"
Some 280 girls aged between 15 and 17 were charged with murder, manslaughter or other violent crimes last year in Sweden.CBS News
‘Unhinged and Anti-American’: Critics Erupt Over Trump‘s AI-Generated Threat
‘Unhinged and Anti-American’: Critics Erupt Over Trump‘s AI-Generated Threat
Donald Trump critics blasted the president's Truth Social post that featured an AI re-imagining of the war movie Apocalypse Now.Jennifer Bowers Bahney (Mediaite)
L’illimitato potenziale artistico del frassino nell’arte intrecciata dei Wabanaki
L'illimitato potenziale artistico del frassino nell'arte intrecciata dei Wabanaki - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri
Un’arte nobile può accedere ai confini della coscienza collettiva per una serie di ragioni qualche volta distinte: l’idea che tutto nasca da una serie di appropriate circostanze, essendo lo specifico prodotto di un momento storico, una fase culturale…Jacopo (Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri)
How to Blow Up a Planet
For liberal supporters of the “abundance” movement, deregulation is crucial to solving climate and economic crises. Their critics argue something more confrontational is needed.
How to Blow Up a Planet
What happened to the future? When did we lose it, and what has taken its place? Political scientists have found a continual decline in visions of a sharedTrevor Jackson (The New York Review of Books)
like this
Tracker to Find Fart/Poop Porn
Sensitive content
like this
don't like this
Google's AI Ambitions An ‘Existential Crisis’ For News Online
Google's AI Ambitions An ‘Existential Crisis’ For News Online
Critics warn that this shift risks creating “echo chambers” filled with sensationalism and clickbait, at the expense of thorough, investigative journalism.Riley Gutiérrez McDermid (Gizmodo)
U.S. says it will deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini because he fears deportation to Uganda
Attorneys for Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a Friday letter that they intend to send Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the African nation of Eswatini after he expressed a fear of deportation to Uganda.
The letter from ICE to Abrego Garcia’s attorneys was earlier reported by Fox News. It states that his fear of persecution or torture in Uganda is “hard to take seriously, especially given that you have claimed (through your attorneys) that you fear persecution or torture in at least 22 different countries. ...Nonetheless, we hereby notify you that your new country of removal is Eswatini.”
Eswatini’s government spokesperson told The Associated Press on Saturday that it had no received no communication regarding Abrego Garcia’s transfer there.
like this
like this
I mean, unless this 19 year old dude stated that he will not have kids, period, I don't see how "he may be the last".
The fundamental question is not whether to allow male or female succession line but how to save the monarchy
The answer is "don't". Monarchies' only use nowadays are as living relics of worse types of government and social structure.
New content moderation rules harm Arabic sexual and reproductive health rights (SRHR) advocacy online
New content moderation rules harm Arabic SRHR advocacy online - SMEX
The New Rules of the GameIn early 2025, Instagram and TikTok flagged several Arabic-language sexual and reproductive health rights (SRHR)...Nourhane Kazak (SMEX)
copymyjalopy likes this.
Technology Channel reshared this.
'Godfather of AI' says the technology will create massive unemployment and send profits soaring — 'that is the capitalist system'
‘Godfather of AI’ says the technology will create massive unemployment and send profits soaring — ‘that is the capitalist system’
"We are at a point in history where something amazing is happening, and it may be amazingly good, and it may be amazingly bad."Jason Ma (Fortune)
Raoul Duke likes this.
Meta’s Role in Amplifying Harmful Content Against Palestinians During Genocide in Gaza
Hamleh - New 7amleh Report: Meta’s Role in Amplifying Harmful Content Against Palestinians During Genocide in Gaza
New 7amleh Report: Meta’s Role in Amplifying Harmful Content Against Palestinians During Genocide in Gaza7amleh – Arab Center for Social Media Advancement
Technology Channel reshared this.
West Point cancels ceremony to honor Tom Hanks as ‘outstanding US citizen’
In addition to his storied acting career, Hanks served as national spokesperson for the World War II Memorial in Washington DC and supported the late Republican senator Bob Dole’s fundraiser to create the Dwight D Eisenhower Memorial, according to the alumni association’s original announcement.
It’s not clear how honoring Hanks conflicts with “preparing cadets”, but the actor has donated to Democrats; received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama; and endorsed Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election.
Since taking office a second time, Donald Trump has taken a litany of actions against his perceived enemies. For example, he has revoked the security clearances and details of some people in the Biden administration and of people who served in his first administration whom he deemed “bad” or “disloyal”; blocked some news organizations from the Pentagon workspace and White House press pool; and revoked security clearances of – and investigated – law firms that were “very, very dishonest”.
West Point cancels ceremony to honor Tom Hanks as ‘outstanding US citizen’
Little known about decision, although Hanks, who has advocated for military memorials, also voted for BidenEric Berger (The Guardian)
like this
How Generative AI Video Works | Computerphile [27:32]
- 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
Some French publishers are giving AI revenue directly to journalists. Could that ever happen in the U.S.?
Some French publishers are giving AI revenue directly to journalists. Could that ever happen in the U.S.?
Le Monde agreed to give journalists 25% of revenue from licensing deals with OpenAI and Perplexity. Now, other French publishers are following suit.Nieman Lab
copymyjalopy likes this.
Technology Channel reshared this.
Put down your phone and engage in boredom – how philosophy can help with digital overload
Put down your phone and engage in boredom – how philosophy can help with digital overload
Avoiding boredom means we are denying ourselves access to our whole selves.The Conversation
adhocfungus likes this.
We risk a deluge of AI-written ‘science’ pushing corporate interests – here’s what to do about it
We risk a deluge of AI-written ‘science’ pushing corporate interests – here’s what to do about it
We have to tighten up on what research policymakers rely on, and also the inner workings of peer review.The Conversation
like this
Technology Channel reshared this.
Trump’s Crypto Dealings Now Have the Perfect Cover
Link without paywall:
yahoo.com/news/articles/trump-…
The Trumps have never been known for their subtlety: They like to do things fast, big, and loud. This is especially so in the context of cryptocurrency, a noisy and chaotic industry by nature. Remember our president’s collection of NFTs? Among the depictions on these digital trading cards is a portrait of Donald Trump in an Iron Man–inspired suit, accompanied by the caption “SUPERTRUMP.” Or how about the $TRUMP meme coin and accompanying gamified gala dinner for its biggest investors
The Trump Crypto Empire Is Growing Up
In recent weeks, the family has dressed up its business dealings in the veneer of legitimacy.Will Gottsegen (The Atlantic)
like this
reshared this
People who complain that crypto is a "pyramid scheme" or whatever are correct, but they fail to realize that capitalism is a pyramid scheme at best. I mean the biggest stock last year was a fascist surveillance company... And stuff like this is exactly why crypto will continue to succeed under capitalism.
It's a casino economy. Our lives have already been sold for chips. The branding of the chips doesn't actually matter but improved chip technology does. Casinos aren't actually using the same chips from the 1800s but the state is.
'Godfather of AI' says the technology will create massive unemployment and send profits soaring — 'that is the capitalist system'
‘Godfather of AI’ says the technology will create massive unemployment and send profits soaring — ‘that is the capitalist system’
"We are at a point in history where something amazing is happening, and it may be amazingly good, and it may be amazingly bad."Jason Ma (Fortune)
like this
reshared this
He's very clearly saying it's the problem with the system by assigning fault:
“What’s actually going to happen is rich people are going to use AI to replace workers,” Hinton said. “It’s going to create massive unemployment and a huge rise in profits. It will make a few people much richer and most people poorer. That’s not AI’s fault, that is the capitalist system.”
ChatGPT Struggles to Answer Whether a "Seehorse" emoji exists.
Inside the Kimsuky Leak: How the “Kim” Dump Exposed North Korea’s Credential Theft Playbook
::: spoiler Comments
- Hacker News.
:::
A rare and revealing breach attributed to a North Korean-affiliated actor, known only as “Kim” as named by the hackers who dumped the data, has delivered a new insight into Kimsuky (APT43) tactics, techniques, and infrastructure. This actor’s operational profile showcases credential-focused intrusions targeting South Korean and Taiwanese networks, with a blending of Chinese-language tooling, infrastructure, and possible logistical support. The “Kim” dump, which includes bash histories, phishing domains, OCR workflows, compiled stagers, and rootkit evidence, reflects a hybrid operation situated between DPRK attribution and Chinese resource utilization.
This report is broken down into three parts:
- Technical Analysis of the dump materials
- Motivation and Goals of the APT actor (group)
- A CTI report compartment for analystsWhile this leak only gives a partial idea of what the Kimusky/PRC activities have been, the material provides insight into the expansion of activities, nature of the actor(s), and goals they have in their penetration of the South Korean governmental systems that would benefit not only DPRK, but also PRC.
Without a doubt, there will be more coming out from this dump in the future, particularly if the burned assets have not been taken offline and access is still available, or if others have cloned those assets for further analysis. We may revisit this in the future if additional novel information comes to light.
Inside the Kimsuky Leak: How the “Kim” Dump Exposed North Korea’s Credential Theft Playbook - DomainTools Investigations | DTI
A rare and revealing breach attributed to a North Korean-affiliated actor, known only as “Kim” as named by the hackers who dumped the data, has delivered a new insight into Kimsuky (APT43) tactics, techniques, and infrastructure.DomainTools Investigations | DTI
adhocfungus likes this.
Technology Channel reshared this.
More than 425 arrested as protesters defy ban on Palestine Action in London
More than 425 people have been arrested at the largest demonstration yet opposing the proscription of Palestine Action.
Defend Our Juries, who organised the demonstrations, said there were 1,500 sign-holders in Parliament Square on Saturday at a fresh protest in London against the ban. At the previous major demonstration last month, 532 people were arrested for taking part. Participants gathered in Parliament Square by 1pm, many holding signs that read: “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.”
At just after 9pm, the Metropolitan police said it had made more than 425 arrests. The Met’s deputy assistant commissioner, Claire Smart, who led the operation, said: “In carrying out their duties today, our officers have been punched, kicked, spat on and had objects thrown at them by protesters. It is intolerable that those whose job it is to enforce the law and keep people safe – in this case arresting individuals committing offences under the Terrorism Act – should be subject to this level of abuse.”
Police make arrests at London Palestine Action ban protest
More than 1,000 people have pledged to risk arrest in what is billed as the largest protest since group was proscribedSammy Gecsoyler (The Guardian)
like this
South Korea vows 'all-out efforts' to help hundreds detained in raid at Hyundai facility in Georgia
cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/35547943
South Korea's Foreign Minister Cho Hyun said he was “deeply concerned” and felt “heavy responsibilities for the arrests of our citizens.”South Korean President Lee Jae-myung ordered “all-out efforts” to respond to the arrests of hundreds of its citizens in an immigration raid on a Hyundai facility in Georgia, as the key American ally and trading partner reeled from the news.
Federal and immigration agents arrested 475 people — mostly South Korean nationals — while executing a judicial search warrant as part of a criminal investigation into alleged unlawful employment at the facility.
At an emergency government meeting Saturday, South Korea’s Foreign Minister Cho Hyun said he was “deeply concerned” and felt “heavy responsibilities for the arrests of our citizens.”
The foreign ministry told NBC News that the government had set up a response team and that Cho was prepared to travel to Washington to meet officials if needed, while Cho reiterated earlier remarks made by Lee that the rights of South Koreans “must be not unjustly infringed.”
South Korea vows 'all-out efforts' to help hundreds detained in raid at Hyundai facility in Georgia
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung ordered all out efforts to respond to the arrests of its citizens in an immigration raid on a Hyundai facility in Georgia.Stella Kim (NBC News)
like this
like this
Ah, so they were doing dodgy shit.
Arresting everyone is completely over the top, but it sounds like there were genuine issues to be resolved.
US Dept of Justice says names of two associates Jeffrey Epstein wired $100k and $250k to should stay secret
DOJ says names of two associates Epstein wired $100k and $250k to should stay secret
Justice Department says the names of two Jeffrey Epstein associates who he wired $100,000 and $250,000 and helped protect from prosecution should stay secret.Tom Winter (NBC News)
adhocfungus likes this.
Knossos
in reply to Pro • • •like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
the16bitgamer
in reply to Knossos • • •I went from Ryzen 1000 to intel 12000 since I need single threaded performance above all else (CAD). Plus it was a steal of a deal.
If Intel ever sorts out their drivers or it gets cheap enough I might for at 14000 chip but no further.
HyperfocusSurfer
in reply to Pro • • •like this
KaRunChiy e yessikg like this.
Vik
in reply to Pro • • •KiwiTB
in reply to Pro • • •like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
Victor
in reply to KiwiTB • • •What if it hits around 90°C during Vulkan shader processing? 😅 Otherwise like 42–52 idle. How's that? I'm wondering if my cooling is sufficient.
This is an AMD 9950X3D + 9070 XT setup, for reference.
Any way to do Vulkan shader processing on the GPU perhaps, to speed it up?
Glitchvid
in reply to Victor • • •like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
miss phant
in reply to Victor • • •sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to miss phant • • •Victor
in reply to miss phant • • •What does it mean to "process shaders in real-time"? Wouldn't it be objectively faster to process them ahead-of-time? Even if it's only slightly faster while running the game?
I mean processing takes like a minute or so, so it's no big deal. I'm just curious for the fun of it, if I can compile it on the GPU. Not sure it's even possible.
miss phant
in reply to Victor • • •Processing them as they're loaded, quickly enough that there's no noticeable frame drop. Usual LLVM based shader compilers aren't fast enough for that but ACO is specifically written to compile shaders for AMD GPUs and makes this feasible.
Pre-compilation would in theory always yield higher 1% lows yes, but it's not really worth the time hit anymore especially for games that constantly require a new cache to be built or have really long compilation times.
I think the one additional thing Steam does in that step is transcoding videos so they can be played back with Proton's codec set but using something like Proton-GE, Proton-cachyos or Proton-EM solves this too.
Disclaimer: I don't know how the deeply technical stuff of this works so this might not be exact.
Victor
in reply to miss phant • • •Huh.
Well like I said it only takes like a minute with half of my 32 threads utilized at 100 % (so all of my cores I guess?). Might as well keep doing it I suppose.
fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
in reply to Victor • • •Victor
in reply to fuckwit_mcbumcrumble • • •OhVenus_Baby
in reply to Victor • • •iopq
in reply to OhVenus_Baby • • •Kyden Fumofly
in reply to KiwiTB • • •That's not the case. 100% for new CPUs, but also for old ones too.
My father's old CPU cooler did not make good contact, got lose in one corner some how, and the system would throttle (fan at 100% making noise and PC run slow). After i fixed it, in one of my visits, CPU was working fine for years.
System throttles or even shuts down before any thermal damage occures (at least when temperatures rise normally).
lemming741
in reply to Kyden Fumofly • • •sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to KiwiTB • • •frongt
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •The article (or one of the linked ones) says the max design temperature is 105°C, so it doesn't throttle until it hits that.
Which makes me think it should be able to sustain operating at that temperature. If not, Intel fucked up by speccing them too high.
sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to frongt • • •frongt
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to frongt • • •frongt
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •Again, you misunderstand. The max operating temperature is where Intel has stated that the CPU can safely operate for extended periods of time, including accounting for situations like thermal runaway (though ideally they engineer the chip that that doesn't happen in the first place).
If that situation does occur, the chip attempts to throttle at 105, and if that fails then it presumable halts at whatever the protection threshold is before it hits the actual damage point, as I said.
sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to frongt • • •frongt
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •Yes.
Whether Intel fucked up by saying "oh yeah works great up to 105" if that isn't actually true is another question, as I mentioned.
JohnEdwa
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •It's not really that different, the exact temperatures are slightly higher but most intel processors will boost up to 105C, then start throttling to maintain that 105C as a maximum, and if that's not possible they'll halt at 110C.
AMD does the same, just the temps are (for the one specific CPU I remember them for) 80-85C for starting dialing down the boost, 90C for throttling below the normal freq, and 95C for TjMax which either halts the system or just drops the power usage so low it doesn't matter - I'm not about to take a heatgun to my CPU to see what it does as it wasn't capable of hitting that on its own.
But it shouldn't be possible to break your CPU from over temperature, no matter what those temps are, because they should be capable of protecting themselves, even if that means dropping to 386 speeds when you are running them in the Death Valley with not cooler whatsoever.
iopq
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •The 7000 series had the Intel behavior of just clocking up until like 95C and staying there indefinitely
That's why people thought the 9000 series was disappointment - AMD went back to balancing power efficiency and performance
iopq
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •Why? It’s designed to run up to 105c.
I think it was when AMDs 7000 series CPUs were running at 95c and everyone freaked out that AMD came out and said that the CPUs are built to handle this load 24/7 365 for years on end.
And it’s not like this is new to Intel. Intel laptop CPUs have been doing this for a decade now.
like this
chameleon likes this.
sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to fuckwit_mcbumcrumble • • •fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •105c is the max operating temperature. It's not going to run away the second it hits 106.
Your CPU starts throttling at 104c so that way it almost never hits at 105c for long If it can't maintain clocks then it drops them until 104c can mostly be maintained.
sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to fuckwit_mcbumcrumble • • •mrvictory1
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •chloroken
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •laughs in 8700k
When I overclock this old chip (which it was built for) it can hit over 100 with proper cooling. Some chips are hot as fuck. I think this one shuts off at 105.
callouscomic
in reply to Pro • • •Somehow I figured out Intel was shit early on. Been AMD for like 15-20 years. I think it was a combo of childhood shit computers running Intel, and a lot of advice pointing out what garbage it was and not worth the cost for PC builds.
Similar reasons I hate Hitachi and Western Digital hard drives. They always fucking fail.
sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to callouscomic • • •I was in team AMD in the 2000s for two reasons: price and competition to Intel. Intel had a massive anti-trust loss to AMD around that time, and I wanted AMD to succeed. I stuck with them until Zen was actually competitive and stayed with them ever since because they actually had better products. Intel was the king in both performance and power efficiency until that Zen release, so I really don't know where that advice would've come from.
As for Hitachi and Western Digital, WTF? Hitachi hasn't been a thing for well over a decade since they sold their HDD business to WD, and WD is generally as reliable or better than its competition. It sounds like you were impacted by a couple failures (probably older drives?) and made a decision based on that. If you look at Backblaze stats, there's not a huge difference between manufacturers, just a few models that do way worse than the rest.
Backblaze Drive Stats for Q1 2025
Backblaze Blog | Cloud Storage & Cloud BackupPasserby6497
in reply to callouscomic • • •You misspelled Seagate.
My WD drives have been great, but my Seagates failed multiple times, causing data loss because I wasn't properly protecting myself.
frongt
in reply to Passerby6497 • • •Passerby6497
in reply to frongt • • •How likely is it that I got 4 to 5 bad batches over the space of as many years?
Raid and offline backups these days, I eventually learned my lesson. One of which is stay away from Seagate.
frongt
in reply to Passerby6497 • • •fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
in reply to frongt • • •acosmichippo
in reply to callouscomic • • •postall
in reply to Pro • • •like this
HeerlijkeDrop likes this.
prettybunnys
in reply to postall • • •sugar_in_your_tea
in reply to postall • • •postall
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea • • •Pieisawesome
in reply to postall • • •CPUs don’t die very often without something being very wrong with your system.
Could be the PSU or motherboard
TheGrandNagus
in reply to postall • • •iopq
in reply to postall • • •zr0
in reply to Pro • • •like this
yessikg likes this.
Vanilla_PuddinFudge
in reply to Pro • • •"Do you need to transcode video?
Then leave Intel the fuck alone."
Been my rule for 20 years, and it's worked good so far.
like this
qupada likes this.
muusemuuse
in reply to Vanilla_PuddinFudge • • •It’s odd, their GPUs are doing fine, a market they are young in, but their well established CPU market is cratering
Business majors suck.
kreskin
in reply to muusemuuse • • •KingRandomGuy
in reply to muusemuuse • • •Their GPU situation is weird. The gaming GPUs are good value, but I can't imagine Intel makes much money from them due to the relatively low volume yet relatively large die size compared to competitors (B580 has a die nearly the size of a 4070 despite being competing with the 4060). Plus they don't have a major foothold in the professional or compute markets.
I do hope they keep pushing in this area still, since some serious competition for NVIDIA would be great.
TheGrandNagus
in reply to muusemuuse • • •acosmichippo
in reply to Vanilla_PuddinFudge • • •like this
qupada likes this.
iopq
in reply to Vanilla_PuddinFudge • • •Decq
in reply to Pro • • •like this
qupada likes this.
Quatlicopatlix
in reply to Decq • • •Decq
in reply to Quatlicopatlix • • •Quatlicopatlix
in reply to Decq • • •Decq
in reply to Quatlicopatlix • • •notthebees
in reply to Quatlicopatlix • • •Quatlicopatlix
in reply to notthebees • • •iopq
in reply to Quatlicopatlix • • •stealth_cookies
in reply to Decq • • •PalmTreeIsBestTree
in reply to stealth_cookies • • •notthebees
in reply to PalmTreeIsBestTree • • •They can't even do that anymore. sgx had a bunch of vulnerabilities and as a result, that service has been disabled.
sgx.fail/
SGX.Fail
SGX.Fail
sgx.failPalmTreeIsBestTree
in reply to notthebees • • •3dcadmin
in reply to Pro • • •xthexder
in reply to 3dcadmin • • •oranges_in_my_a55
in reply to xthexder • • •3dcadmin
in reply to oranges_in_my_a55 • • •SapphironZA
in reply to Pro • • •Allero
in reply to SapphironZA • • •Better energy efficiency overall.
Other than that - maybe some habit.
Fizz
in reply to Pro • • •I'd probably just warranty the CPU and assume it was a defect instead of blame the entire company.
But yeah amd is the better choice for everything atm except x86 power efficiency laptop chips.
rezad
in reply to Fizz • • •care to explain that last part?
for example if I want to by a new laptop right now, do I buy intel?
because it has better power usage?
is that only idle and/or lower usage power?
what about if I just plus the laptop to power socket always (like a simple desktop), then amd is better with respect to performance per watt?
Fizz
in reply to rezad • • •Intel has its core ultra line up which improved its power usage a lot. This isnt great for intensive workloads because there is more efficeny cores and less preformance cores but its great for general everyday use on battery.
When you're plugged in power usage no longer matters so having an Intel CPU sucks because yoy are getting less preformance for your dollar.
Also amd is more price to preformance and still has good battery life so you really do get the most value.
rezad
in reply to Fizz • • •I get the intel lower power when not doing stuff (wish amd had high/low config for cores too) but what I mean was, in laptop cpus that are not on battery (just connected to power) does amd do more with the same power usage?
if the comparation can not be done with the same gen cpus from two companies, then maybe a similar power usage cpu from amd and one from intel (laptop of course), do they for example have similar geekbench benchmark results? (for lack of better tool)
so what I am asking is I dont care that is the same gen amd and intel laptop cpu with both connected to socket power, if amd is better. I want to know if for the same power usage (not idling but working) amd is better or not.