Monaka Prozessor: Fujitsu entwickelt CPU mit 150 Arm-v9-Kernen
Der 2nm-Chip soll in Rechenzentren eingesetzt werden. Sein Vorgänger treibt Japans schnellsten Supercomputer an. (Prozessor, KI)
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Der 2nm-Chip soll in Rechenzentren eingesetzt werden. Sein Vorgänger treibt Japans schnellsten Supercomputer an. (Prozessor, KI)
The new UP 7000 Edge is a small computer with a fanless design, an Intel Alder Lake-N processor, and support for up to 8GB of LPDDR5 memory and 64GB of eMMC storage. It measures just 92 x 64 x 45mm (3.6″ x 2.5″ x 1.8″), but the littl…
The new UP 7000 Edge is a small computer with a fanless design, an Intel Alder Lake-N processor, and support for up to 8GB of LPDDR5 memory and 64GB of eMMC storage. It measures just 92 x 64 x 45mm (3.6″ x 2.5″ x 1.8″), but the little computer supports Windows, Ubuntu, and other operating […]
The post UP 7000 Edge is a tiny fanless desktop with up to an Intel N200 processor and 8GB RAM appeared first on Liliputing.
Interim release points the way toward minimal installers and better security.
Ubuntu 23.10, codenamed Mantic Minotaur, is the 39th Ubuntu release, and it's one of the three smaller interim releases Canonical puts out between long-term support (LTS) versions. This last interim before the next LTS doesn't stand out with bold features you can identify at a glance. But it does set up some useful options and upgrades that should persist in Ubuntu for some time.
Two of the biggest changes in Ubuntu 23.10 are in the installer. Ubuntu now defaults to a "Default installation," which is quite different from what the "default" was even just one release prior. "Default" is described as "Just the essentials, web browser, and basic utilities," while "Full" is "An offline-friendly selection of office tools, utilities, web browser, and games." "Default" is somewhat similar to what "Minimal" used to be in prior versions, while "Full" is intended for those who are offline or have slow connections or just want as many options as possible right away.
At the moment, most people won't be saving much, assuming they install off an ISO file. The ISO for Ubuntu 23.10 is 4.6GB, which is smaller than the 4.9GB ISO of Ubuntu 23.04, but not drastically so. This may change, however; Ubuntu staffers note that they have bigger plans for provisioning and install options, which may make it into 24.04. For now, it's a way to avoid clutter in your app search, at least, if not your disk overall.
Dozens join lawsuit alleging Apple AirTags are stalkers’ “weapon of choice.”
This month, more than three dozen victims allegedly terrorized by stalkers using Apple AirTags have joined a class-action lawsuit filed in a California court last December against Apple. They alleged in an amended complaint that, partly due to Apple's negligence, AirTags have become "one of the most dangerous and frightening technologies employed by stalkers" because they can be easily, cheaply, and covertly used to determine "real-time location information to track victims."
Since the lawsuit was initially filed in 2022, plaintiffs have alleged that there has been an "explosion of reporting" showing that AirTags are frequently being used for stalking, including a spike in international AirTags stalking cases and more than 150 police reports in the US as of April 2022. More recently, there were 19 AirTags stalking cases in one US metropolitan area—Tulsa, Oklahoma—alone, the complaint said.
This seeming escalation is concerning, plaintiffs say, because Apple allegedly has not done enough to mitigate harms, and AirTags stalking can lead to financial ruin, as victims bear significant costs like hiring mechanics to strip their cars to locate AirTags or repeatedly relocating their homes. AirTags stalking can also end in violence, including murder, plaintiffs alleged, and the problem is likely bigger than anyone knows, because stalking is historically underreported.
This summer Simply NUC announced plans to launch one of the first computers with a 4″ x 4″ motherboard that supports up to an Intel Core i9 processor and up to 96GB of RAM. Now it’s available for pre-order, and the company says the l…
This summer Simply NUC announced plans to launch one of the first computers with a 4″ x 4″ motherboard that supports up to an Intel Core i9 processor and up to 96GB of RAM. Now it’s available for pre-order, and the company says the little computer should begin shipping later in October. The Simply NUC Onyx […]
The post Simply NUC Onyx is up for pre-order (4×4 mini PC with up to Core i9-13900H and 96GB of RAM) appeared first on Liliputing.
Amazon’s Fall 2023 Prime Day event has come and gone. Some products, like the MacBook Air 13 (2020), are still on sale at Prime Day prices. Others, like many of the mini PCs I highlighted this week have seen small price increases, but are still …
Amazon’s Fall 2023 Prime Day event has come and gone. Some products, like the MacBook Air 13 (2020), are still on sale at Prime Day prices. Others, like many of the mini PCs I highlighted this week have seen small price increases, but are still selling for below list prices. Meanwhile, the Epic Games Store […]
The post Daily Deals (10-12-2023) appeared first on Liliputing.
IRS ends epic 16-year tax probe and sends Microsoft the bill, but Redmond disagrees.
On Wednesday, Microsoft revealed in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing and blog post that the Internal Revenue Service says the company owes the US Treasury $28.9 billion in back taxes, plus penalties and interest, reports the Associated Press. The claim comes as a result of a lengthy IRS audit that examined how Microsoft distributed its profits across different countries from 2004 to 2013. Microsoft disagrees with the IRS's claim and intends to appeal the decision.
According to the AP, the ongoing IRS probe began in 2007 and is described as "one of the largest in the Service's history" in court documents released last year. Recently, Microsoft received notification that the audit phase has concluded, triggering the next steps for settling the dispute. At the core of the IRS investigation is the practice known as "transfer pricing," which some critics argue allows companies to report lower profits in countries with higher taxes and vice versa, minimizing their overall tax obligations.
Microsoft maintains that it has complied with IRS rules all along and will proceed to appeal the agency's decision—a process expected to last for years. Here's how the company described the episode in Section 8.01 of its SEC filing:
Cell phone towers in space could soon be connecting to your normal smartphone.
Starlink's website update is revealing a bit more about its plans for a satellite-delivered cell phone service. The new page for "Starlink Direct to Cell" promises "ubiquitous coverage" from "cellphone towers in space" that will work over bog-standard LTE. The current timeline claims there will be text service starting in 2024, voice and data in 2025, and "IoT" service in 2025.
Today satellite phone connectivity still requires giant, purpose-built hardware, like the old-school Iridium network phones. If you're only looking for emergency texting, you can also make do with Apple's introduction of the barely there connectivity paradigm, requiring being inside a connectivity window, holding up a phone, and following a signal-targeting app. Starlink wants to bring full-blown space connectivity to normal smartphone hardware.
The plan for Starlink Direct to Cell is different thanks to a lot of foundational improvements over what's currently available. First, those other two networks are in a higher orbit: the iPhone's Globalstar network is at 1,400 km above Earth, and Iridium is at 781 km. Starlink currently operates a lot closer to Earth, in the 550 km range. The other major shift is that SpaceX is developing the world's largest rocket, Starship, and having the world's largest rocket means you get to launch the world's biggest satellites. Bigger satellites can involve bigger, more sensitive antennas than what generally are launched into space, and this part of the operation isn't rocket science: Your tiny smartphone will have a much easier time connecting to the closer, bigger satellites, leading to a level of cellular space service that wasn't possible before.
T-Mobile: “We are not raising the price… we are moving you to a newer plan.”
T-Mobile is moving people to newer, more expensive plans starting with the November bill cycle unless customers call the company to opt out, according to multiple reports.
The forced migration surfaced on Reddit two days ago and was confirmed by The Mobile Report, which published portions of leaked documents indicating how the plan changes will be implemented. T-Mobile also confirmed the change to CNET, telling the news site that "there will be an increase of approximately $10 per line with the migration."
"We're always looking for ways to give our customers more from our services so we're moving a small number who were on older rate plans to newer plans that will deliver them enhanced features," T-Mobile told CNET.
The James Webb Space Telescope may help us find the answer.
In June, astronomers reported a disappointing discovery: The James Webb Space Telescope failed to find a thick atmosphere around the rocky planet TRAPPIST-1 C, an exoplanet in one of the most tantalizing planetary systems in the search for alien life.
The finding follows similar news regarding neighboring planet TRAPPIST-1 B, another planet in the TRAPPIST-1 system. Its dim, red star hosts seven rocky worlds, a few of which are in the habitable zone—at a distance from their star at which liquid water could exist on their surfaces and otherworldly life might thrive.
What it would take to detect that life, if it exists, isn’t a new question. But thanks to the JWST, it’s finally becoming a practical one. In the next few years, the telescope could glimpse the atmospheres of several promising planets orbiting distant stars. Hidden away in the chemistry of those atmospheres may be the first hints of life beyond our solar system. This presents a sticky problem: What qualifies as a true chemical signature of life?