Here’s how the makers of the “Suyu” Switch emulator plan to avoid getting sued

Dev says project is “in a legal gray area we are trying to work our way out of…”

Is a name like "Suyu" ironic enough to avoid facing a lawsuit?

Enlarge / Is a name like "Suyu" ironic enough to avoid facing a lawsuit? (credit: Suyu)

Last week, the developers behind the popular Switch emulator Yuzu took down their GitHub and web presence in the face of a major lawsuit from Nintendo. Now, a new project built from the Yuzu source code, cheekily named Suyu, has arisen as "the continuation of the world's most popular, open-source Nintendo Switch emulator, Yuzu."

Despite the name—which the project's GitHub page notes is "pronounced 'sue-you' (wink, wink)"—the developers behind Suyu are going out of their way to try to avoid a lawsuit like the one that took down Yuzu.

"Suyu currently exists in a legal gray area we are trying to work our way out of," contributor and Discord moderator Sharpie told Ars in a recent interview. "There are multiple plans and possibilities for what to do next. Things are still being organized and planned."

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M3 MacBook Air refresh boosts storage speeds for 256GB models

For the M2 Air, getting better storage speeds required a 512GB (or larger) SSD.

The 13- and 15-inch M3 MacBook Air.

Enlarge / The 13- and 15-inch M3 MacBook Air. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

When Apple upgraded its Macs with the M2 chip, some users noticed that storage speeds were actually quite a bit lower than they were in the M1 versions. Both the 256GB M2 MacBook Air and the 512GB M2 MacBook Pro had their storage speeds roughly halved compared to M1 Macs with the same storage capacities.

Teardowns revealed that this was because Apple was using fewer physical flash memory chips to provide the same amount of storage. Modern SSDs achieve their high speeds partly by reading from and writing to multiple NAND flash chips simultaneously, a process called "interleaving." When there's only one flash chip to access, speeds go down.

Early teardowns of the M3 MacBook Air suggest that Apple may have reversed course here, at least for some Airs. The Max Tech YouTube channel took a 256GB M3 Air apart, showing a pair of 128GB NAND flash chips rather than the single 256GB chip that the M2 Air used. BlackMagic Disk Speed Test performance increases accordingly; read and write speeds for the 256GB M2 Air come in at around 1,600 MB/s, while the M3 Air has read speeds of roughly 2,900 MB/s and write speeds of about 2,100 MB/s. That's roughly in line with the M1 Air's performance.

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Nvidia Geforce RTX 5000: Blackwell-Topmodell soll 512-Bit-Speicherbus bekommen

Der KI-Hype könnte auch für Spieler und Hobbynutzer etwas Gutes bringen. Gerüchten zufolge soll die nächste Gaming-Grafikkarte von Nvidia ein ungewöhnlich breites Speicherinterface haben. (Grafikkarten, Nvidia)

Der KI-Hype könnte auch für Spieler und Hobbynutzer etwas Gutes bringen. Gerüchten zufolge soll die nächste Gaming-Grafikkarte von Nvidia ein ungewöhnlich breites Speicherinterface haben. (Grafikkarten, Nvidia)

Kobo’s first eReaders with E Ink Color displays could be coming soon

E Ink’s color displays have been showing up in eBook readers for a few years, but most of the devices that have used the company’s color display technology have been niche companies without much presence in the US, like Onyx, Bigme, and Po…

E Ink’s color displays have been showing up in eBook readers for a few years, but most of the devices that have used the company’s color display technology have been niche companies without much presence in the US, like Onyx, Bigme, and PocketBook. Now it looks like Kobo may be planning to enter the space. […]

The post Kobo’s first eReaders with E Ink Color displays could be coming soon appeared first on Liliputing.

Aliens: Pentagon findet keine Beweise für UFOs

Weder Aliens noch fliegende Untertassen: Das Pentagon findet keine Belege für Außerirdische. Allerdings fehlt ein Stück der möglichen Wahrheit. (Aliens, Wissen)

Weder Aliens noch fliegende Untertassen: Das Pentagon findet keine Belege für Außerirdische. Allerdings fehlt ein Stück der möglichen Wahrheit. (Aliens, Wissen)

After coming back from the dead, the world’s largest aircraft just flew a real payload

Falling just short of hypersonic velocity.

The world's largest aircraft takes off with the Talon A vehicle on Saturday.

Enlarge / The world's largest aircraft takes off with the Talon A vehicle on Saturday. (credit: Stratolaunch/Matt Hartman)

Built and flown by Stratolaunch, the massive Roc aircraft took off from Mojave Air and Space Port in California on Saturday. The airplane flew out over the Pacific Ocean, where it deployed the Talon-A vehicle, which looks something like a mini space shuttle.

This marked the first time this gargantuan airplane released an honest-to-goodness payload, the first Talon-A vehicle, TA-1, which is intended to fly at hypersonic speed. During the flight, TA-1 didn't quite reach hypersonic velocity, which begins at Mach 5, or five times greater than the speed of sound.

"While I can’t share the specific altitude and speed TA-1 reached due to proprietary agreements with our customers, we are pleased to share that in addition to meeting all primary and customer objectives of the flight, we reached high supersonic speeds approaching Mach 5 and collected a great amount of data at an incredible value to our customers," said Zachary Krevor, chief executive of Stratolaunch, in a statement.

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OpenAI CEO Altman wasn’t fired because of scary new tech, just internal politics

As Altman cements power, OpenAI announces three new board members—and a returning one.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman speaks during the OpenAI DevDay event on November 6, 2023, in San Francisco.

Enlarge / OpenAI CEO Sam Altman speaks during the OpenAI DevDay event on November 6, 2023, in San Francisco. (credit: Getty Images)

On Friday afternoon Pacific Time, OpenAI announced the appointment of three new members to the company's board of directors and released the results of an independent review of the events surrounding CEO Sam Altman's surprise firing last November. The current board expressed its confidence in the leadership of Altman and President Greg Brockman, and Altman is rejoining the board.

The newly appointed board members are Dr. Sue Desmond-Hellmann, former CEO of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Nicole Seligman, former EVP and global general counsel of Sony; and Fidji Simo, CEO and chair of Instacart. These additions notably bring three women to the board after OpenAI met criticism about its restructured board composition last year. In addition, Sam Altman has rejoined the board.

The independent review, conducted by law firm WilmerHale, investigated the circumstances that led to Altman's abrupt removal from the board and his termination as CEO on November 17, 2023. Despite rumors to the contrary, the board did not fire Altman because they got a peek at scary new AI technology and flinched. "WilmerHale... found that the prior Board’s decision did not arise out of concerns regarding product safety or security, the pace of development, OpenAI’s finances, or its statements to investors, customers, or business partners."

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Mond und Raumfahrt: China äußert sich zur Nutzung von Weltraumressourcen

China hat der UN eine Stellungnahme zur Nutzung von Weltraum-Ressourcen vorgelegt. Zudem hat es seine Pläne für den Mond erläutert. Ein Bericht von Patrick Klapetz (Mond, Raumfahrt)

China hat der UN eine Stellungnahme zur Nutzung von Weltraum-Ressourcen vorgelegt. Zudem hat es seine Pläne für den Mond erläutert. Ein Bericht von Patrick Klapetz (Mond, Raumfahrt)