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Comment Re: Secular (Score 1) 82

Let's do a little Occam's Razor analysis of your theory:

Which is more probable:
- Democrats have entered into a half-century spanning "we hope we're right" conspiracy to do a double fake-out on apparently easily manipulated Republicans to bitch and moan about debt and deficits for the last 50 years (and not doing anything about it while in power until *this year*) while temporarily speaking to the needs of impoverished and working class people until they eventually unravel the entire global economy into a collapsed twisted flaming wreckage of human civilization;

- Democrats are trying to prevent impoverished and working class people from having massive cost-of-living increases that will cause tens of millions of people to decide "do I buy my medicine or food this week" so that incredibly rich people can have a few pennies on each tax dollar back that they, by definition, do not need.

I think I know which one is more probable.

Comment Re: Secular (Score 1) 82

Well, the "very unpleasant people" have already taken over and now control the US Mint presses. Do you really think they aren't going to fire up those presses to their own advantage, after seeing that they have no problem putting tens of millions of people into starvation risk to save a few bucks on their own taxes?

This administration has no moral center. Stop acting like they do - they're literally using hunger as a political weapon.

Comment Re:Secular (Score 1) 82

Have Sanders or Ocasio (Cortez is her maternal last name) uttered the words "genocide" or "ethnic cleansing" in reference to Gaza yet?

Yes they have.

Try to keep up.

Also, why do you get to decide what her name is? I'm pretty sure that self-determination is one of those core values we share as Americans, enshrined in the Declaration of Independence. If she wants to have a last name of Occasio-Cortez, that's her decision - not yours.

Jesus H. Christ.

Comment Re:Secular (Score 1) 82

So we should be congratulating the guy who sews division at every chance he gets for reluctantly continuing to nominate a singular Democrat to head an agency with no political clout whatsoever?

All this does is prove that the label "billionaire" means more than either political party label to this President, which should come as news to absolutely nobody.

Comment Re:What do they care? (Score 1) 42

I don't use an agent but I use AI to find the exact thing I want on Amazon and it gives me the link and I buy it, without having to wade to the crap that Amazon's "search" throws at me.

Glad to see I'm not the only one who noticed that over time Amazon's search feature has enshitified. If that's the correct verb. It used to be fairly good. These days, nah, unless I'm looking for a book or other product from Amazon directly, as a search for the marketplace it's crap.

And since it used to be better, something must be responsible for that. Greed, most likely.

Comment Re: Cue the hate... (Score 1) 68

Not 99% but definitely some of the most useful ones. And yes, stack traces are one of the things that only Linux users send you without an explicit request.

And the advantage of debugging a (this specific exception) error in (this specific file) on (that specific line) over a "hey, the game crashed when I jumped out of the car" bug report cannot be overstated.

Comment Re:Every Two Years (Score 2) 65

This is what I was thinking - RAM guys have been stacking chips for a hell of a long time. First as actual package stacks on the DIMM - I remember seeing some very dense modules in the DDR2 days with stacked packages; and then as you correctly point out: Samsung has been layering dies inside the package for years as a microscopic version of stacking chip packages.

It's also why DIMMs have heat spreaders on them now.

Comment Re: Heat dissipation? Yields? (Score 4, Interesting) 65

My guess is that they aren't targeting performance, but rather making a lower power system-on-chip that really is a fully-featured system-on-a-chip and incorporates lots of low-power and low-heat peripheral crap like I2C / serial / USB / SATA in addition to RAM, flash storage, NIC, etc. - put the highest wattage bits on the top for direct interface with the heat spreader, and stack the other stuff below with some thermal magic in the sandwich to move as much heat from the lower layers to the edges as possible so you aren't adding to the thermal load of the CPU core from below.

This kind of thing could be really cool in the low-power embedded / industrial controller space where nobody is looking for laptop performance out of a chip. But you are trading one complexity for another: instead of having to use a lot of geometric area to mount and connect all the peripherals to the CPU, you end up with a shitload of thermal management problems for a very compact system without the geometric area requirement.

Unfortunately, that geometric area really helps with the thermal problems.

Comment Re:Cool (Score 4, Insightful) 65

This was my thought too - if you have essentially 6 layers of silicon with insulators between to create 600% of the transistor density, you're also consuming >600% of the power (nothing is ever 100% efficient) and therefore producing >600% of the wattage to dissipate without a corresponding size in radiative surface area.

How do you not cook the center of the cube when we're already throwing 70W into a single chip the size of your fingernail? Maybe central heat pipes that each layer hooks up to, running vertically through the die? And how much area per layer do you lose to that, at what increased manufacturing complexity (read: cost and reduction in yields)?

I'm sure those are all answerable engineering questions to present if the value is there. And my guess is that since it's very obvious that stacking chips is a sure-fire way to increase transistor area, that the value hasn't been worth the added complexity to solve the inherent problems because die shrinks were always cheaper and easier to do... right up until they aren't.

It's good that someone is asking the question and showing that it can be done. But I'd wager [paywall so couldn't RTFA to confirm] that they aren't exactly stacking up the highest performance Xeon or Epyc chips 41 high and running them at full throttle.

Comment Re: Like oil fields in Nigeria (Score 1) 46

You don't know anything about how taxes in Oregon work.

Hint: we have a property tax that pays for stuff at the county level. 9-digit construction cost datacenters are worth quite a bit of property tax to counties that are largely agricultural and would otherwise have a low tax base.

But do go on only considering one slice of the governmental revenue pie without looking at the much larger slice sitting right next to it.

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