Brkdncr

joined 2 years ago
[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 15 points 12 hours ago (4 children)

Pre-computer cars sucked. Anyone that’s worked on mechanical fuel injection will tell you so.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 13 points 17 hours ago

Figure out a way to live an extra 10 years so any money they have left goes right into the healthcare system never to be seen again.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Please let this be his primary focus until he dies.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

Friend of a friend used dating apps to find places to sleep while traveling, and couch surfing apps to find hookups.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 20 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Should have just closed the exhibit “due to funding”

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 16 points 2 days ago

Some custom designed stuff I ordered just landed today. I’m about to pay an extra $300 because of that fool.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

Is the starter getting juice

Tighten the battery terminals, they shouldn’t slip off at all.

Your wires could be rusted enough to cause problems. You should have a ground wire that goes from the engine block to the negative on the battery, sometimes using the body/frame to complete the circuit. If that’s rusted or is loose then you’ll have something’s working but the starter won’t.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago

Dude is full of himself.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 3 points 3 days ago

Yeah, heat pumps use a lot of energy when running. They are the most efficient way to cool your home though.

Only an electric water heater or clothes dryer compares to the amount of electricity they use.

You can improve your homes insulation or set your thermostat higher if you want to reduce the amount used.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 7 points 3 days ago

Closing/layoffs is a quick way to turn the books black.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 14 points 3 days ago (6 children)

LTT isn’t a reliable news source.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Because the business model is designed around everyone paying the utility for consumption of energy when the should be paying for the availability of a service.

When 50% of the people no longer pay, it’s not like the utility can deal with that. They still have poles to maintain and generation plants sized for peak load.

To fix this we would need to pay a baseline service fee for the size of the panel. A home might have a 200 amp panel while a laundromat might have something much larger.

Then, some nerds would need to figure out how to charge for consumption.

But like I said, it’s not designed like this today. It’s designed around consumption only.

 

San Bernardino County, in partnership with Family Assistance Program, has been awarded $5.8 million in Homekey Round 3 funding from the California Department of Housing and Community Development to construct 22 interim housing units to serve homeless youth, which may include but is not limited to those who have previously been in foster care or involved with the probation system.**

The project itself will be led by Family Assistance Program, a nonprofit agency that provides housing and supportive services to vulnerable populations in the High Desert region.

“This critical funding will enable us to increase access to safe housing and supportive services for young adults who are experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness,” said Carrie Harmon, director of the San Bernardino County Community Development and Housing Department. “I’m deeply grateful to the Family Assistance Program for their partnership and tireless efforts to fund this important project.”

The Homekey funding will support the expansion of the TAY (Transition-Age Youth) Tiny Home Village in Victorville, which currently serves as a youth drop-in facility and community center in Old Town Victorville. The addition will include 22 interim housing units specifically for young adults between the ages of 18-24. The campus will also offer on-site supportive services, including case management, healthcare navigation, substance use counseling, mental health services, family reunification and workforce development resources.

“As youth homelessness continues to be a critical issue in our region, we’re glad to receive this funding to expand the TAY Tiny Home Village and enhance the services we provide to young adults,” said Darryl Evey, CEO of Family Assistance Program. “I appreciate the county’s continued support of our efforts and would like to thank the state for providing these vital funds.”

Family Assistance Program, a dedicated county partner, brings extensive experience as a homeless service provider with established programs including domestic violence shelters, transitional housing, homeless youth outreach, re-entry services, and anti-human trafficking initiatives throughout San Bernardino County.

The partnership between the county and Family Assistance Program represents a coordinated response to addressing youth homelessness. The campus expansion will help meet the needs identified in the 2025 Point-in-Time Count report, which recorded over 300 sheltered and unsheltered youth between the ages of 18-24. 

In addition to state funding, the TAY Tiny Home Village expansion project has also received financial support from the Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation and Southwest Gas. For more information, please visit familyassist.org/programs/youth-centers/tiny-home-village.

 

Surely some good important things came from Alabama, what are they?

 

A while back i bought a rebuilt 390FE for my 1969 F250. Swapped it in and for the most part it's been fine. the old engine was leaking pretty bad, mis-firing, poor compression.

What should i do with it? sell as-is? rebuild it myself? turn it into lawn art? FE's aren't exactly cheap to rebuild, and my closest shop for any machine work is 2.5hrs away.

 

cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/204150

Intel, CPUs, and the concept of "badness" aren't necessarily things you'd want to shout about, what with numerous well-documented issues afflicting Intel's recent processors. But a new Oregon-based startup called AheadComputing is leaning hard on the Intel provenance of its founders while claiming that it is creating, "the biggest, baddest CPU in the world." And it's going to do it via IPC or instructions per clock, not cranking up the operating frequencies or throwing in more cores.

That is some statement. All four of AheadComputing's founders had long careers at Intel, dating all the way back to ye olde 386 processor through to the latest Intel Core-branded chips. What's more, AheadComputing also appointed CPU design legend Jim Keller to its board in March. That's at least a vote of confidence, even if it seems unlikely Keller will be involved in the design of AheadComputing's CPUs.

The company is very young, having launched in July last year with a plan to, "develop and license breakthrough, high-performance 64-bit RISC-V processor cores." RISC-V, of course, is an open-source instruction set that exists to present a more modern and cost effective alternative to the proprietary x86 and Arm standards.

Currently, RISC-V chips tend to be found in embedded applications and commercial devices. RISC-V has yet to make much of an impact in PCs or phones, for instance.

Exactly how AheadComputing is going to deliver on that promise of the "biggest, baddest CPU in the world" isn't totally clear beyond the focus in IPC. It's a fabless startup, which means it won't manufacture chips itself. But then the likes of AMD and Nvidia are fabless, too. It's really only Intel that designs and manufactures its own chips, and that business is coming under increasing pressure.

Apple M4

Apple's M4 currently has significantly better IPC than any Intel or AMD CPU. (Image credit: Apple)

According to AheadComputing's CEO Debbie Marr, "the x86 ecosystem is fiercely defending its territory but is destined to lose in the end." As for Arm, she says, "we anticipate that the ARM ecosystem will experience considerable strain in the coming years. If ARM's current customers are pressured excessively, they will consider transitioning to an alternative architecture like RISC-V."

In response, AheadComputing claims it will, "demonstrate leadership in CPU performance and performance per watt in a very short timeframe and start building the second generation of products that will demonstrate our commitment to a roadmap with large gains in performance generation over generation."

AheadComputing says it will achieve that via IPC, or instructions processed per clock, as opposed to operating frequency or adding cores. "If the performance and efficiency from the multi-core scaling era are slowing down, then it's time for the CPU designers to find a different way to use the additional gates from new process technologies. CPU designers must look towards IPC. This will require increasing the functions for each core rather than increasing the number of cores. If we do this intelligently, AheadComputing will provide performance improvements regardless of workload parallelism," says co-founder Jonathan Pearce.

That latter point could be critical. When Intel's plans for 10 GHz-plus computing hit the wall towards the latter end of the 2000's, the company dramatically changed tack in favour of multi-core computing as a way to add performance in the absence of substantial clockspeed improvements.

Intel Core i9-14900K being installed into a motherboard CPU socket

Adding lots of cores isn't always the best way to improve performance. (Image credit: Intel)

The problem with adding cores is that it relies on multi-threaded workloads. That's fine for many tasks, like 3D rendering. But it's not a magic bullet for every computational task. Indeed, that's why AMD's eight-core Ryzen 7 9800X3D is the weapon of choice for PC gaming, currently. Adding another eight cores in the form of the Ryzen 9 9950X3D typically doesn't do a whole lot for gaming performance.

Whatever, aside from that focus on IPC as opposed to adding cores, AheadComputing isn't going into any detail. For sure, it will be years before the company's CPU core designs have any chance of showing up in a device you can actually buy.

Your next upgrade

Nvidia RTX 5090 Founders Edition graphics card on different backgrounds

(Image credit: Future)

Best CPU for gaming: The top chips from Intel and AMD.Best gaming motherboard: The right boards.Best graphics card: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaits.Best SSD for gaming: Get into the game ahead of the rest.

But the focus on IPC is still interesting. Right now, Apple's M Series CPUs offer the best IPC in a consumer chip by absolutely miles. The latest M4 easily outperforms anything from Intel or AMD when it comes to a single software thread, despite running at significantly lower clockspeeds. Metrics vary, but the M4 probably has a lead of at least 30% in terms of pure IPC versus the best AMD and Intel CPUs, and quite possibly more.

Personally, if you offered me a CPU with either 50% more IPC or 50% more cores, I'd take the IPC every time. That will deliver in almost any circumstance, while multi-core CPUs can be a bit more hit and miss. Aiming for improved IPC also tends to make for better efficiency, which is great for mobile PCs.

Anywho, for now we'll have to chalk AheadComputing down as a slow burn. The company has strong provenance, but it's anyone's guess as to whether it will, in reality, make an impact. My best guess is that if it manages to come up with an interesting core design, it'll get snapped up by one of the big boys, just as the startup Nuvia was bought by Qualcomm and its Oryon CPU cores ended up in the new Snapdragon X chips.

And all of that is before you even begin to ponder the odds of any RiSC-V chip making an impact on the PC. Industry watchers have been predicting Arm chips would take over the PC for decades. That still hasn't happened.


From PCGamer latest via this RSS feed

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/38991716

The software error, which Ford reported to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration earlier this month, may cause the rearview camera image to delay, freeze or not display when the vehicle is in reverse.

The problem will be fixed by a dealer or via an “over-the-air” update at a later date. A preliminary letter notifying owners of the safety risk is expected to be mailed June 16, with a second letter to be sent once the update is available, expected sometime in the third quarter of 2025.

The following Ford vehicles — a total of 1,075,299 — are included in the recall:

2021-2024 Bronco

2021-2024 Edge

2023-2024 Escape

2021-2024 F-150

2023-2024 F-250, F-350, F-450, F-550, F-600

2022-2024 Expedition

2022-2025 Transit

2021-2023 Mach-E

2024 Ranger

2024 Mustang

2021-2023 Lincoln Nautilus

2022-2024 Navigator

2023-2024 Corsair

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Brkdncr@lemmy.world to c/music@lemmy.world
 

Maxwell Jonas Pelta was a tremendous talent and gentle spirit who passed away on Jan. 6, 2006. Born on Oct. 7, 1986, in San Francisco, CA, he grew up in Piedmont, CA. He loved the music of Elliot Smith, Sublime, and Nirvana. He was largely self-taught on guitar and bass. These 11 songs and this set of 3 promo photos are what remains of an impressive body of work of this 19-year old artist. These songs were recorded between 2001 and 2005 at his friend Neil's house, at a dorm-room studio at the Heritage School in Provo, UT, and at Frogville Records in Santa Fe. Anything more that could be said about Max's life or spirit or the tremendous challenges he faced is contained in these songs.

All Proceeds from the sale of these tracks benefit Ambassadors of Hope and Opportunity, a Mill Valley, CA-based non-profit that helps at-risk and homeless youth with access to healthcare, shelter, and employment. 

www.facebook.com/ahobayarea/

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Earthquake! (earthquake.usgs.gov)
 

So far my fave has been The Dare.

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