
Damn. This is not scene from a disaster movie. These are apparently Pokémon Go players in Taiwan.
Source: Kotaku – Pokémon Go Stampedes in Taiwan

Damn. This is not scene from a disaster movie. These are apparently Pokémon Go players in Taiwan.
Source: Kotaku – Pokémon Go Stampedes in Taiwan


Sure, it may look like the seagull is playing along with the man hiding the food under three cups in an attempt to trick the bird but know this: seagulls are motherfuckers who don’t care about you or silly games. It is not playing along. It is in complete control. The bird is only pretending because it knows that it’s the only way it’ll get food from this guy (for now). Once the guy exposes his food stash, the seagull is going to attack it and then poop all over the dude who thought it was cute to play games with seagulls.
Source: Gizmodo – Smart Seagull Tricks Dumb Man Into Giving It Free Food By Beating the Shell Game
The first day of conference sessions wrapped up earlier this evening at the annual Hot Chips symposium. One of the computing industry’s lower-key events, the IEEE conference for high performance chips is not a venue for product announcements, but instead a more focused conference for tech companies and their engineers to let their hair down a bit and present some deeper technical workings of their products. Even these aren’t full product briefings – since they’re often for future products – but it’s a good venue to dive a little deeper and learn a little bit more about the technologies and decisions that have gone into putting these chips together.
Over the next two days we’ll be covering the highlights of several presentations, but I wanted to start this year’s coverage off with some nerdy pictures. I am of course referring to die shots, as NVIDIA has released the first die shot of their behemoth 610mm2 GP100 die as part of a presentation on Pascal and NVLink 1.0. Die shots have been relatively rare in the GPU industry in recent years, particularly those for the highest-end GPUs with the most features.
GP100 is particularly interesting because it’s the first NVIDIA part featuring HBM and NVLink, two interfaces which (at least for NVIDIA) premiered on GP100. The die shot itself is not significantly enhanced (and I’m not going to spoil a good die shot here), but even with just basic coloring you can make out features such as the thread scheduler and other uncore features in the center, along of course with the SMs. GP100, as a reminder, has 60 in all, organized into 30 TPCs, the latter of which is what you’re probably counting right now.
Top and bottom of this picture appear to be the HBM2 interfaces. Despite the width of GP100’s 4096-bit HBM2 bus, the space consumed by HBM2 appears to be relatively small on the admittedly large GPU, which is one of the benefits of HBM as it allows for very tight routing and simpler GPU-side logic. Going HBM didn’t just get NVIDIA more memory bandwidth, but I fully expect it also got them a meaningful increase in die area that they could dedicate to GPU logic.
Meanwhile the presentation also gives us our best shot to date of a full (and presumably production) GP100 package. Note the tight spacing between the HBM2 stacks and the GPU die; NVIDIA did not waste any space here, as the memory stacks have been placed as close as they can be. Both the memory and GPU sit on top of the silicon interposer, itself not much larger than the hardware it sits on. Due to the large size of GP100, every millimeter ends up mattering here, as the resulting interposer has to be quite large even with this dense packing. This also does a great job illustrating just how much larger HBM2 stacks are than HBM1 stacks, as they now are a considerable fraction of the die size of GP100 itself, as opposed to the smaller HBM1 stacks used on AMD’s Fury X last year.
The big question, of course, is when this technology will trickle down into cheaper, consumer-level boards. Right now HBM2 is still quite expensive, while GDDR5X has allowed NVIDIA to cover much of their bandwidth needs on consumer parts with the cheaper memory technology. However as we’ll see in the Hot Chips memory presentation, Samsung and Xilinx have some ideas on how to handle that…
Source: AnandTech – Hot Chips 2016: NVIDIA Pascal GP100 Die Shot Released


The making of a record isn’t exactly a big mystery but there’s still a bit of old magic in seeing music get put to wax in a factory where the metal gets etched and the vinyl gets stamped out. Super Deluxe took its stoned mode camera into one of these vinyl stamping factories and recorded all the good stuff. Sometimes it looks like they’re making Captain America’s shield and other times it looks like they’re just mixing paint dye but they’re all just steps into giving the world better sounding music.
Source: Gizmodo – Seeing How Records Get Made from Beginning to End Is Still Charming
Crafting with CNC mills, routers and other power tools isn’t all that easy, especially if you’re new to it. You’ll frequently want a template, and it’s all too easy to mess up a cut if you haven’t developed a steady hand. Shaper doesn’t think it has…
Source: Engadget – Augmented reality power tool helps anyone craft things
Back in June, reports came out that Amazon plans to launch a $10-a-month standalone music service similar to Spotify, Apple Music and other subscription-based options out there. According to Recode, though, the tech titan is also gearing up to introd…
Source: Engadget – Amazon could launch an Echo-exclusive music service
mdsolar quotes a report from Los Angeles Times: When a drum containing radioactive waste blew up in an underground nuclear dump in New Mexico two years ago, the Energy Department rushed to quell concerns in the Carlsbad desert community and quickly reported progress on resuming operations. The early federal statements gave no hint that the blast had caused massive long-term damage to the dump, a facility crucial to the nuclear weapons cleanup program that spans the nation, or that it would jeopardize the Energy Department’s credibility in dealing with the tricky problem of radioactive waste. But the explosion ranks among the costliest nuclear accidents in U.S. history, according to a Times analysis. The long-term cost of the mishap could top $2 billion, an amount roughly in the range of the cleanup after the 1979 partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania. The Feb. 14, 2014, accident is also complicating cleanup programs at about a dozen current and former nuclear weapons sites across the U.S. Thousands of tons of radioactive waste that were headed for the dump are backed up in Idaho, Washington, New Mexico and elsewhere, state officials said in interviews. “The direct cost of the cleanup is now $640 million, based on a contract modification made last month with Nuclear Waste Partnership that increased the cost from $1.3 billion to nearly $2 billion,” reports Los Angeles Times. “The cost-plus contract leaves open the possibility of even higher costs as repairs continue. And it does not include the complete replacement of the contaminated ventilation system or any future costs of operating the mine longer than originally planned.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – New Mexico Nuclear Accident Ranks Among the Costliest In US History

Track: One Nine | Artist: Black Cobra | Album: Bestial
Source: Kotaku – Track: One Nine | Artist: Black Cobra | Album: Bestial

Oh Barb with your coke-bottle glasses, your mom jeans, and your perfect eye rolls. There’s something in your charm and wit that made you so endearing to us, the viewers of Stranger Things.
Source: io9 – We Will Get ‘Justice for Barb’ in a Second Season of Stranger Things

Russian cosplayer Milligan Vick—who we’ve featured before
—is the perfect Evie Fry in this shoot, nailing everything about the last Assassin’s Creed game, from the costume to the location.
Source: Kotaku – Welcome To The 21st Century, Evie Frye
Iraq built an armed robotic vehicle, according to Baghdad Post, and it could be used to take back a town occupied by ISIS. Based on Defense One’s translation of the story, the robot is car-sized and tank-like, equipped with an automatic machine gun a…
Source: Engadget – Iraq built a gun-wieding robotic vehicle to take on ISIS
Thanks to the work of a team of researchers at the University of Texas, Austin’s Cockrell School of Engineering, your next car windshield or apartment window could have an efficient, low-cost way of electronically controlling its tint, while also kee…
Source: Engadget – Researchers develop cheaper, more flexible smart glass

If movies about space have taught us anything, it’s that no one can hear you scream. If you get lost in space, nobody’s going to find you. Unless you’re a spacecraft with a direct link to NASA. Then there is hope for you yet.
Source: io9 – NASA Just Found a Lost Spacecraft

If movies about space have taught us anything, it’s that no one can hear you scream. If you get lost in space, nobody’s going to find you. Unless you’re a spacecraft with a direct link to NASA. Then there is hope for you yet.
Source: Gizmodo – We Get a Happy Ending to the Saga of NASA’s Lost Spacecraft STEREO-B
Sony’s Greg Lewickyj officially announced that PlayStation Plus subscribers will be paying a bit more for their memberships upon renewal beginning…
Sony Announces Increases in PlayStation Plus Subscription Pricing
Source: PS4 News – Sony Announces Increases in PlayStation Plus Subscription Pricing
Earlier today Eurogamer took pictures and video of what appears to be a redesigned slim PlayStation 4, and now YouTube channel ZRZ is showing off what it says is the console’s new controller. The only immediately noticeable tweak is up top, where the…
Source: Engadget – Video claims to show a redesigned PS4 slim controller

Pokémon Go’s Team Leaders haven’t been doing much leading thus far. That’s about to change, with the game’s latest update introducing something called “Implemented Pokémon Appraisal”.
Source: Kotaku – Pokémon Go’s Team Leaders Now Actually Do Something
North Korea has unveiled a set-top box that offers video-on demand services similar to Netflix. The service is called Manbang, which translates to “everywhere” in Korean, and allows consumers to stream documentaries about Kim Jong Un and other “educational” programs, as well as five live TV channels. “If a viewer wants to watch, for instance, an animal movie and sends a request to the equipment, it will show the relevant video to the viewer […] this is two-way communications,” according to NK News. It reportedly works by plugging the set-top box into an internet modem, then connecting an HDMI cable from the cable box to the TV. A very small number of North Koreans will actually be able to use the device as “only a few thousand […] have access to the state-sanctioned internet, in a nation of 25 million people,” reports New York Daily News.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – North Korea Unveils Netflix-Like Streaming Service Called ‘Manbang’

Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: No Man’s Sky Is What Happens When You’re Busy Making Other Plans • Manga Reviews: The Ancient Magus’ Bride Vol. 5, My Hero Academia Vol. 4 & 5 • The Nerfs And Buffs Overwatch Needs Right Now
Source: Kotaku – Today’s selection of articles from Kotaku’s reader-run community: No Man’s Sky Is What Happens When
(credit: Silk Road 2.0)
A 27-year-old Irishman whom police say was an administrator on the Silk Road drug-dealing website is fighting to avoid facing trial in the US.
Gary Davis of Wicklow, Ireland was indicted in 2013. US prosecutors say Davis was “Libertas,” a Silk Road admin who helped with things like customer service and moderating the forums.
Davis was arrested in 2014. Earlier this month, Ireland’s High Court ordered that he should be extradited to the US. Davis has appealed that order, The Irish Times reported this weekend. Davis has been charged with conspiracy charges related to narcotics distribution, money laundering, and computer hacking. If convicted, he could face up to a life sentence.
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Source: Ars Technica – Silk Road moderator “Libertas” fights to stay out of US prison