An Inside Look at the Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Star Trek’s first foray to the box office is a strange beast—a gorgeous, haunting exploration of the franchise’s love of the cosmos wrapped up in an overwrought, over-long plot. So it’s perhaps a good thing that a new making-of book puts the spotlight on what works about Star Trek: The Motion Picture: the art behind

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Source: io9 – An Inside Look at the Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Windbound Nails The Terrifying, Calming Peace Of Being In Open Waters

Six minutes into Windbound, I died. Shortly after the game started, I found myself stranded on an island with nothing but my wits and a knife. I saw a boar-like creature. It wasn’t bothering me, but it had something I needed. So I did what video games have taught me to do and struck it with my knife.

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Source: Kotaku – Windbound Nails The Terrifying, Calming Peace Of Being In Open Waters

Samsung 980 PRO Briefly Listed Online

In what seems to be an accidental leak, a product page for the highly-awaited Samsung 980 PRO SSD was posted and later taken down from Samsung’s website for Singapore. The 980 PRO was first previewed in January at CES as their first consumer SSD to support PCIe 4.0, but with very little technical information. No release date was announced but Samsung’s PR said to expect more information in Q2.


The timing of this leak is unsurprising: if Samsung was planning for a Q2 or early Q3 release before COVID-19 hit, it makes sense for them to be preparing for a release in the near future. However, this leak brings a few surprise about what kind of product the 980 PRO will be. Since this wasn’t an official, coordinated announcement, the specifications revealed may not be final and we still have no indication of pricing or launch date. But the big surprise is that the 980 PRO will apparently be using TLC NAND, a first for Samsung’s PRO models. Samsung has been the last holdout offering high-end MLC-based SSDs while the rest of the SSD industry has moved on to TLC (and QLC), for both consumer and enterprise markets. Samsung provided an early indication that they may finally be abandoning MLC NAND in early 2019 when the TLC-based 970 EVO was replaced with the 970 EVO Plus, a refresh that switched from 64L to 92L TLC. There was never any sign of a corresponding 970 PRO Plus model in the works.


The switch from MLC to TLC means the rated write endurance of the 980 PRO will be half that of the 970 PRO and equivalent to the TLC-based 970 EVO and EVO Plus. The upside is that the 980 PRO may be more competitively priced against other high-end consumer NVMe SSDs. It’s also quite possible that Samsung needed to introduce SLC caching in order to hit the 5GB/s write speeds they’re promising for the 980 PRO.






















Samsung High-End NVMe SSD Comparison
Model 980 PRO 970 PRO 970 EVO Plus
Capacities 250 GB

500 GB

1000 GB

512 GB

1024 GB
250 GB

500 GB

1000 GB

2000 GB
Interface PCIe 4 x4

NVMe 1.3
PCIe 3 x4

NVMe 1.3
PCIe 3 x4

NVMe 1.3
Form Factor M.2 2280 Single-sided
Controller Samsung Elpis Samsung Phoenix Samsung Phoenix
NAND 3D TLC 64L MLC 92L TLC
SLC Write Caching Yes No Yes
Specifications below are for 1TB models specifically
Sequential Read 7000 MB/s 3500 MB/s 3500 MB/s
Sequential Write 5000 MB/s (SLC)

2000 MB/s (TLC)
2700 MB/s 3300 MB/s (SLC)

1700 MB/s (TLC)
Random Read 

(4kB)
QD1 22k IOPS 15k IOPS 19k IOPS
Max 1M IOPS 500k IOPS 600k IOPS
Random Write

(4kB)
QD1 60k IOPS 55k IOPS 60k IOPS
Max 1M IOPS 500k IOPS 550k IOPS (SLC)

400k IOPS (TLC)
Active Power 6.2 W (Average)

8.9 W (Burst)
5.2 W (Read)

5.7 W (Write)
5.5 W (Read)

6.0 W (Write)
Write Endurance 600 TB

0.3 DWPD
1200 TB

0.66 DWPD
600 TB

0.3 DWPD
Warranty 5 years 5 years 5 years
Launch Date 2020? May 2018 January 2019
Launch MSRP TBD $629.99

(62¢/GB)
$249.99

(25¢/GB)

The product page for the 980 PRO indicated that sequential read speed is now planned to be 7 GB/s, an improvement over the 6.5 GB/s listed earlier this year at CES. We also get our first look at random IO specifications, with the 1TB model hitting a maximum of 1M IOPS for either reads or writes. Performance at a queue depth of 1 is slightly improved over the 970 PRO and 970 EVO Plus, and post-cache sequential write speeds are also up from the 970 EVO Plus. This points to the 980 PRO as likely using Samsung’s 1xx-layer 3D TLC rather than the 92L used in the 970 EVO Plus.


Power consumption from the 980 PRO is unsurprisingly higher than its predecessors, with the spec sheet showing 6.2W average and 8.9W in “burst mode”. Samsung’s high-end NVMe SSDs have already been fairly power-hungry, and making use of PCIe 4.0 speeds requires even more power. However, the 980 PRO should bring a substantial improvement in efficiency, because peak performance is doubling but power draw is not increasing by anywhere near that much. Samsung is likely following the same strategy as most other SSD controller designers by moving to a much newer fabrication process as part of the PCIe 4.0 transition.


The capacity options for the 980 PRO are a bit odd. The 970 PRO was offered in 512GB and 1TB capacities, and a 2TB capacity was hinted at but never made it to market. The lack of a 256GB option made some sense as that low capacity would likely not have been able to offer “PRO”-level performance. The 980 PRO moves to Samsung’s typical TLC capacities: 250GB, 500GB, 1TB, but still omits the 2TB option that has been available from the EVOs. It seems likely that a 2TB 980 PRO model would be released at a later date.



Moving the 980 PRO to TLC NAND raises big questions for what to expect from a 980 EVO. Moving it to QLC NAND might be a bit premature, and would definitely be a big step down for that product line even if it added PCIe 4.0 support. My expectation is that any 980 EVO would more likely be a lower-performance, lower-power mainstream TLC drive, possibly without PCIe 4.0 support. Or to put it another way, an answer to the SK hynix Gold P31, which we think represents the direction the mainstream NVMe market segment is moving towards.



Source: AnandTech – Samsung 980 PRO Briefly Listed Online

Madden 21 Has Set A New Gaming Record For The Worst Possible Reason

Madden 21 Has Set A New Gaming Record For The Worst Possible Reason
I have a running joke when watching football games, where any time someone’s helmet comes flying off as a result of a hard hit, I feign shock at their entire head separating from their body (yes, my family is tired of the running gag). Nobody actually loses their noggin in the NFL, but you might come across a headless player in Madden NFL

Source: Hot Hardware – Madden 21 Has Set A New Gaming Record For The Worst Possible Reason

Lenovo Yoga 9i And IdeaPad Slim 9i Notebooks Arrive With Intel Tiger Lake And Premium Materials

Lenovo Yoga 9i And IdeaPad Slim 9i Notebooks Arrive With Intel Tiger Lake And Premium Materials
It seems the year is starting to pick up steam and move quicker. We just received some hot news from Lenovo that they are planning out their holiday season roadmap with new devices, such as laptops and tablets. Let us dive into some of what’s in store.

First up, Lenovo has some laptops planned for the holiday season. They are expanding

Source: Hot Hardware – Lenovo Yoga 9i And IdeaPad Slim 9i Notebooks Arrive With Intel Tiger Lake And Premium Materials

See a Meteor Shower and Other Night Sky Events This Week

Those living in the northern hemisphere have a pretty exciting astronomical week coming up. Between the full moon, a meteor shower and the opportunity to get a glimpse at Mars, there is plenty to see in the night sky over the next several days. If school has already started—especially if it is taking place at…

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Source: LifeHacker – See a Meteor Shower and Other Night Sky Events This Week

CenturyLink Outage Led To a 3.5% Drop in Global Web Traffic

US internet service provider CenturyLink has suffered a major technical outage on Sunday after a misconfiguration in one of its data centers created havoc all over the internet. From a report Due to the technical nature of the outage — involving both firewall and BGP routing — the error spread outward from CenturyLink’s network and also impacted other internet service providers, ending up causing connectivity problems for many more other companies. The list of tech giants who had services go down today because of the CenturyLink outage includes big names like Amazon, Twitter, Microsoft (Xbox Live), EA, Blizzard, Steam, Discord, Reddit, Hulu, Duo Security, Imperva, NameCheap, OpenDNS, and many more. Cloudflare, which was also severely impacted today, said CenturyLink’s outward-propagating issue led to a 3.5% drop in global internet traffic, which would make this one of the biggest internet outages ever recorded.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – CenturyLink Outage Led To a 3.5% Drop in Global Web Traffic

[$] Supporting Linux kernel development in Rust

The Rust programming language
has long aimed to be a suitable replacement for C in operating-system
kernel development. As Rust has matured, many developers have expressed
growing interest in using it in the Linux kernel. At the 2020 (virtual) Linux Plumbers Conference, the
LLVM microconference track hosted a session
on open questions about and
obstacles to accepting Rust upstream in the Linux kernel. The interest in
this topic can be seen in the fact that this was the single most heavily
attended session at the 2020 event.

Source: LWN.net – [$] Supporting Linux kernel development in Rust

Finally Some Good News: September Is Overflowing With New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books

Movies are slowly trickling back into theaters, but a far safer option is to pick up one of September’s new books instead. And it’s a ridiculously bountiful month, with witches, warriors, time travelers, ghosts, robots, aliens, monsters, and space pirates to fire up your imagination without needing to leave the house.

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Source: Gizmodo – Finally Some Good News: September Is Overflowing With New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books

You Should Waffle Two Pieces of Pizza Together

I rarely reheat leftover pizza, simply because I love cold pizza so much. But this morning I woke up vaguely hungover, and that pair of cold, two-day-old Domino’s slices just didn’t seem that appealing. They were dry and kind of hard (I had not wrapped them up that well), and it was clear they needed a little heat…

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Source: LifeHacker – You Should Waffle Two Pieces of Pizza Together

Sitrep: F-35 upgrades aim for more compute power (and maybe new software)

(video link)

The F-35 Lightning II fighter has generated a lot of hype and a lot of hate over the past decade. But the next three years will see major changes to the aircraft that will, with any luck, at least mute some of the hate—or otherwise, just add billions more to the cost of the aircraft.

The Tech Refresh 3 program for the F-35 includes an upgrade of the aircraft’s core processor and memory and the replacement of the aircraft’s Panoramic Cockpit Display—the big-screen display that is the user interface for many of the aircraft’s sensors and systems. There are also radar upgrades and some weapons-handling hardware changes in store, but a vast proportion of the upcoming changes will be in software.

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Source: Ars Technica – Sitrep: F-35 upgrades aim for more compute power (and maybe new software)

It's Fine to Just Cry, Too

I keep coming back to resilience. And how I hate how we consider it to be an essential and inherent and invaluable characteristic of Blackness. I hate it because it’s dehumanizing. Being born Black don’t make us any more resilient than anyone else. We ain’t stronger. We ain’t tougher. We’ve just been given more shit…

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Source: Kotaku – It’s Fine to Just Cry, Too

How far can you drive an electric car at 70mph before it stops?

How far can you drive an electric car at 70mph before it stops?

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

The personal car has been sold to society as an engineered expression of freedom, as told through stories as varied as the dust bowl migration of The Grapes of Wrath to the irresponsible road racers of The Cannonball Run. And decades of dependence on fast-flowing liquid hydrocarbons for fuel have left little tolerance for spending many minutes more plugged in and stationary, waiting for lithium-ion cells to recharge. So when it comes to bench-racing electric vehicles, the only statistic most people care about is how far it can go before you need to plug it in again.

The situation isn’t exactly helped by the tests used by regulators. In Europe, the WLTP test cycle averages 29mph (47km/h) and generates range estimates that should be considered mere fantasies on North American roads. The US Environmental Protection Agency’s test averages almost twice that, but then gets subjected to a fudge factor that heavily penalizes some while flattering others. Which is why it’s interesting to see the results of an independent range test of several EVs that involved charging them up then driving them at a steady 70mph (112km/h) until they ground to a halt.

The study was commissioned by Polestar, which wanted to rank its new Polestar 2 EV against three competitors: the Tesla Model 3 Performance, Jaguar I-Pace, and Audi e-tron. The test procedure, conducted on July 28 on a three-mile (4.8km) oval at Fowlerville Proving Ground in Michigan, was quite straightforward.

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Source: Ars Technica – How far can you drive an electric car at 70mph before it stops?