Fun fact: We didn't cover CrowdStrike because the news came out... while we were trying to travel (this was filmed before that). We got delayed in an airport for 9 hours, had all connecting options evaporate, gave up, and went home. Fortunately, we were still at our home airport when it happened, so didn't get stranded. I'll have something to say about that in the next episode!
Time to start an investigation to see if any Big Tech companies have recently made a big investment into Crowdstrike. Tech Company " Shit!,GN Steve is coming our way Press the RED BUTTON"
I haven't had ATT service in over 10 years and my data was still breached. Why the fuck does ATT still have my data? They should be required to purge this data
That would actually be an interesting set-up for a plot. A shut-in and a hacker become friends after a security breach because the hacker falls for the shut-in.
[German speaker here] your translation is accurate, the article basically states they've "had enough". The "e" designation models will disappear from the market and the subscription is soon no longer purchasable. Anybody else is unaffected. Again, just like you stated. Also yes, we can indeed get wild with compound words, if we choose to do so...and "-lied" would be pronounced "leed"
There is actually a German compound word in the article that could reasonably be translated as "Bullshit": Cloud-Verbindungsanforderungen, which is a bullshit requirement to have for a printer
German Language is a hard / difficult Language for a non native Speaker. Deine Übersetzung passt soweit. Hatte auch kurz überlegt eine Übersetzung ins Englische zu versuchen aber dann habe ich deinen Kommentar gesehen und war sehr zufrieden.
Best thing I've done was to buy a laser printer 5 years ago. It still uses the original toners, but I got a spare set of toners back in the day for about $120 - down to the current $470 market price if I had to buy them today, can't complain - and I happily won't deal with ink in a decade.
Same. Inkjet printers, by HP and other brands, always felt cheap and were unreliable; but the HP Color LaserJet I got is the best printer I've ever had. It's not a model that requires any subscription, and it doesn't require an Internet connection, it just works. It's cheaper per-page to operate than an inkjet printer too.
E cores are here to stay as they drop hyper threading on newer gen products the smaller cores will become necessary. Also it wasn't really their innovation ARM based mobile SoCs have used E cores long before Intel.
@@zgillet They are mainly meant to be area efficient cores, the hybrid design allows Intel to push the P cores harder by physically making them bigger (11th gen had less cores than 10th gen because of this) without sacraficing multi core performance. The 8+16 design could beat AMDs 16 core Zen4 in multi core workloads, the 12+0 die won't have any chance at that.
The only reason why i9s were created in the first place is to charge more for the hyperthreading and cache removed from the i7 9700K. Now i9s should stay as just general purpose chips instead of being "just gaming" with overvoltage and clockspeed to death.
Which is what they should have done all along and instead fix their process technology which was one of their main (and still is) limitation. The 'hybrid' core design was/is doomed to fail as NO hardware can 'predict' where or what types of bottlenecks may exist in software. That type of design /ONLY/ works if you control 100% of the hardware and software (OS & app) stack which they don't. They would have been better off to keep a homogeneous E core cpu and a homogeneous P-core version based on power envelopes.
I appreciate my old LaserJet's dumb toner cartridges that you can simply drill a hole into the side, refill yourself using bulk toner, put a plug on and keep going until the imaging drum or heater wire crap out. Only contacts on the cartridge are power for the heater.
I purchased a Brother Colour Laser (HL-3150CDW) a while back (2018?). It is not that good a photo's but for documents with coloured text/charts it is perfect. There are 4 toner cartridges and it still runs if one runs out. Brothers own toner cartridges are expensive but I found the cheap ones work perfectly. At ~£10 for around 6000 prints is good value, also those same cartridges are still being used by their latest printers. I found that even though I do photography I hardly ever did prints it was too expensive on inkjet and that was when you got 5x the ink of today. Going online and paying a few £, I can get professionaly done prints of any size from tiny passport mugshots to poster sizes. I needed passport style photos for my new driving license (moved house) and found that ASDA charged just £2.50 including P&P for 8 pics last November. The photo booth in the town wanted £9.
I like to recommend Brother in the way Verge does: Best printer 2023: just buy this Brother laser printer everyone has, it’s fine / The Brother whatever-it-is will print return labels for online shopping, never run out of toner, and generally be a printer instead of the physical instantiation of a business model.
@@tablettablete186 lol my last printer was a brother, it was one of the few on the shelf that was JUST a printer instead of a super mega compound 5 machine. aka it cost less than half of the competitors on the shelf
BTW AT&T gave customers a $5 bill credit for the data leak. Not per line, per account. Then the next month raised the rate on all plans by $1 so people would be less likely to notice. So on our 5 line account we got a $5 credit one month, then the bill increased $5 the next. Classy AT&T.
@@GamersNexus that's the doomdsay for enterprise customers who can't print a page due to bricked AI software. I'm hoping someone creates a modular and open source printer even though there are less functions
@@vasudevmenon2496Not anytime soon. I'd love to see it myself, but consider how the government feels about counterfeits. Supposedly, that's where the tiny ID dots came from.
I don't think their business model would work if it became known that paying their ransom would be pointless. Trust and honoring agreements still seem to play an important role when you operate a hacking group, oddly enough.
@@Rotwold here is the funny thing: there is no way to prove that they deleted the data It's all just "yea we deleted it pinky promise" It takes 0 effort to just turn around and sell it to someone else while you delete a copy of the data. It's a hacking group after all, why do they care about reputation after they just got paid by some sucker, it's like trusting a scammer or someone doing ransomware
@@Rotwold a lot of the time the data is still sold on. that at&t data is worth a lot more than they paid for them to delete. in the hands of scammers and shit the entire breach would easily pull over a mil if sold off properly. they're retarded if they dont fuck at&t and sell it anyway
As a certified German: "bullshit" is the correct translation for that paragraph. Also: "panzerlied" is also German and literally translates to "tank song".
How does that go again? On the heath, there blooms a little flower fine and it's called Erika. Eagerly a hundred thousand little bees, swarm around Erika. For her heart is full of sweetness, a tender scent escapes her blossom-gown. On the heath, there blooms a little flower and it's called Erika. 💖
I use my printer so infrequently I've had to waste pages to get the ink flowing. So I gave up on color and bought a laser printer (Brother HL-L2300D) for $87.19 in 2019. No regret in not having color. It boots a lot faster than an inkjet.
Likewise I think it was 2018 I picked a new Brother HL-3150CDW (colour) for just £129. That model had been replaced with a newer one and was discounted. The newer model is almost identicle, its only differences being a built in NF thing for connecting phones/tablets and a slightly lighter colour to the plastic. As I typical only print something every month or two, not wasting 20% of you ink cleaning the heads every time is a real bonus. Also the printer is connect direct to LAN and starts up in a few seconds, the delay is just heating the rollers up. Once warmed up it dose double sided printing with around 2s per side.
@@nese1lol I don't now if your comment is made in jest or not but just to be safe, here we go. My comment was a joke made at the expense of those crazy/dumb people who think everything is either a lie or a conspiracy. Ofc it doesn't make sense to anyone with a brain. Peace
@@Zetpherious it basically means paying the ransom would be cheaper than dealing with privacy litigations from EU. And I say EU because we know damn well how toothless the US government is.
Do I get to skimp out on my payments?. This happened when April. Before?. So I'm owed 4 months worth. Fuck 10 years ago they ate through a 10k credit card. Sure the bank annulled the finatial trouble. But AT&T still to this day has never paid me back.
@StrikeWarlock The RU can sit down and keep quiet on this one honestly. Security is a constant race, not a one and done. The EU taking issue ove them not winning one stent really doesn't help anything.
And they gave their customers a whole $5. Not per line, but total. And then raised the rate on all plans by $1 so people would be less likely to notice. For example we have 5 lines, so we got the $5 credit one month, then the bill went up by $5 the next month. Classy AT&T
@StrikeWarlock is it? What if it didn't/ doesn't work and they didn't delete the data? Now they are a known ransom payer and will become a bigger target also. It's never a good idea because it opens you up to a lot of downsides.
Another benefit of losing the efficiency cores is increasing the ring bus (cache) ratios. Less cores makes it easier to run the cache at higher frequencies.
If that line-up is true this might also force AMD into making the R7 an R5 and relegating the 6core into an R3. I never liked the R7...i think it was priced in a way that made you either go for a 6core or a 12 core instead.
@@adriancojo6671 The R7 was/is the sweet spot. Only budget users went 6 core and the more expensive 12 cores generally performed no better or even worse than the 8 cores in gaming.
@@ZboeC5 an 8 core CPU is the sweet spot in general for mixed workloads whether if u're gaming on it, 3d modeling, editing and so on . But from a price standpoint it never made much sense. It was priced like 50%(100dollars) more than the 7600x for only 2 extra cores for as long as i could remember. For an aditional 100dollars you could get 4 more cores with a 7900x. Even the intel I5 made more sense than the 7700x at that time and it was priced lower than the AMD.
@@vinylSummer You can often find the A770 16GB for under $300 new. I love mine. Full 60fps on Cyberpunk 2077 fully maxed @1080p, with hardware AV1 acceleration is sick. Damn thing renders in handbrake at 2000fps. Its also very efficient at only 200 [W], so the beefy Sparkle cooler stays cool and quiet. Granted, the drivers on linux are significantly better than Windows. Intel GPUs arent just coming, theyre already here. The price to performance is very good. It will take a lot to encourage people to consider anything but nvidia though.
@@kazuviking just depends on the resolution. under 1080p AV1 is superior. At 1080p it's about the same in quality with AV1 giving a smaller file size. Above 1080p h265 is still better - but at least in streaming the most used resolution is 720p, so for most people AV1 would be the superior choice.
The actual reason for that hotkey to disable E-cores is due to the DRM Denuvo, which until the release of the 12th Gen could have issues because the P-cores and E-cores have slightly different CPUID which because the CPUID is used as part of the decryption key can cause either activation failures or crash the game due to decryption failures. By forcing P-cores only it would ensure the game only sees one set of CPUID and can properly activate and decrypt. Many games got patched to either remove the DRM, update it to a version that is aware of hybrid CPUs, or get a compatibility shim from the Windows 11 operating system.
Seems wild to believe the hackers would actually delete the data. I guess they can't sell the data without the chance of it being discovered and hurting future chances of getting paid for hacks though. I have 0 faith the data is actually wiped.
Once upon a time a single core 8bit processor and it's clones ruled the home computer market. I recall recall wishing I could afford a 2 socket 486 board, but as a poor college student that was right out.
Santander is... a pretty for profit company, and hire some very... sketchy employees when things don't go their way. You're just a number to them. Love seeing their stickers on a racecar.
I spent 2 or 3 times as much on a Brother laser printer but now spend $45 to print 6000 black and white pages. Pretty happy with that over the HP inkjet that went in trash.
Its better beyond 8 cores as they will be on same ring bus instead of AMD dual CCDs. Even Zen 6 is going to max out at 8 cores per CCX within a CCD which is not good as cross latency penalty. More than 8 P cores on a single die was what I badly wanted. Though if based on Raptor Lake and 10nm process, is it going to be stable and not degrade easily? If these are problems a hard pass. But I really want one and this will be the only option since Comet Lake and on a modern architecture.
I really like what you did there on the right side of the table Old sticks of ram, What else are you going to do with them?! you used it for something great!
The moving blue line that's sync to the timeline of each segment is awesome, and also, visible of the hardware reviews and performance charts. SUPER handy.
Purchased a Brother a multi function laser printer 12 years ago and never looked back. Been using 3rd party cartridges ever since the starter toner gave out. 😀
Talked to an system builder that made an custom PC to show off some Asus parts with an amazing cooling set-up. They actually went with the I9 not for benchmark performance. But for showing off how good the cooler was.
5090 base retail price - $3200 you also get 3 free months of Nvidia 'overclock service' After which you must pay $19.99 a month or the video card will throttle to 70% base frequency.
Love the humor, part of the reason I clicked on the video today was because I couldn't wait to hear what you guys would say about the controller. Please keep them coming!
Regarding the HP statement machine translation, I went and found the original article and had a read through it. The machine translation by the HP statement is reasonably accurate (though a better translation would be "appreciated" instead of "embraced"). And yeah, it's corpospeak so your summary of the statement is true. Also, Jimmy is good. Continue!
Dunno how much the signaling protocols changed from GSM onwards, but it was possible to check on people by ringing them and then read GSM code replies (list of BTS) from the cell's memory (sounds super hacker, but in reality it was a part of 3rd party "outlook" styled phone manager)
@@vinylSummerIntel has an all ecore Xeon. These are great for servers and hyper scalers for aws and azure and VMware as the cores are smaller so you can get 128 on a die! But not for gaming. They belong to the data center where latency and throughput wide not hard shallow ipc for games
So Intel will be now using TSMC to make their arc, battlemage and celestial GPUs aswell as their core tiles for Arrow lake. What does that say about their own foundry services? It sure doesn't inspire confidence
@@ThunderingRoar If Celestial launches late 2026, it needs to be production ready late 2025 or early 2026. So anywhere between 1 and 1.5 years from now. Until Intel isn't very sure that they can compete with TSMC they won't go away from there. Until Intel is sure that they have a stable foothold in the GPU market they will not relocate production capacity from their CPUs to their GPUs, or build fabs for their GPUs. Either way, 2 years is basically tomorrow in terms of production and fab planning. Even if they start to build a fab to get the capacity for their GPU production today, that fab won't be ready for another 4 years.
A video that shows the data being deleted proves nothing. They could easily have multiple copies of it backed up. Trusting a hacker group to keep their word is foolish.
17:18 - 'Schórnsteinfeger - chimney-sweeper :) 19:36 - My neighbor still uses one of these, after purchasing it back when 8th gen Intel with Radeon Vega M GL was a thing. Still works like a charm. :) 23:58 - But.
as someone who speaks German, I was going to reply about your second run at the machine translation for the HP blurb with "Yeah, that scans" but you're talking about printers, so I can't.
That's why we replaced all HP laserjets with Brother machines. The printers were written off anyway. So new Brother machines. Desktops will always be sold, because you can custom-build them, what you not always can do with laptops.
Intel should first fix their faulty 13th and 14th generation chips before popping out something new. What is this, real life RoboCop? Vice-CEO of OCP: "Who cares if it worked or not?!"
Been dealing with an Asus RMA myself. It has been two months since i sent in my GPU and my case still isnt closed. Their process has been a nightmare for me, especially after consistently getting ignored by their service teams
I would buy a P-core only chip tomorrow. I always thought E cores were a way of packing out compute power on every square mm of the chip without runaway thermals (queue the laughter). So, I am all for adding a few more P cores at the expense of all the E cores.
Someone's probably already said this but in case they haven't: Santander (san-tand-air) is a well-known (and pretty massive) Spanish bank who operates in many countries including Spain (naturally), the UK, Germany, France, most other European countries, Brazil, many other countries in the Americas including the northeastern US (and possibly more regions), China, Hong Kong, and Singapore. A pretty large company to have hit. And an awful lot of very personal data, potentially.
Just a comment on margin on silicon area. The per waifer estimate for 4nm waifers is about $20k. In 2022 6nm was reported to be $10k per waifer. This gives somewhere between 85 and 130 good dies per waifer, so the die cost is somewhere between $70 and 200 per die, given differing costs. I would guess it is closer to the lower number. With memory they might not be making a loss, but they will be skinning it close.
The translation you show for the german news site about HP+ is accurate. The german part of their statement you show doesn't even contain combined words like Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitänsmützenschirm (which Google Translate doesn't even attempt to translate). Greetings from germany.
I bought a black only laser printer, it uses powder for the ink so it never tries out. Doesn’t stop working because some color ran out either. It’s such a better deal than these normal printers.
@HP Printers, they also broke the drivers for old printers. The only drivers online for some old printers is through windows update but they're broken drivers. I had to hook my printer to a raspberry pi then I could print with it again.
The fact that we humans managed to manipulate and engineer matter to place electrons at our will to represent 60 TB of cat videos in a device that could fit in your hand is mind boggling.
Outside of the corporate office, I have not printed anything in years at my house. I did have to print an amazon return label and just got it done at staples for a few cents. Maybe HP hasn't noticed, but the need for printing has been slowly going down over the last decade.
Several years ago now I bought an HP Envy 5660 printer. It required that HP+ sub and the rules included a limit on the allowed number of pages you could print per month. Going over that limit incurred a cost per page. I used it until it was out of ink and cancelled the sub early which then gave me a fine for early cancellation. "Embraced" is definitely not the term I'd use for the program. In fact, "program" isn't the term I'd use for the scam...
I love HP's DRM policies! They've done a fantastic job of preventing me from EVER buying any HP products, saving me from their other downsides. Thanks, HP!!
Plz do a video of ps5 accessories that actually help cool the gpu/apu/console! I like your guys scientific and in depth explanations that other people can’t replicate. Ive been having some issues and would love to see a vid on this!
Fun fact: We didn't cover CrowdStrike because the news came out... while we were trying to travel (this was filmed before that). We got delayed in an airport for 9 hours, had all connecting options evaporate, gave up, and went home. Fortunately, we were still at our home airport when it happened, so didn't get stranded. I'll have something to say about that in the next episode!
Time to start an investigation to see if any Big Tech companies have recently made a big investment into Crowdstrike. Tech Company " Shit!,GN Steve is coming our way Press the RED BUTTON"
Hi cool guys hope you are having a good day!
:(
In a way I would say thats lucky instead of getting stuck in a secondary airport on route.
The irony...
I haven't had ATT service in over 10 years and my data was still breached. Why the fuck does ATT still have my data? They should be required to purge this data
How would they sell it if they deleted it? Use your head man.
They would if you had some actually decent legislation like EU GDPR. You're only getting the trickle down effects other than in California maybe.
@@whohan779 Imagine simping for Commiefornia
@@teapouter6109 I actually wanted to write the mock-name, but I thought "Why bother, the EU is allegedly communist as is to 'Muricans.".
That info is dang old, it way too oudated it to still be useful. A lot of people change so muxh in 10 ysears..@@operator8014
if my location metadata got hacked it would prob just make the hacker feel sad for me. "this number hardly ever leaves its house, thats so sad"
Combine that with an MSI warranty and a Zotac product registration and they'd have enough to at least do door-to-door RMA claims for you!
That would actually be an interesting set-up for a plot. A shut-in and a hacker become friends after a security breach because the hacker falls for the shut-in.
@@EbonySaints Title it as: "My Hacking Victim with Crappy OpSec and Depression Can't Be This Cute!"
@@journeytoformWhy does that sound like a porno title?
Yes -- because people who hack into other's computers are well known for their sympathy and going outside themselves. xD
@24:00
Shout-out to Jimmy. His "cheeky" humor is appreciated
Genius
The joke didn't stink.
5:15 I really hope GN never stops using the "Thanks Steve" drop.
I really hope that Intel stops giving them good reasons to use it.
I agree, I hope they never stop not stopping!
It's a classic
The Deadpool Controller needs a Wolverine face docking station
Finally a reason for Wolverine's hair spikes, to cradle the controller
Shame you can't buy it officially
😲😨🤣
that's a different kind of content...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
The name and position badge for the host appears to have received an upgrade. I like it!
That was Andrew's recent template overhaul! Glad you like it. I'll show him the comment.
@@GamersNexus Thanks, Steve (and Andrew)!
[German speaker here] your translation is accurate, the article basically states they've "had enough". The "e" designation models will disappear from the market and the subscription is soon no longer purchasable. Anybody else is unaffected. Again, just like you stated. Also yes, we can indeed get wild with compound words, if we choose to do so...and "-lied" would be pronounced "leed"
Kind of like Planetenverteidigungskanonenkommandant 😅
There is actually a German compound word in the article that could reasonably be translated as "Bullshit": Cloud-Verbindungsanforderungen, which is a bullshit requirement to have for a printer
German Language is a hard / difficult Language for a non native Speaker.
Deine Übersetzung passt soweit. Hatte auch kurz überlegt eine Übersetzung ins Englische zu versuchen aber dann habe ich deinen Kommentar gesehen und war sehr zufrieden.
@@auturgicflosculator2183While Dutch also combines words, German is on another level 😅
@@RedFighterNL I have/had both Dutch and German grandparents, so it's a familiar meme ☺
The fact that the third party that did the communication between the hackers and AT&T was called reddington is too funny
Blacklist vibes 😂
Raymond is known to broker deals between high level criminals, alongside some of his other "business ventures".
I understood that reference.....
Rest in pieces Elizabeth Keen.
🤣🤣🤣
Japanese
Best thing I've done was to buy a laser printer 5 years ago. It still uses the original toners, but I got a spare set of toners back in the day for about $120 - down to the current $470 market price if I had to buy them today, can't complain - and I happily won't deal with ink in a decade.
Yes, i have a Brother laser printer, using another brand of tonners, much cheaper.
Same. Inkjet printers, by HP and other brands, always felt cheap and were unreliable; but the HP Color LaserJet I got is the best printer I've ever had. It's not a model that requires any subscription, and it doesn't require an Internet connection, it just works. It's cheaper per-page to operate than an inkjet printer too.
STEVE - watch your deliveries, if you start getting large pallets of CAT food and toys then your will know who the true SNOWFLAKE hacker is ! LOL!
Cyber Cattack
Intel 2023: E cores are the biggest innovation you can possibly want!
Intel 2024: Never mind that nonsense!
Tbf we don't yet have official specs
E cores are here to stay as they drop hyper threading on newer gen products the smaller cores will become necessary. Also it wasn't really their innovation ARM based mobile SoCs have used E cores long before Intel.
E-cores only really make sense in laptops to me, where battery life actually may matter.
@@zgillet They are mainly meant to be area efficient cores, the hybrid design allows Intel to push the P cores harder by physically making them bigger (11th gen had less cores than 10th gen because of this) without sacraficing multi core performance.
The 8+16 design could beat AMDs 16 core Zen4 in multi core workloads, the 12+0 die won't have any chance at that.
Their economy cores are for mobile and consumer products. That shit won't be use on enterprise server because it's stupid.
"Intel P-Core Only CPUs" .. they've come full circle. From CPUs, to "WE NEED TO BEAT AMD AT CINEBENCH"-CPUs, back to regular CPUs.
They flew too close to the sun
Using sub par glue.
😂 you guys are a bunch of idiots
@@StrikeWarlock sniffing sub par glue more like
The only reason why i9s were created in the first place is to charge more for the hyperthreading and cache removed from the i7 9700K.
Now i9s should stay as just general purpose chips instead of being "just gaming" with overvoltage and clockspeed to death.
Which is what they should have done all along and instead fix their process technology which was one of their main (and still is) limitation. The 'hybrid' core design was/is doomed to fail as NO hardware can 'predict' where or what types of bottlenecks may exist in software. That type of design /ONLY/ works if you control 100% of the hardware and software (OS & app) stack which they don't. They would have been better off to keep a homogeneous E core cpu and a homogeneous P-core version based on power envelopes.
I appreciate my old LaserJet's dumb toner cartridges that you can simply drill a hole into the side, refill yourself using bulk toner, put a plug on and keep going until the imaging drum or heater wire crap out. Only contacts on the cartridge are power for the heater.
I purchased a Brother Colour Laser (HL-3150CDW) a while back (2018?). It is not that good a photo's but for documents with coloured text/charts it is perfect.
There are 4 toner cartridges and it still runs if one runs out. Brothers own toner cartridges are expensive but I found the cheap ones work perfectly. At ~£10 for around 6000 prints is good value, also those same cartridges are still being used by their latest printers.
I found that even though I do photography I hardly ever did prints it was too expensive on inkjet and that was when you got 5x the ink of today. Going online and paying a few £, I can get professionaly done prints of any size from tiny passport mugshots to poster sizes. I needed passport style photos for my new driving license (moved house) and found that ASDA charged just £2.50 including P&P for 8 pics last November. The photo booth in the town wanted £9.
I work in IT so any friends and family that ask about printers my first reply would be "Do not buy an HP"
Same, and ultimately I recommend a brother printer. Especially for Linux support.
I like to recommend Brother in the way Verge does:
Best printer 2023: just buy this Brother laser printer everyone has, it’s fine / The Brother whatever-it-is will print return labels for online shopping, never run out of toner, and generally be a printer instead of the physical instantiation of a business model.
@@tablettablete186 lol my last printer was a brother, it was one of the few on the shelf that was JUST a printer instead of a super mega compound 5 machine. aka it cost less than half of the competitors on the shelf
A Brother or Epson Inktank.
@@vissermatt1058 LOL
I am having a great time with their printers, it is simple and it works! No need for cloud DRM, ink DRM, and God knows what.
BTW AT&T gave customers a $5 bill credit for the data leak. Not per line, per account. Then the next month raised the rate on all plans by $1 so people would be less likely to notice. So on our 5 line account we got a $5 credit one month, then the bill increased $5 the next. Classy AT&T.
Thanks Steve 😊. HP might introduce firmware level DRM on printers for more AI.
I clicked the heart but only because there is no hate option. You are probably right about AI printers and DRM!
@@GamersNexus that's the doomdsay for enterprise customers who can't print a page due to bricked AI software. I'm hoping someone creates a modular and open source printer even though there are less functions
@@vasudevmenon2496Not anytime soon. I'd love to see it myself, but consider how the government feels about counterfeits. Supposedly, that's where the tiny ID dots came from.
When that happens my company will sell all printers and go back to hiring scribes.
@@grantmurdock7385 yeah
how did i not know GN's CEO was a cat?? this only raises my trust and respect for GN's reporting!
I bet they want to return to the glory days of the Egyptian-level status
22:57 - The script writer had a lot of fun here, I see. Thanks, Steve! Edit: Thanks, Jimmy!
That was Jimmy's story!
I have to admit, it did crack me up too!
@@GamersNexuscan we get an RMA follow-up? With all seriousness though, thanks team!
Thanks Jimmy. You definitely deserve to win a xButt controller
im 10000% sure the hackers deleted that data and didnt just make a copy that they sold elswhere
I don't think their business model would work if it became known that paying their ransom would be pointless. Trust and honoring agreements still seem to play an important role when you operate a hacking group, oddly enough.
@@Rotwold here is the funny thing: there is no way to prove that they deleted the data
It's all just "yea we deleted it pinky promise"
It takes 0 effort to just turn around and sell it to someone else while you delete a copy of the data.
It's a hacking group after all, why do they care about reputation after they just got paid by some sucker, it's like trusting a scammer or someone doing ransomware
@@Rotwold a lot of the time the data is still sold on. that at&t data is worth a lot more than they paid for them to delete. in the hands of scammers and shit the entire breach would easily pull over a mil if sold off properly. they're retarded if they dont fuck at&t and sell it anyway
Last time I was this early Intel still used to make stable products
You were early enough for the bots!
@@GamersNexus Why don't you ban them?
@@GamersNexus Finally bet 'em less goooo
Edit: beat
@@ManysdugjohnHe does. But new heads keep popping up when he tries to slice them. Just like the hydra.
@@Manysdugjohn lmao good one
As a certified German: "bullshit" is the correct translation for that paragraph.
Also: "panzerlied" is also German and literally translates to "tank song".
I really want to learn German.
How does that go again? On the heath, there blooms a little flower fine and it's called Erika.
Eagerly a hundred thousand little bees, swarm around Erika.
For her heart is full of sweetness, a tender scent escapes her blossom-gown.
On the heath, there blooms a little flower and it's called Erika. 💖
3:30 Uf, I was sweating for a bit, thinking that our lovely Snowflake might have gone to the dark side. I'm glad you clarified it.
I use my printer so infrequently I've had to waste pages to get the ink flowing. So I gave up on color and bought a laser printer (Brother HL-L2300D) for $87.19 in 2019. No regret in not having color. It boots a lot faster than an inkjet.
Likewise I think it was 2018 I picked a new Brother HL-3150CDW (colour) for just £129. That model had been replaced with a newer one and was discounted. The newer model is almost identicle, its only differences being a built in NF thing for connecting phones/tablets and a slightly lighter colour to the plastic.
As I typical only print something every month or two, not wasting 20% of you ink cleaning the heads every time is a real bonus. Also the printer is connect direct to LAN and starts up in a few seconds, the delay is just heating the rollers up. Once warmed up it dose double sided printing with around 2s per side.
Somewhere someone is going "it all makes sense now, this is how they afford all that expensive testing equipment".
No, it damn well doesn’t.
@@nese1lol I don't now if your comment is made in jest or not but just to be safe, here we go. My comment was a joke made at the expense of those crazy/dumb people who think everything is either a lie or a conspiracy. Ofc it doesn't make sense to anyone with a brain.
Peace
Wait wait wait, HP had a subscription... for INK!?
How did Steve get attached to the end of your name?
@@christophermullins7163 they are a channel member, you give said channel money and then get special perks, emojis, icons like that, etc
It's 2024 and you're just NOW learning this?! Wow... 🤦
@@christophermullins7163
You have no idea, wait until you hear about Ubisoft saying we don’t own the games we pay for and it’s only a “license” to play
AT&T paying a ransom is as shocking as them getting breached, lol
@@Zetpherious it basically means paying the ransom would be cheaper than dealing with privacy litigations from EU.
And I say EU because we know damn well how toothless the US government is.
Do I get to skimp out on my payments?. This happened when April. Before?. So I'm owed 4 months worth. Fuck 10 years ago they ate through a 10k credit card. Sure the bank annulled the finatial trouble. But AT&T still to this day has never paid me back.
@StrikeWarlock The RU can sit down and keep quiet on this one honestly.
Security is a constant race, not a one and done. The EU taking issue ove them not winning one stent really doesn't help anything.
And they gave their customers a whole $5. Not per line, but total. And then raised the rate on all plans by $1 so people would be less likely to notice. For example we have 5 lines, so we got the $5 credit one month, then the bill went up by $5 the next month. Classy AT&T
@StrikeWarlock is it? What if it didn't/ doesn't work and they didn't delete the data? Now they are a known ransom payer and will become a bigger target also. It's never a good idea because it opens you up to a lot of downsides.
my 1700 series Intel CPU met it's end alright.... RIP 13900k we had so little time together I barely even knew you
Another benefit of losing the efficiency cores is increasing the ring bus (cache) ratios. Less cores makes it easier to run the cache at higher frequencies.
If that line-up is true this might also force AMD into making the R7 an R5 and relegating the 6core into an R3. I never liked the R7...i think it was priced in a way that made you either go for a 6core or a 12 core instead.
@@adriancojo6671 The R7 was/is the sweet spot. Only budget users went 6 core and the more expensive 12 cores generally performed no better or even worse than the 8 cores in gaming.
@@ZboeC5 Well only some of the recently released games support more than 8 core processors.
@@ZboeC5 an 8 core CPU is the sweet spot in general for mixed workloads whether if u're gaming on it, 3d modeling, editing and so on . But from a price standpoint it never made much sense. It was priced like 50%(100dollars) more than the 7600x for only 2 extra cores for as long as i could remember. For an aditional 100dollars you could get 4 more cores with a 7900x. Even the intel I5 made more sense than the 7700x at that time and it was priced lower than the AMD.
I really hope Battlemage will be competitive, we need another gpu manufacturer option.
Intel is AN option already, not a perfect one, but the situation is much better compared to what it was on release
@@vinylSummer You can often find the A770 16GB for under $300 new. I love mine. Full 60fps on Cyberpunk 2077 fully maxed @1080p, with hardware AV1 acceleration is sick. Damn thing renders in handbrake at 2000fps. Its also very efficient at only 200 [W], so the beefy Sparkle cooler stays cool and quiet. Granted, the drivers on linux are significantly better than Windows.
Intel GPUs arent just coming, theyre already here. The price to performance is very good. It will take a lot to encourage people to consider anything but nvidia though.
@@connivingkhajiit AV1 is useless for 99.9% of users while H265 is the superior choice.
At least battle mage will be much, much more expensive than alchemy!
@@kazuviking just depends on the resolution. under 1080p AV1 is superior. At 1080p it's about the same in quality with AV1 giving a smaller file size. Above 1080p h265 is still better - but at least in streaming the most used resolution is 720p, so for most people AV1 would be the superior choice.
That controller has me DualShook
I really thought that was spooderman's ass for a second
magnetic dumpy
The actual reason for that hotkey to disable E-cores is due to the DRM Denuvo, which until the release of the 12th Gen could have issues because the P-cores and E-cores have slightly different CPUID which because the CPUID is used as part of the decryption key can cause either activation failures or crash the game due to decryption failures.
By forcing P-cores only it would ensure the game only sees one set of CPUID and can properly activate and decrypt. Many games got patched to either remove the DRM, update it to a version that is aware of hybrid CPUs, or get a compatibility shim from the Windows 11 operating system.
Seems wild to believe the hackers would actually delete the data. I guess they can't sell the data without the chance of it being discovered and hurting future chances of getting paid for hacks though.
I have 0 faith the data is actually wiped.
Once upon a time a single core 8bit processor and it's clones ruled the home computer market. I recall recall wishing I could afford a 2 socket 486 board, but as a poor college student that was right out.
What is funny for AT&T's story, is all that info is part of the NSA database anyway.
Love how these companys release crap QLC SSDs with a price higher than TLC and hoping no one notices
Thanks Steve! Back to you Steve
Remember, the hot sommer 2007...and the 80 class gpus under $500
good old days
8800gt and Core2Quad baby.
Say hello to inflations
Santander is... a pretty for profit company, and hire some very... sketchy employees when things don't go their way. You're just a number to them. Love seeing their stickers on a racecar.
I spent 2 or 3 times as much on a Brother laser printer but now spend $45 to print 6000 black and white pages. Pretty happy with that over the HP inkjet that went in trash.
I don't know why but the "Thanks Intel"; "Thanks Steve" really made me laugh.
I am still amazed how HP is still in business
When you can't compete in the consumer space, you get government contracts.
🤣🤣🤣 that crack about the crack cracked me right up
Intel inventing the concept of an AMD CPU and calling it "P-core only" wasn't on my 2024 hardware news bingo card
The Apple methodology
Its better beyond 8 cores as they will be on same ring bus instead of AMD dual CCDs. Even Zen 6 is going to max out at 8 cores per CCX within a CCD which is not good as cross latency penalty. More than 8 P cores on a single die was what I badly wanted.
Though if based on Raptor Lake and 10nm process, is it going to be stable and not degrade easily? If these are problems a hard pass. But I really want one and this will be the only option since Comet Lake and on a modern architecture.
@@Wolverine607 Wait did they confirm they will keep 8 cores per CCX for Zen 6? I faintly remember hearing otherwise. But just rumors of course.
@@artemisDev RedTech gaming had mentioned it in some recent video last couple of weeks. But really just a rumor at this point.
@@Wolverine607 RedGamingTech has a worse then 50/50 track record. Dude basically just speculates and calls it a rumor.
RTX 40 series thermal paste situation, we need you GN, with your thorough research.
I really like what you did there on the right side of the table
Old sticks of ram, What else are you going to do with them?!
you used it for something great!
7:20 "you are in the days of 2004 processing capabilities" 😂
The onscreen menu is a good addition to track the chapters. Thank you.
They've been doing that for years
@@Zatchillac Haha, thats funny, I usually skip to the chapter and then continue with my work, so I guess I never noticed!
The moving blue line that's sync to the timeline of each segment is awesome, and also, visible of the hardware reviews and performance charts.
SUPER handy.
Purchased a Brother a multi function laser printer 12 years ago and never looked back. Been using 3rd party cartridges ever since the starter toner gave out. 😀
That was great Jimmy. Cracked me up there.
Talked to an system builder that made an custom PC to show off some Asus parts with an amazing cooling set-up.
They actually went with the I9 not for benchmark performance. But for showing off how good the cooler was.
"What's bullshit in german?" ... "bullshit ist Bullshit" 😂
5090 base retail price - $3200 you also get 3 free months of Nvidia 'overclock service' After which you must pay $19.99 a month or the video card will throttle to 70% base frequency.
Soon we will have to pray to tech Jesus in the PCMR cathedral of normal hardware prices the way this is going
Too cheap!
Reddington? Is he also giving a blacklist of all the criminals to the FBI?
Love the humor, part of the reason I clicked on the video today was because I couldn't wait to hear what you guys would say about the controller. Please keep them coming!
4:05 Santander is a major banking group based out of Spain and is one of the biggest banks in the UK
Regarding the HP statement machine translation, I went and found the original article and had a read through it. The machine translation by the HP statement is reasonably accurate (though a better translation would be "appreciated" instead of "embraced"). And yeah, it's corpospeak so your summary of the statement is true.
Also, Jimmy is good. Continue!
The "Thanks, Steve" got me.
🤣🤣
Dunno how much the signaling protocols changed from GSM onwards, but it was possible to check on people by ringing them and then read GSM code replies (list of BTS) from the cell's memory (sounds super hacker, but in reality it was a part of 3rd party "outlook" styled phone manager)
Thanks Steve
That moment, when steve had to state( 3:22 ) it brought me back, memories of SAO abridge and that mafia cat
😂😂😂😂😂
Keep it coming Jimmy!
Thanks Jimmy.
JIMMY - never stop writing for Steve, man. Freaking gold. 🤣
Finally a proper high-end Core SKU without those "benchmarking" E-cores.
E-cores are very helpful at multiprocessing. 12P 0E design will be significantly weaker than 8P 16E design in multiprocessing tasks
@@vinylSummerIntel has an all ecore Xeon. These are great for servers and hyper scalers for aws and azure and VMware as the cores are smaller so you can get 128 on a die!
But not for gaming. They belong to the data center where latency and throughput wide not hard shallow ipc for games
@@timothygibney159 gaming is not the only workload outside of data centers
@@timothygibney159 So you agree, the memecores were marketing wank for the consumer market and basically a scam.
The easiest way to save Intel Arc is to allow users to use SRIOV to split a GPU between several VM's, as simply as that. At least for one generation.
So Intel will be now using TSMC to make their arc, battlemage and celestial GPUs aswell as their core tiles for Arrow lake. What does that say about their own foundry services? It sure doesn't inspire confidence
They're probably still suffering the condequences of being run by an accountant ( the previous CEO ) and this is probably a temporary measure.
@scottie46a77 Celestial should launch around 2026, that sure doesn't sound temporary
@@ThunderingRoar If Celestial launches late 2026, it needs to be production ready late 2025 or early 2026. So anywhere between 1 and 1.5 years from now. Until Intel isn't very sure that they can compete with TSMC they won't go away from there. Until Intel is sure that they have a stable foothold in the GPU market they will not relocate production capacity from their CPUs to their GPUs, or build fabs for their GPUs.
Either way, 2 years is basically tomorrow in terms of production and fab planning. Even if they start to build a fab to get the capacity for their GPU production today, that fab won't be ready for another 4 years.
I assume those 2P core CPUs are targeting the home server market. No idea tho. I don't do that stuff.
A video that shows the data being deleted proves nothing. They could easily have multiple copies of it backed up. Trusting a hacker group to keep their word is foolish.
17:18 - 'Schórnsteinfeger - chimney-sweeper :)
19:36 - My neighbor still uses one of these, after purchasing it back when 8th gen Intel with Radeon Vega M GL was a thing. Still works like a charm. :)
23:58 - But.
Ah new Intel Cpus! Maybe these Cpus will be stable, well or mabye not. Who knows? There is still no explanation.
as someone who speaks German, I was going to reply about your second run at the machine translation for the HP blurb with "Yeah, that scans" but you're talking about printers, so I can't.
The vibrate feature on the Deadpool controller 😂.
its a special vibration, called twerk
That is 100% something Deadpool would do.
That's why we replaced all HP laserjets with Brother machines. The printers were written off anyway. So new Brother machines. Desktops will always be sold, because you can custom-build them, what you not always can do with laptops.
Intel should first fix their faulty 13th and 14th generation chips before popping out something new. What is this, real life RoboCop? Vice-CEO of OCP: "Who cares if it worked or not?!"
I will never get tired of Thanks Steve!
The P-core is stored in the balls.
Been dealing with an Asus RMA myself. It has been two months since i sent in my GPU and my case still isnt closed. Their process has been a nightmare for me, especially after consistently getting ignored by their service teams
I would buy a P-core only chip tomorrow. I always thought E cores were a way of packing out compute power on every square mm of the chip without runaway thermals (queue the laughter). So, I am all for adding a few more P cores at the expense of all the E cores.
Someone's probably already said this but in case they haven't: Santander (san-tand-air) is a well-known (and pretty massive) Spanish bank who operates in many countries including Spain (naturally), the UK, Germany, France, most other European countries, Brazil, many other countries in the Americas including the northeastern US (and possibly more regions), China, Hong Kong, and Singapore. A pretty large company to have hit. And an awful lot of very personal data, potentially.
Gonna be an awesome 2nd hand market in PC components over the coming months. Let's hope that drives new prices down (after the initial rush to buy)
Between Paul’s Tech News and Gamers Nexus, I get all my double entendre news needs.
17:41 I'm a German and I can confirm that your translation here is 100% correct.
Just a comment on margin on silicon area. The per waifer estimate for 4nm waifers is about $20k. In 2022 6nm was reported to be $10k per waifer. This gives somewhere between 85 and 130 good dies per waifer, so the die cost is somewhere between $70 and 200 per die, given differing costs. I would guess it is closer to the lower number. With memory they might not be making a loss, but they will be skinning it close.
The translation you show for the german news site about HP+ is accurate. The german part of their statement you show doesn't even contain combined words like Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitänsmützenschirm (which Google Translate doesn't even attempt to translate). Greetings from germany.
I bought a black only laser printer, it uses powder for the ink so it never tries out. Doesn’t stop working because some color ran out either. It’s such a better deal than these normal printers.
Zefrank smiles down from Heaven with that last segment.
Dammit, Jerry...
@HP Printers, they also broke the drivers for old printers. The only drivers online for some old printers is through windows update but they're broken drivers. I had to hook my printer to a raspberry pi then I could print with it again.
The fact that we humans managed to manipulate and engineer matter to place electrons at our will to represent 60 TB of cat videos in a device that could fit in your hand is mind boggling.
A repair center in the US is actually exciting
That last part was the best part. Finally some news to be happy about.
20:25 Ob’s stürmt oder schneit, ob die Sonne uns lacht, der Tag glühend heiß oder eiskalt die Nacht...
Outside of the corporate office, I have not printed anything in years at my house. I did have to print an amazon return label and just got it done at staples for a few cents. Maybe HP hasn't noticed, but the need for printing has been slowly going down over the last decade.
thats why they have this assinine subscription scam.
Never change Jimmy. And please keep it going with the dry humour Steve. 😂
Thanks Steve!
Always a pleasure to hear the news.
Peaceful Skies.
Several years ago now I bought an HP Envy 5660 printer. It required that HP+ sub and the rules included a limit on the allowed number of pages you could print per month. Going over that limit incurred a cost per page. I used it until it was out of ink and cancelled the sub early which then gave me a fine for early cancellation. "Embraced" is definitely not the term I'd use for the program. In fact, "program" isn't the term I'd use for the scam...
Wow that sounds absolutely demonic
I'll never understand how anyone can "trust" a hacker to have "really really super duper honest toootally deleted that stolen data..."
but.. pinky swear! 😂
Adding Context for Steve: Santander is pronounced as San-Tan-Dare
They are around the 20th largest global bank - with about $57Bn revenue last year
I love HP's DRM policies! They've done a fantastic job of preventing me from EVER buying any HP products, saving me from their other downsides. Thanks, HP!!
Plz do a video of ps5 accessories that actually help cool the gpu/apu/console! I like your guys scientific and in depth explanations that other people can’t replicate. Ive been having some issues and would love to see a vid on this!