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Progenitor of the Weird Knife Wednesday feature column. Is “column” the right word? Anyway, apparently I also coined the Very Specific Object nomenclature now sporadically used in the 3D printing community. Yeah, that was me. This must be how Cory Doctorow feels all the time these days.

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Cake day: July 20th, 2023

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  • Interesting to see where this leads, but I’m not terribly excited about this yet. The article mentions, but doesn’t necessarily explain, how these are supposed to work with pancake lens assemblies — only that they propose that they are. One of the major problems with those is light loss, which is the stated reason Valve went with LCD rather than OLED for the Steam Frame. LCD brightness can be fairly trivially increased simply by… well, making the backlight brighter. LEDs, on the other hand, largely provide their luminance as a function of the surface area of the die. If you make them smaller it also makes 'em dimmer, and there isn’t any mention of whether or not TCL has somehow managed to overcome this. That may explain the rather underwhelming bump in panel resolution.

    Option B is just to drive them harder, which is probably not a great plan for an OLED panel’s already finite lifetime. The blue subpixels die first, then the greens, then the reds…




  • Pro or Enterprise? Or even better, Enterprise IoT LSTC? The latter is going to get security updates until 2032.

    And those enrolled ($61) in the Extended Security Updates program get one more year of security support (not feature updates), and the various Enterprise versions will continue to get updates for up to another seven years, depending on the version.

    Microsoft didn’t stop updating Windows 10 and they won’t for quite some time. They’re simply no longer offering those updates to most users of the consumer versions of Windows.

    Windows Update can also hand you updates to your drivers independent of the support status of your copy of Windows. For instance, if you install a copy of Windows 7 even today it will still pull driver files from Microsoft.



  • I do too, but I’d highly doubt it will. It’s well known that Meta sells every headset at a loss and funds the expenditure via revenue from their gargantuan advertising and spy network, specifically to squeeze out competitors and make it harder to enter the VR market as a newcomer. Zuck Zuck still thinks all the prime real estate in the metaverse is going to be his, because he only read the first half of Snow Crash.

    Gabe is a rich man and I assume he and his company could take this approach as well if they wanted to, at least temporarily. But based on their pricing for their past hardware (particularly the Steam Deck), I predict they won’t.


  • Insufficient pedantry detected.

    The PC platform is an extension of IBM’s Personal Computer architecture, which was not a description of what it was so much as it was literally the brand name. It’s long since been forgotten that this is now a shorthand, and the full name of the platform arguably ought to be PC Compatible. Unless you bought your machine from IBM, anyway, which these days would be quite the trick.

    Being PC compatible was a big deal back when the original PC was also a big deal. Probably slightly less so now, since it’s the assumed default.

    It should go without saying that the original IBM PC, model 5150, did not run Windows… Because Windows did not yet exist. It didn’t even necessarily run the then-nascent PC-DOS provided by Microsoft, because IBM also supported running CP/M and and UCSD Pascal on it.

    The whole Windows-as-default thing didn’t happen until well after the appeal of the PC specification had escaped containment at IBM and x86 had handily taken over the desktop computing world.

    A personal computer is basically anything you can stick on your desk (or lap) and doesn’t require hooking up to a mainframe to run. But a Personal Computer, capital P and C, implies an x86 compatible platform with architecture designed such that it is technically still capable of running all those decades old 8086 programs and operating systems. (Just, several orders of magnitude faster than their designers ever envisioned, and probably only by sticking your UEFI BIOS in legacy mode first.)



  • No one who isn’t a venture capital weirdo actually gives a shit about “XR” or any kind of augmented reality.

    Maybe I’m not phrasing that correctly for people with chronic brain rot to understand. Here:

    Zero 👏 percent 👏 of 👏 ordinary 👏 users 👏 care 👏 about 👏 XR/AR.

    For anyone doing the math at home, that’s even fewer people who than those who are potential VR customers in the first place, which are already objectively far fewer potential customers compared to, just for sake of argument, console sales or ordinary PC gaming.

    I don’t know what it’s going to take for this to finally sink in for Big Tech. Possibly a shovel applied smartly upside the head. Users want to easily play VR games and watch VR porn, and maybe in extended use case scenarios have virtual work environments with multiple floating pseudomonitors or hang a virtual IMAX movie screen in space or whatever. The list ends right there.

    No one wants to walk around outside with a bulbous display thingy on their face. No one wants to venture out into the world with their peripheral vision reduced to 110° and tripping over everything. No one has ever developed a compelling use case for ordinary consumers to have “content” (reality check: most of which will ultimately be spyware or ads) floated in front of their eyeballs mixed with the real world. The primary function people actually use the Quest/WMR/Frame passthrough for is brief stints for figuring out where they set down their coffee cup, or finding their keyboard, or avoiding stepping on the cat. That’s it. Monochrome passthrough is fine for that. Color would be neat, sure, but monochrome sensors are faster and have better dynamic range and higher sensitivity, which translates to better controller tracking performance, and that’s something everyone will bitch about if it’s bad.

    Hololens was dead on arrival. The Apple Vision was dead on arrival. Android XR and by extension Galaxy XR are dead on arrival. Valve doesn’t need to make a bunch of compromises to compete in the “consumer XR market” because there is no consumer XR market. The Frame is a VR gaming headset designed as a VR gaming headset, for VR gamers. Period.

    The Frame doesn’t have to “disrupt” anything. It has to do everything the Quest 3 does and manage do it roughly as well, while not being sold by Mark Zuckerberg’s creepy ass.







  • As opposed to what, buying a viable phone from those other guys?

    What other guys?

    At minimum a stampede of people moving to iPhones should theoretically cause Google to shit enough of a brick (providing capitalism actually works as advertised, and for the record I am trying like hell to keep a straight face as I type this) to correct their behavior in an attempt to win some of those users back.

    Because at the end of the day most consumers are consumers, not nerds, and if neither platform is going to allow you control over your device and they’re both privacy nightmares you’re not much worse off with an iDevice if you plan on owning a smartphone in the first place.

    What we really need is a viable third option. Hopefully an inherently non-shitty one. The barrier to market entry seems pretty high, though.


  • No, because the hardware is not out to the public yet and nobody’s thoroughly tested it. Or if they have, I haven’t found any published results yet. We’ll see when this thing actually starts hitting the streets.

    My current headset is also a WMR unit, a Reverb G2, and it works well enough for me. If the Frame is at least as good as that, I’m golden. But I find it hard to believe Valve of all people would not be aware of the limitations of inside out tracking and not done the best they absolutely could with it.

    Maybe they didn’t. If that’s the case, they’re going to have a problem on their hands.