Oof Edition <div><br /> </div> <h2>Top Story</h2> <div> <ul> <li>Got up early to get something fixed at worked - looked like a two hour job.<br /> <br /> By the end of the day it had clearly turned into a two day job, so that was fun.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.theregister.com/ai-ml/2026/05/21/google-explains-how-it-will-infuse-ads-into-ai-answers/5244586]Google is bringing something new to its AI-powered search: Ads.[/url]&nbsp; (The Register)<br /> <br /> Ads.&nbsp; Lots of ads.&nbsp; On Google.<br /> <br /> The websites that Google scours for its content get nothing.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/21/six-search-engines-worth-trying-now-that-google-isnt-really-google-anymore/]Six search engines worth trying now that Google has shit not only its own bed but everyone else's bed.[/url]&nbsp; (Tech Crunch)<br /> <br /> I use DuckDuckGo (have for years) and Brave.&nbsp; DuckDuckGo was originally noticeably less complete than Google, but Google has fixed that by diligent strategic incompetence.</li> </ul> <div><br /> </div></div> <h2>Tech News</h2> <div> <ul> <li>[url=https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/github-confirms-breach-of-3-800-repos-via-malicious-vscode-extension/]The TanStack supply-chain breach that I noticed but did not report on here has expanded to 3800 GitHub repositories.[/url]&nbsp; (Bleeping Computer)<br /> <br /> Vectored via a GitHub employee.&nbsp; Sometimes AI isn't the worst thing.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/google-accidentally-exposed-details-of-unfixed-chromium-flaw/]Google accidentally leaked details of an unpatched Chromium flaw.[/url]&nbsp; (Bleeping Computer)<br /> <br /> Unpatched since December.<br /> <br /> December 2022.<br /> <br /> Chromium is the engine underlying Chrome, Edge, Brave, Vivaldi, and other browsers.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/semiconductors/amd-begins-production-ramp-of-256-core-epyc-venice-on-tsmcs-2nm-node]AMD is ramping up production of its new 256-core Zen 6 Epyc server CPU.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> It's claimed to be 70% faster than existing 192-core Zen 5 models, which is plausible since it also jumps from TSMC's 4nm process to 2nm.&nbsp; Server CPUs are limited by power and heat more than raw clock speeds, and 2nm uses a lot less power.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/chinas-new-homegrown-gaming-gpu-flops-in-performance-and-price-flagship-usd485-lx-7g100-cant-keep-pace-with-nvidias-older-rtx-4060]Lisuan Tech's new 7G100 graphics card is...&nbsp; A graphics card.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> It exists.&nbsp; It actually works, which requires a lot of work.&nbsp; And at around $500 it's not the most expensive option.<br /> <br /> The article notes the Nvidia's previous-generation low-end RTX 4060 is 20% to 70% faster, but that's not correct.&nbsp; The 7G100 actually delivers 20% to 70% of the performance of the 4060.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/networking/flipper-one-computing-multitool-bristles-with-network-gpio-and-m-2-connectivity-new-keychain-device-is-also-a-fully-open-arm-linux-computer]The Flipper 1 is not one more than the Flipper 0.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> The Flipper 0 is a pen-testing (security testing) multitool, a single device that can scan for security issues on a range of wired and wireless connection methods.<br /> <br /> The Flipper 1 while keeping the same multi-tool form factor is a general purpose Linux computer that you can clip to your belt.&nbsp; Perfect for technicians who need to be able to plug into whatever device you have locally and figure out why it's not talking...&nbsp; Whether they should be doing that or not.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> </ul> <h2>Musical Interlude</h2></div> <div>[ytlite=UHgi9KUrgVk]</div> <div><br /> </div> <div><br /> </div> <div><br /> </div> <div><br /> </div> <div><span style="font-style: italic;">Disclaimer: Splut.</span></div>