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Wednesday, December 13th, 2023

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Introducing Michigan J. Frog

12/13/2023 4:23 pm | : 13 mins.

I didn't have a good sense of how long building it would actually take, but I figured it couldn't take as long as the movie marathon!

As I told a friend, I grew up building computers. I worked for my dad's business "sep Computers." (sep was dad's initialism for 'Specialized Engineering Products' but he eschewed capital letters and periods leading to many people thinking it was pronounced "sepp" rather than "Ess Ee Pee.") We did GeekSquad style work before GeekSquad was a thing. I built computers, pulled network cables, etc. But that was from roughly 1990-2005. I did build my last rig ("Marvin") but that was still around ten years ago. Things change, though not as much as I feared.

I was excited at the prospect of this new machine. After spending a few weeks evaluating options I settled on a build and got input from a few people. Once I had the build, I worked with a buddy of mine and traded Magic product for the parts. Over the past week-and-a-half the parts came in, and last night the final piece arrived.

So, I got up this morning, and starting around 7:00 am, I began putting it all together. I took it slow, and as soon as I hit something I wasn't completely confident in I pulled up manuals and double checked or found the answer. Overall, I'd say 95% of it was stuff I was familiar with, but there were a few things which were new and I had to learn.

First, this computer has a NVME SSD drive. Looking at the motherboard I couldn't find where it connected. I searched and hunted before eventually giving up. I referenced the manual and found where it was, under a plate which wasn't obviously labeled.

Second, I am utilizing an all-in-one watercooling unit from Corsair. My only previous experience had been heat-sinks and fans. This is largely the same concept, but I was very nervous to make sure I installed it correctly and had fans going the right directions, etc. This unit was also the last piece of hardware to arrive, because the original hardware spec used the upgraded version which had three fans - unfortunately that was too large for the case I had selected. So I had to order a replacement.

Otherwise though, it was all the same core concepts, plugging in wires. Screwing things down, etc.

I did make mistakes though.

One realization I had was how far computer cases have come. I can recall many times cutting myself on the cut metal inside cases, but the case I used was smooth and there was nowhere for me to cut myself. Not to mention the pathing to enable hidden wiring, etc. Just very cool steps forward in a very subtle area of the computer technology.

Once I had fully assembled and wired, I turned the machine on and it booted up first try. I have to admit, that felt pretty good.

As noted by a friend, I like themes with my naming schemas. The two Raspberry Pi computers I use in the house are both named for professional soccer coaches. So when it came time to name this machine, for a while, I was going to use 'Foghorn' but this morning it came to me to name it after the top-hat wearing frog.

I've spent a good bit of today getting Michigan updated, installing software, etc. It's using wifi and I'm seeing decent speeds, but I am wondering if I should run a network cable to this corner of the house for the machine. We'll see. Maybe a summer project. I'm also considering upgrading the keyboard from my Microsoft ergonomic one to something more nerdy, a split-hand ergonomic keyboard like the Glove80 or the Voyager but I'm not ready to pull the trigger on any of those purchases yet. We'll see.

Aside from getting Michigan up and running, I also had to spend some time relocating Marvin (the old machine) to its new home, out near the router. It's going to live-on as our dedicated media server. The move was simple enough, the biggest has was I had to spend some time sorting out its ethernet networking as it had been running on wifi and the ethernet had to be manually re-enabled. But, some googling and working on it got it solved and it's all set up.

As for gaming... Last week, I was discussing this build with a friend. I joked that one of my metrics for judging the computer's speed would be how fast it could make a new world of Dwarf Fortress. I just set Michigan to run with the maximum history and other settings which would make it really work. I watched the processor and it never went above 25%, which I was somewhat surprised by - I would have assumed it would just peg the processor during the world building phase. Now that I think about it, I'm assuming it only uses so many threads, etc. Concurrency doesn't really work for that and thus it can't take advantage of the extra cores in the processor. Which makes sense.

That said, it did work amazingly fast compared to the other machines I've played Dwarf Fortress on.

The Specs

PCPartPicker Part List

Type Item
CPU AMD Ryzen 7 7700X 4.5 GHz 8-Core Processor
CPU Cooler Corsair iCUE H100i ELITE CAPELLIX XT 65.57 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler
Motherboard MSI PRO X670-P WIFI ATX AM5 Motherboard
Memory Corsair Vengeance 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6000 CL36 Memory
Storage Samsung 980 Pro 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive
Storage Seagate EXOS Enterprise 16 TB 3.5" 7200 RPM Internal Hard Drive
Video Card MSI VENTUS 3X OC GeForce RTX 4070 12 GB Video Card
Case Fractal Design Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
Power Supply Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply

PS - Only twelve more hours of downloading Baldur's Gate III.

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"Is This the End of Geofence Warrants?"

12/13/2023 6:19 pm | : 2 mins.

Google is changing how they track user location data. The link is a breakdown by the EFF regarding these changes. As they say it, it isn't a full victory for privacy - but it is stepping in the right direction.

Google’s announcement outlined three changes to how it will treat Location History data. First, going forward, this data will be stored, by default, on a user’s device, instead of with Google in the cloud. Second, it will be set by default to delete after three months; currently Google stores the data for at least 18 months. Finally, if users choose to back up their data to the cloud, Google will “automatically encrypt your backed-up data so no one can read it, including Google.”

[...]

However, we are not yet prepared to declare total victory. Google’s collection of users’ location data isn’t limited to just the “Location History” data searched in response to geofence warrants; Google collects additional location information as well. It remains to be seen whether law enforcement will find a way to access these other stores of location data on a mass basis in the future. Also, none of Google’s changes will prevent law enforcement from issuing targeted warrants for individual users’ location data if police have probable cause to support such a search.

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T. S. Eliot explained the central problem with the Information Age

12/13/2023 6:27 pm | : 1 min.

The vast accumulations of knowledge—or at least of information—deposited by the nineteenth century have been responsible for an equally vast ignorance. When there is so much to be known, when there are so many fields of knowledge in which the same words are used with different meanings, when every one knows a little about a great many things, it becomes increasingly difficult for anyone to know whether he knows what he is talking about or not. And when we do not know, or when we do not know enough, we tend always to substitute emotions for thoughts.

Share to: | Tags: information, misinformation, information age, t s eliot

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