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[3549.78 --> 3550.30] And... |
[3550.30 --> 3550.50] industry. |
[3550.74 --> 3551.34] I am really liking the band. |
[3551.34 --> 3551.78] And... |
[3552.00 --> 3552.92] What? |
• Introduction to a live stream and acknowledging previous contemplative moment |
• Discussion of AMD's Thread Ripper announcement and its new name |
• Destiny 2 being exclusively on Battle.net instead of Steam or open platforms |
• WannaCry ransom collection total and plans to discuss it later |
• Host's travel to Toronto, Canada and their time zone shift affecting sleep |
• Donations from Savage Jerky and Fresh books |
• Discussion about Tech Carnival ticket sales and the host possibly asking Sippy Pee for information |
• Discussion about an NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) and respecting someone's privacy, especially for public figures |
• Separate release form to be signed for publishing content from a piece they worked on |
• Personal experience with Deadmau5 (Joel Zimmerman), describing him as a "super chill guy" and a "gigantic geek" |
• Talking about the difference between being famous for fame's sake versus being passionate about one's craft, with Deadmau5 being an example of the latter |
• Interest in watching Deadmau5's masterclass to see his passion for electronic music |
• Discussion about electronic music as a complex topic that can be hard to understand even for those interested in it |
• Confessing ignorance about the electronic music scene and its artists, but having listened to some of Deadmau5's music |
• Conversations about a music video featuring Dead Mouse |
• Discussion of visiting the studio where the video was made and approaching it differently due to not being a "rabid fanboy" |
• Technical aspects of electronic music production, including equipment like SSL consoles |
• Explaining complex concepts in simple terms, with one person asking for an explanation like they are "completely stupid" |
• The speaker mentions they were grading projects, finalizing contracts, and meeting with accountants |
• They describe a strange encounter with multiple accountants, one of whom aggressively pushed them to move to the US and renounce their Canadian citizenship |
• The speaker discusses trying out a pre-release keyboard from Wu Ting with optical key switches |
• They mention a past request for an early version of the keyboard, which was finally received after a long wait |
• The conversation devolves into banter with Twitch chat about the name "Wu Tang" being misinterpreted |
• AMD introducing Ryzen Threadripper with up to 16 cores and 32 threads |
• Up to nine different Threadrippers, including models with 10, 12, and 14 cores |
• Compatibility issues: Threadrippers may not be compatible with AM4 socket, requiring a massive 4094 pin socket instead |
• Possible design similarities between Epic server chips and Threadripper desktop/workstation chips |
• Potential for increased PCIe lanes and memory support (up to 8-channel or 32 DMI) on new platform |
• Rumors of up to nine Threadrippers |
• Ryzen naming convention vs Threadripper |
• Virtualization performance issues with Ryzen |
• Potential use cases for high core count processors (e.g. workstations, video rendering) |
• Criticism that most users won't need or utilize such high core counts |
• Pressure on Intel from AMD's introduction of high core count processors |
• Discussion about GPUs being a thing or not |
• Confusion over the naming of "Epic" as a product codename |
• Criticism of the name "Epic" for sounding too flashy and unprofessional |
• Comparison to Red camera products, which have successfully used similar names |
• Humorously suggesting that adding an "I" instead of a "Y" would improve the name |
• Discussion about the name "Epic" being used for processors |
• Mention of someone defending the name Epic in conversation |
• Comparison of Epic's features (threads, memory bandwidth) vs other processors |
• Reference to a hypothetical conversation about purchasing Epic processors |
• Discussion about the ownership of the letter "I" and its relation to processor names |
• Explanation that eyes are not necessary for blindness |
• Transition to discussing the chip formerly known as Naples |
• Description of the Naples/Epics features (single-socket, 32 cores, dual-socket variants) |
• Mention of a project idea using multiple Epic processors. |
• Speed transcoding YP9 8K footage |
• Distributed transcoding with multiple servers and cores |
• The difficulty of keyframe handling in distributed processing |
• Virtualization using Red Hat KVM |
• Multi-GPU bare-bones server for editing den |
• Single tower running six editing workstations |
• High-end server specifications, including 8-core memory and 128 PCI Express lanes |
• Inter-GPU communication and the importance of direct connections |
• AMD's Radeon Vega Frontier Edition graphics card is the most powerful yet, with 13 teraflops of peak single precision compute performance |
• It has 64 next-generation compute units and 16 gigs of HBM2 memory on a super-wide 2048-bit bus |
• The card's memory architecture can access terabytes of memory, moving beyond traditional soldered HBM2 or GDDR memory |
• AMD claims the Vega Frontier Edition is 70% faster in SOLIDWORKS and 27% faster in another program called Katya |
• Ryzen Mobile and Ryzen Pro laptops are coming, with AMD finally bringing its processor technology to laptop form factor |
• The introduction of these products will bring competition to NVIDIA, at least until they release Volta |
• Desire for a 6 or 8 core laptop |
• AMD's claims of 50% more CPU performance and 40% better graphics in new APUs |
• Comparison to Intel's improvements and potential competitiveness |
• Ryzen Pro, a business-focused version of Ryzen |
• Quarterly earnings report and impact on stock prices |
• Investment in tech companies and possibility of investing in AMD |
• The host is discussing a potential conflict of interest in covering a story about NVIDIA after mentioning owning NVIDIA stock |
• Insider trading and the embargo on financial information are discussed, but deemed not to be against the law by the host |
• The host explains that they would disclose their ownership of a company's stock when discussing news stories related to that company |
• A listener is encouraged to vote on whether the host should disclose their ownership in every video or just in specific contexts |
• The host discusses their own experience with buying stock and the need for clarity in financial disclosures |
• The topic of sponsorships and disclosures is briefly mentioned, followed by a shift to discussing FreshBooks as a business solution |
• FreshBooks as a mobile accounting solution |
• Mobile app functionality identical to desktop version |
• Features for tracking expenses, hours worked, and invoicing |
• Ability to send professional-looking invoices and accept payments online |
• Free tech support with human interaction, not automated systems |
• Promotion of FreshBooks and offer of free trial at freshbooks.com/WEN |
• Discussion of Savage Jerky flavors, including ghost pepper buffalo sauce |
• The speaker tried Mojo Habanero beef jerky and found it spicy but manageable |
• Savage Jerky offers a range of flavors without nitrates or preservatives |
• The company's goal is to create snacks that are full of flavor and spice while being healthy |
• The speaker recommends using the code LTT for 10% off at savagejerky.com |
• The company also makes barbecue sauce |
• The speaker tried the cracked pepper and sea salt flavor, which was good but easy to devour quickly |
• Savage Jerky's spicy flavors can be intense, but it gets easier after the first bite |
• The speaker discusses plans for an upcoming tech carnival called LTX |
• Event planning |
• WannaCry ransomware attack and its impact |
• Bitcoin transactions and tracking |
• Silk Road 3 (an online black market) |
• Request for water and ice |
• Discussion of Optane DIMMs and companion CPUs |
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