Diamond Rapids
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Intel Diamond Rapids to boost core counts to 192, but RIP Hyperthreading
Intel’s upcoming Diamond Rapids Xeon will boost core counts to 192, a 50 percent increase over last generation, the x86 giant revealed at Computex in Taipei this week. But while core counts continue to rise, in doing so Intel has managed to cut thread counts by a quarter. Yep, Hyperthreading – Intel's marketing for simultaneous multithreading – is officially dead.
If cores are what agents crave, Intel's new Clearwater Xeon 6+ might just quench their thirst
Intel’s Clearwater Forest Xeons were originally designed to power telco networks, SaaS apps, and other high-volume web-scale workloads. But by a stroke of luck, the x86 giant may have also built an agentic AI beast. AI model training, inference, and the GPUs that power them have dominated the discourse for the past few years, but with the rise of agentic harnesses like OpenClaw, CPUs are back in the limelight.
Intel bit off more than it could chew with 18A process node
Intel is keen to reassure investors that its troubles with the 18A manufacturing process were a one-off, and that it is better positioned to capitalize on what it expects will be growing demand for CPUs used in AI inference workloads. Speaking at the Bank of America 2026 Global Technology Conference in San Francisco, Chipzilla’s chief financial officer David Zinsner claimed that the firm simply bit off more than it could chew in trying to move too fast with the new process node. “I would say...
Thermal Decoherence and Population Transfer of MeV Channeling Electrons in Diamond
arXiv:2602.16529v2 Announce Type: replace-cross Abstract: Channeling radiation from MeV-regime electrons is governed by transitions between quantized transverse bound states, but experimental spectra are strongly modified by thermal diffuse scattering. To capture these open-system dynamics, a frozen-phonon multislice framework is combined with bound-state projection analysis to construct depth-dependent reduced density matrices in selected transverse manifolds. Beyond reproducing...
Ahoy, DECmate II the little PDP-8 that could
Now, that's a lot of word processing. But under the hood it's still at least PDP-8 adjacent, even considering its oddities and incompatibilities, and you can make it do many of the things a full-size Eight can. We'll take this basic unit, convert the floppy drives to solid state, tap the video output, and put it through its paces.
'Evolution' at 25: A perfect fusion of 'Ghostbusters' and 'Men in Black' that's become a sci-fi comedy classic
'Evolution' at 25: A perfect fusion of 'Ghostbusters' and 'Men in Black' that's become a sci-fi comedy classic Pour out a bottle of Head & Shoulders for Ivan Reitman's Evolution on its 25-year anniversary. What started off as a sci-fi horror turned into one of the best sci-fi comedies ever when it dropped 25 years ago. Being true to its title, Ivan Reitman's "Evolution" proves that nothing ever stays the same – including story.
Light pulses uncover Higgs mode that reshapes perovskite crystal symmetry
Light pulses uncover Higgs mode that reshapes perovskite crystal symmetry Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Waves of light and sound interact to drive electronic and structural changes in a perovskite crystal. At the atomic scale, nothing is ever truly still. Materials that appear perfectly rigid and motionless to the naked eye are in fact swarms of vibrating atoms.
Sophie Cunningham turned heads off the court before dominating Angel Reese, Spurs-Knicks ticket price & Saban!
We made it to another Friday. To the first weekend of June. Everyone can exhale now.
Velma from 'Scooby-Doo' cranks up the heat, Nick Saban dragged on Capitol Hill & the great car dealership scam
Over the hump and safely on the other side. First half of the first week of a new month in the books. Smooth sailing from here!Yesterday, I came to you live from the Hyundai dealership down the road, where the First Lady's car was getting an oil change.
So You Want a Coat of Arms
The first thing you notice upon entering the College of Arms, in London, is a small and incongruously blue statue of a kiwi, clutching a gold axe in its right claw. Sorry, let me try that again: In the odd historic language of heraldry, this is “a kiwi Azure grasping in the dexter foot an ice axe bendwise Or. ”The bird belongs to the coat of arms of Sir Edmund Hillary, a New Zealander, who was part of the first team to conquer Mount Everest.