 I don't know why my lower third is in the Android faithful style. I'm guessing, because it's Tuesday and Ron went in there and switched it in advance, but I like it. I like it. Why not? Go Android faithful. This is what I would look like where I do appear on Android. It's up with you. I suppose you're wondering why I streamed today. Well, it's to talk about my fantasy baseball team. Actually, not at all because of that. I should do a quick run-through of what's gonna be on the show for... Oh, I haven't written the T's on this episode of DTNS. Good afternoon, technical bench. Is VR at work bad for you? Safety guy. VR at work could be bad for you. Authors are very cross with AI. On this episode of DTNS, VR at work could be bad for you. Authors are very cross with AI. And despite that, Nvidia launches a more powerful chip to bring down the cost of AI. Hey, Steve, what's going on? This is the day of the tech news for the longest. Eighth, Sarah Lane, Roger Tang, Netflix just released an iOS app that says it will let you play Netflix video games on the TV, son. Let's get to the rest of the quick hits. Okay, Asia reports that Apple, Samsung and Intel and Nvidia will all invest in soft bank groups, British chip design unit ARM, and change that to UK. Next month, ARM is expected to announce a $60 billion IPO in the US NASDAQ stock exchange. Participating chip makers will each get a few percent at the launch of the IPO, becoming medium to long-term shareholders, which should stabilize the stock price once it's listed. And the chip makers will then have at least some sway over ARM's management going forward. Aha! TSMC announced it has agreed to build its first chip factory in Europe in Dresden, Germany. TSMC will receive government investment in the plant subject to EU approval, which is expected. Bosch, Infineon and XP will also own 10% of the plant in joint venture. This comes a week after approval for an Intel plant to be built in Germany as well, with production expected to begin in 2027. Some analysts believe TSMC may face a shortage of skilled workers in Germany, as it has in the US, where it had to delay its Arizona-based plant as it continues to look for qualified workers. Hey, Fred, hey, Clinton, good to see y'all. Meta-owned Facebook Messenger has started notifying Android users that as of September 28th, SMS messages will no longer be available once their Messenger app is updated. Facebook Messenger has a large Android user base and presumably some portion of those folks use the SMS-MMS integration. With Meta already owning WhatsApp Messenger and Google-pushing Android users which were SMS to RCS, SMS doesn't seem too top of mind for Meta these days. UK's Electoral Commission announced that voters fit, something about that RCS line is bugging me, hold on. UK's Electoral Commission announced that voters' physical and email addresses were accessible to hostile actors. Let's make sure you think of like an angry Daniel Day-Lewis. The commission discovered a breach in October and reported it to the Information Commissioner's Office and the National Crime Agency to late notify the public while it removed the actor's access to the system. Commission says the actors had access to the electoral register systems and email system but it does not know conclusively what files had been accessed. The Las Vegas and Nevada city council approved the boring companies plan to expand its tunnels in the area. Planned out calls for 81 stations, 68 miles of tunnel throughout Las Vegas and surrounding Clark County. A reminder, the boring company system moves passengers and Tesla vehicles through a system of tunnels underneath surface streets. Currently, the system includes three stations at the Las Vegas Convention Center and an offshoot open at Resorts World. I should have it, I think. I'm gonna start with the rest of this plan but not yet scheduled. Is it Resort World or Resorts World? Resorts World, okay. Bye, Clinton. Seagraph is happening this week and NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang kicked off the concert with keynote and a song. No. Here are some of the big announcements. A new AI chip, the GH200, GH for the legendary computer scientist Admiral Grace Hopper uses the same GPU as the H100 but has 141 gigabytes of memory and 72 arm. GH200's big advance will be in running inferencing fast. Inferencing is what models do when they generate something like answering a question or creating an image. Huang said this chip will drop the inference cost of large language models. Two GH200 chips can also be combined around as one. This means models would not need multiple systems to run. This is NVIDIA's answered AMD's M1300X with 192 gigabytes of memory and is also designed for inferencing. Also AI workbench for creating, testing and customizing generative models on a workstation before deploying them to a data center. Available models include Hugging Face and GitHub. It's meant to speed up customization. Polls in cloud resources when necessary. NVIDIA is also partnering with Hugging Face for a training cluster as a service powered by NVIDIA's DGX Cloud and Hugging Face's training models and data sets. NVIDIA has 80% of the AI chip market share. Gardner suggests that close to 85% of big-name fields do imparted infrastructural roadblocks. AI workbench competing with startups like Fixi, Raka and Together in to make it easier for companies and individuals to build customizations. Postdoc researcher in agribusiness at USC, Alex Sushay has an article on the conversation called virtual reality has negative side effects, new research shows that can be a problem in the workplace. Some of the new things you might expect include headaches, eye strain and neck pain, things you get for a computer monitor now if you're not careful, but some that are more specific to VR include dizziness, nausea, muscle fatigue. Scientists have some ideas for how you can reduce the problems if you decide to use a headset as your monitor for work. These include taking regular breaks from the headset, limiting immersion to 20 to 30 minute increments and stop using them if you feel sick. There are a lot of guidelines for a lot of different possibilities and there's no clear consensus about what exactly they should be. So more research is needed to know which risks are greatest and which methods are most effective at dealing with them. So long trip studies are just beginning. If you're just joining us, I'm cleaning up the document before today's DTNS. So the reason I'm plowing through so fast, just looking for typos. On Monday's extended show, we talked a lot about AI and copyright in relation to Dungeons and Dragon, stating clearly would not support its artists using AI related tools. We expect it might be in large part because the issues of intellectual property, crop or tea with generated works of art are at best unclear. Well, there's a couple of stories that bear directly on that today. First good news. OpenAI announced its GPT bot, which will crawl the web like search index does and filter out paywall restricted sources, paywall restricted sources, filter out paywall restricted sources, as well as sources that violate open AI policies and sources that gather personally identifiable information. OpenAI hopes other websites will let it crawl their sites in order to make its products like chat GPT work better. But if a website doesn't want to participate, it can disallow GPT bot in its robots.txt file, just like sites can to stop being indexed for search. Sites can even customize directories to allow GPT bot access to some, but not all of its site. That's all good news, but a lot of folks don't wonder if OpenAI has the right to use web information for training it all, even if sites have let it open to be crawled, which leads us to our next story. First, there's a lot of abuse of AI going on out there. One recent example is author Jane Friedman, who discovered that someone was selling generated text under her name on Amazon. It took this story going viral to get Amazon to remove them. Benjy Smith launched Pro'scraft in 2017. It had scanned more than 27,000 books and used an algorithm to rank them by various statistics, including word count, passive voice percentage of adverbs and a measure called Vividness. Only sections of books shown were the most passive and most vivid page. Benjy Smith, the creative progress, thought it was a useful tool for new authors to upload and compare their own work, a way to improve the writing. It was incorporated into the Shakespeare word processor application into his, so writers could use it on works in progress. Smith said he, because he used only published small, because he only published small pieces of text alongside summary statistics, he believed he was making a fair use of the texts and did not need permission. And then Monday, the internet noticed and backlash commenced, at which point Smith removed Pro'scraft and said, your feelings are legitimate and I hope you'll accept my sincerest apologies. He noted that Pro'scraft never made money and that he has never taken VC money for Shakespeare. Instead of working other jobs to pay his bills, he finished, I would love to rebuild this library with the consent of authors and publishers. I truly believe these tools are useful for creative people, but now is not the right time, I understand. And I'm sorry. Smith's algorithm was not generative AI and no one noticed Pro'scraft for six years. But the sensitivity to such things has been ratcheted up by situations like Friedman's. Did Smith deserve the ire? What do you think? Did Smith deserve the ire? Should I use a word like ire? Evo 2023 took place in Las Vegas for the weekend. If you're not familiar, it's the biggest fighting game event of the year and a big deal for Esports fans also run by Sony. However, some of the competitors, PlayStation 5s running all the games through various matches and they're melting their controller connectors, like literally so hot they fried their USB adapters. Amphilipost on X and Reddit lamented similar heat issues. PS5 only has one USB port on the front of the console with two more on the back next to the heat exhaust. Some players say even the connectors seem too hot. Martin, PC Milesi. Thank you, Zoe. USB ports are melting like crazy. Let's see this picture. Broke my junk food cable right there. All right. Coffee time. Let's check out the mail bag. You can also catch the show live Monday through Friday for PM Eastern, blotty, blotty, blotty, blotty, Casey Newton wrote an article on his platform news letter called it's time to change how we cover Elon Musk. There's a bit in there about the rhetoric between Musk and meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg about how some kind of physical fight started as a joke, but it seems to be not a joke at all. CEOs normally say things they mean. However, Musk says things that don't come to pass. We're gonna must him and really maybe maybe, okay. Ooh, good morning, PC Milesi. We'll be back tomorrow with Scott Johnson. Jot Skon-son. Okay. Oh, I know what I was gonna do. Wait, why is someone on sorting laser at reply? What are you, what are you saying? What are you saying over there? Oh, got a poster. Nice. All right. I think Sarah Lane was asking me something. Title capitalization. Well, I'll do this in the screen cap. That's not the right. All right. So we realized we don't have, is this working? This doesn't seem to be working. It's not changing it. Well, this isn't really working. AP style. I'm picking a style. I'm getting stylish. There's the style guide. All right, it's done. What else is up? If you had to go work for a broadcast company, would you prefer to be a producer or the anchor man? Why not both? Most anchors are also producers because they do a lot of writing and segment selection. But yeah, I'd probably be the anchor. I'd probably want to be an anchor. It is 82 degrees Fahrenheit right now. Exactly, Howard. Why not both? Now, if some of you are saying, who's he talking to? I don't see this person in chat. There's a YouTube chat and a Twitch chat going on at the same time. That's one of the nice things about Stringard is I see both. I have a phone call with Molly Wood today. Talk podcast stuff. Doing the show. Planning the class on Thursday. Very nervous about that, to be honest. I should probably get to work on that. Hey, thanks, Omega Man. Appreciate you. We do our best. Howard, Howard with a foot in both worlds, look at you. It's a busy week. So I have that call, and then Eileen and I are going to a concert tonight. Then tomorrow I'm doing my practice run through of the class, It's a Thing, and Sword and Laser, along with DTNS. Thursday, Daily Tech headlines, and then a doctor's appointment, and then how to make a great podcast. I am, Ryan, as a matter of fact, I am. I'm a tourist though. I know songs, but I'm not like huge fans, so I'll just be soaking up the vibes. That's all right, Howard, we'll do it again. Don't fret. Sorry, you can't make it too. Like a scary mask, technical match. Like Ghost Face. That was actually my big joke during COVID, you know, when there were mass mandates. It was like, not that I wouldn't have actually wore it up on N95 or whatever, but to wear, you know, Halloween masks on top of it. Don't actively fret. Did your niece enjoy the concert, Ryan? Ooh, Cyberpunk mask. Yeah, I give one of those razor ones. Good to know. Good to know, Ryan. That's a positive review. I have my homework to do too. Maybe I'll do that after my call with Molly. I'll try to squeeze it in. All that matters is the kids. It's your kids, Marty. Remembering great if Marlon Brando had played the doctor in Back to the Future. It's your kids, Marty. Do you let Twitch subscribers into the Discord? No, Discord's linked directly to Patreon. So it's just automatic. If you're a patron, it lets you in. If you're not, it doesn't. There's no easy way to connect Twitch to Discord membership. Membership has its benefits. Thanks, Nightbot. Well, I gotta do our DTNS production meeting. So I just wanted to sneak in here briefly and say, hey, well, Kilba, if you find a way to do the direct link of membership to Discord, let me know, because I wouldn't mind doing it. I just never saw an easy way to link them up so that it's automatic. I mean, Technometch is not wrong, although it may read a little bluntly the way it's written there, but yeah, I mean, and I don't expect you to do the research, just if you do happen across it. Yeah, if you do, if you do, I'll take a look around again, too. I just didn't see anything like that. What I wanted was automatic. There are people who just go through and manually, if they update their audiences, but I needed something that would just do it on its own. Yeah, PC Mousy, that's great. If I can find an automatic way to connect it, I'll totally do that. Be into that. Alrighty. Well, thanks, everybody. I'm gonna go do a production meeting and thank you, Kilbot, for the nudge. I'll take a second look at that. Maybe it's something that's come along since the last time I looked. Until, well, actually, no, until an hour from now, right on Twitch.tv's last good day internet. Bye, everybody.