Thursday, 31 October 2024

New Intel Processors, more of the same (kind of).

Now that some of the reviews have hit on the Core Ultra Series 2 processors it's interesting to see how a lot of the reviews are panning them.


Personally I like the fact that they are getting the power draw down on these things, for the past couple of years it's just seemed like both AMD and Intel just kept pushing the power limits higher and higher to clock more performance. At some point it has to stop - personally I'm not wanting a computer that's pulling 1500w on the CPU by itself. 

The thing that gets me though is that there's nothing that's come out since I built my last machine that was a "must have" upgrade and that was a Ryzen 3700x when I put it together. I did wind up tossing a 5800x in when the price tanked on those at one point but it was more a convenience thing since it freed up the 3700x to go into another machine. Even my recent purchase of the Macbook Pro wasn't driven by a need to get something faster - that was a need for something portable. 

And while the ARM based Apple Silicone and Qualcomm chips are pretty dammed cool it's going to take time to find out if they will disrupt things enough to really make a difference in how things are going. Apple's transition is pretty darn smooth, but the Windows side of things is a different situation entirely. 

I would really love to see more disruptive stuff in the CPU space but these days it's not about the hardware, it's about what you can do with the software that's going to govern who's stuff is successful in the market. 

Back in the day spreadsheet applications where the killer apps, these days, there's so many out there and technology is so integrated into our lives that there is no single killer app kicking around. So there's a potential that we could start seeing specific types of computers used for different tasks. High efficiency lower powered devices for using for day to day office type work, higher powered x86 systems to run games on, or something else for other specific scientific workflows? 

Either way I hope there's something new on the horizon. Faster is cool, but it would be nice if there was something compelling to upgrade to that wasn't some "faster" version of something that we already have. 

Friday, 11 October 2024

Macbook Pro for personal use, what about the office.

Well, I've been posting about the Macbook here for a while, it's not really the tool for me to get work done on. It's not that I can't get the work done on a macOS system, it's that I have to use a lot of Windows specific tools and running through hoops to make that work just slow me down and complicate things. For work I prefer to just keep things simple. 

So when my previous work laptop started acting up I wound up sourcing a replacement device. First thing to note we are generally a Lenovo shop, at least for laptops. 

As far as what I needed;
  • Reasonably quick device for general office use and Windows admin tasks.
  • Ability to run VM's for testing. 
  • Solid battery life. 
  • Lightweight and portable. 
Since I use the device docked most of the time the screen has to be "good enough" and since I don't use the thing for gaming I'm not looking for anything with a high refresh rate display or dedicated graphics since most of my work is just admin work and zoom meetings. 

Many of my coworkers are running current versions of the X1 Carbon, and while that device would have worked fine it's limited to the U series of processors, and they are a bit larger than I would have prefered. The 14 inch thinkpads are a little smaller footprint but not quite as thin, but still don't have a H series CPU. However, for whatever reason, Lenovo sells a x13 Gen 5 where you have a option of a Core 7 155H processor as opposed to the 155U or 165U. 


While the 155H has a lower base clock than the 155U, it's also got more performance cores and better integrated graphics compared to the U series chips. Given that I'm running VM's on the thing those extra performance cores won't go unused. The battery life won't be as good I'm assuming - but I generally don't run the VM's when I'm not docked, and I can't imagine that the battery life will be that horrid comparing the two. 

As far as the AMD options. I've had two AMD based devices from Lenovo and both have had problems. For the most part it's all small stuff, but there's enough issues that the friction that they put into my workflow was just wearing on me. 

The other big thing that I like about the Lenovo devices is that I can get them with a built-in cellular modem. 

Yes, you can hotspot off a phone, and if you have a macOS system with a iPhone that process is very good. However with the built in modem you just pull the laptop out and you are online, and for work that let's me run the device without having to worry about burning through two device batteries at the same time if I'm working remotely. 

For personal use it's not something that i'm that concerned about, but for work, hell yes. Add that thing in there. 

After a week with the new work laptop the biggest takeaway from it is that it just seems to blend into the background and get out of the way while I'm working. The keyboard works, and is well suited to long typing sessions. The screen is good enough that it gets the job done. It's not as nice as what's on the Macbook, but it's not offensive by any means. And it's light enough that it doesn't feel like anything has been added to my backpack when I'm carrying it around.

Again, check back in three months and we will see where I am with it, but unless it's going to do a complete 180 and become a basket case it's probably a keeper and will just get used until eventually something does fail (hopefully out of warranty).

Saturday, 5 October 2024

Finally something good about video games.

I tend to bitch a lot about the state of gaming right now. 

It all boils down to a lot of games just not being worth shelling out 80$ for something that's a rehash of some other older concept or a game that just is not really enjoyable.

Even things like the freebie gatcha games are only interesting for a short period of time, they then either become boring grinds or holes that you sink buckets of money into just to try to progress your game further. 

However today I got my hands on something that. was actually fun to play. It got it's hooks into me and I sat and played at it for several hours over the course of the day and had a lot of fun just messing around. I died a pile of times and it really didn't bother me because the game is fun and has a awesome soundtrack (I'm almost wondering if I can extract it or something). 

Ladies and Gentlemen, let me introduce you to Squirrel with a Gun.


You are a Squirrel.

You have a gun.

That's the entire real premise of the game. The graphics are simple, controls aren't too hard, and it's one of the most fun things that I've picked up in a long time. 

It's 25$ Canadian. 

I've already gotten enough play time out of the game to justify what I've spent, and I'm nowhere near bored of the thing yet. 

I wonder if they have any plans for making a co-op version?