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AMD already released their MI300X which is objectively better than NVIDIA's offerings. Just a matter of time for adoption and integration.


My Xiaomi Mi 10T has a built in app for receiving FM radio, and I'm sure my old Samsung galaxy also had it.


I think those had analog FM receivers. HD radio is digital FM, you need a special tuner for it.


I think in that case it looks like some LG phones had DAB/DAB+ tuners built-in.


My old Nokia N900 had a FM _transmitter_ allowing me to broadcast to my car.


Is this a continuation of the existing Grace Hopper SoC [0]?

[0] - https://www.nvidia.com/en-gb/data-center/grace-hopper-superc...


A Grace Hopper workstation sounds cool but I would expect Nvidia PC chips to be an evolution of Orin.


Not to be confused with the AMD/Xilinx UltraRAM present in their FPGA fabric.


If it is a different technology, wikipedia needs to be corrected:

> The technology has been integrated into Xilinx's FPGAs and Zynq UltraScale+ family of multiprocessor system-on-chips (MPSoC).[7]

Referencing a paper https://www.eejournal.com/chalk_talks/2016033002-xilinx-ultr... FROM 2016 !


It seems they(Xilinx/AMD) might also have applied for a trademark, so I don't know if the name as used here will stick...

https://trademarks.justia.com/972/53/ultraram-97253591.html


Just wanted to say I like your website and have used it in the past :)


Thanks very much. Please don’t hesitate to shoot us an email at fpga.RTL.jobs@gmail.com if you have any suggestions for improvement, or success stories from your job hunt, or anything we can do to help you find a new gig.


For anyone interested in solid-state battery usage, Mercedes-Benz has already released vehicles with such batteries to customers, even as far back as 2021 [0].

[0] - https://www.electrive.com/2021/12/20/mercedes-buses-with-sol...


No they have not. This is just a total misunderstanding of the technologies involved. Sadly for dumb marketing reasons 'solid state' has become the terms that is used, but that is the wrong term. The actual reason why 'solid state' was important is because people believe lithium metal anodes would only be possible with solid state. When we are talking about next generation 'solid state' we actually mean 'next generation li-ion batteries with lithium metal anode'.

The 'solid state' technology in buses that is talked about in that article is a totally different thing. That tech has been known to exist for a long time and is a totally different technology that has nothing to do with the hype around 'solid state'. Its 'lithium-polymer' that as a far narrower application and isn't all that interesting and certainly not some amazing next generation battery.

This is a sad issue in battery marketing world where people mix up what these technologies actually mean.


Framework laptops are also firmly in that sweet spot, with the great repairability and flexibility being a big bonus.


You can use 2G sniffers for that which require much less expensive hardware.


>it's a fucking autocomplete program

So like a human? I'd say they were pretty influential on the future of humanity.


Like clock work, I swear to god you're all reading from the same script.

I beg of you to take some humanities courses.


On an unrelated note, are there any open source implementations utilising Intel's Gaussian & Neural Accelerator and Deep Learning Boost technologies on 12th and 13th gen CPU's?


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