The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

‘Degree of complacency’: are supply chains prepared for impact of ongoing Iran war?

The economic warnings are bleak, but full extent of shortages are still not felt for many European countries

The biggest energy shock in modern history, jet fuel shortages “within weeks”, a global recession – since Iran throttled shipping flows through the strait of Hormuz at the end of February the economic warnings have become increasingly dire.

Yet 10 weeks on from the first US-Israeli attacks, share indices, companies and governments have been surprisingly sanguine. Every day the divergence grows between the eerie quiet on markets and alarming warnings of an imminent supply chain crunch.

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Two arrested over arson attack at former synagogue in east London

Man, 45, and 52-year-old woman held on suspicion of conspiracy to commit arson after blaze in Whitechapel

Two people have been arrested by counter-terrorism officers investigating an arson attack at a former synagogue in east London.

A 45-year-old man and a woman, 52, were arrested on Sunday on suspicion of conspiracy to commit arson and have been taken into police custody.

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Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Patiënten met hartfalen gebaat bij oud medicijn dat nog geen tien cent kost, effect van medicijn al in 18de eeuw beschreven

Patiënten met hartfalen gebaat bij oud medicijn dat nog geen tien cent kost

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Memory godboxes could offer relief from the RAMpocalypse

In modern datacenters, storage can live anywhere — local to the machine, remotely accessed over the network, and/or shared between systems. The next generation of servers will treat system memory in much the same way. Systems will still have some local DDR5, but the bulk of it will be remotely accessed from what some have taken to calling the memory godbox. The ongoing DRAM shortage has created a perfect storm for the proliferation of the appliances, which not only allow for memory to be pooled, but also data stored in that memory to be shared by multiple machines simultaneously. In effect, memory becomes a fungible resource. More importantly, your next round of servers will probably support the tech, if they don't already. CXL finally has its moment to shine The technology at the heart of these memory godboxes isn’t new. Compute Express Link (CXL) has been slowly gaining traction since its introduction seven years ago. As a quick refresher, CXL defines a common, cache-coherent interface for connecting CPUs, memory, accelerators, and other peripherals. The technology comes in a couple of different flavors: CXL.mem, CXL.cache, and CXL.io, which, as a whole, have implications for disaggregated compute. Imagine a rack with a CPU node, GPU node, memory node, and storage node, which can talk to one another completely independently. That's the core idea behind CXL. CXL piggybacks off the PCIe standard, which means in theory it should be broadly compatible, but, up to this point, it's primarily been used with memory devices. The 1.0 spec opened the door to memory expansion modules, which allow you to add more memory by slotting them into a CXL-compatible PCIe slot. To the operating system — assuming you’re running Linux that is — the extra memory is largely transparent, showing up as if it were attached to another CPU socket, just one without any additional compute. The 2.0 spec, which showed up in 2020, added basic support for switching, which meant memory could be pooled and then allocated to any number of connected systems. AMD and Intel’s current crop of Epycs and Xeons already support these appliances. But while the memory can be partitioned and reallocated to different machines as needed, two machines can’t work on the same data simultaneously. Unless you were memory-constrained, the added complexity of CXL 2.0 didn’t offer much benefit over simply using higher capacity DIMMs in the first place. At least, not until memory prices went through the roof. Where things really get interesting is when the 3.0 spec arrives in AMD and Intel’s next-generation of Epycs and Xeons. In fact, from what we understand, Amazon’s Graviton5 CPUs we looked at in December already support the spec. CXL 3.0 introduces two key capabilities that make it particularly interesting for memory appliances. The first is support for larger topologies: Multiple CXL switches can be stitched together into a fabric. The second is support for memory sharing: Rather than partitioning memory into slices only accessible to one machine at a time, memory can be shared between machines. In theory this could allow two machines running the same set of workloads to use the memory closer to that of one. It’s a bit like deduplication for memory. In fact, we already do this in virtualized environments like KVM, but it now works across machines. There are security and performance implications to all of this. Thankfully in CXL 3.1 and later, the consortium introduced confidential computing capabilities into the spec, allowing for isolation where necessary. On the performance end of things, CXL 3.0 moves to PCIe 6.0 as a baseline, which provides 16 GB/s of bidirectional bandwidth per lane. Assuming 64 lanes of CXL per CPU, that works out to an additional 512 GB/s of bandwidth. So memory bandwidth shouldn’t be too much of an issue for most applications. Latency, on the other hand, is a different story. CXL-attached memory is going to add some latency. However, as we’ve previously discussed, the latency isn’t as bad as you’re probably thinking — on the order of a NUMA hop, or about 170 to 250 nanoseconds of round trip latency. Obviously, the farther the memory appliance is from the host CPU, the worse the latency is going to be. Late last year, the CXL consortium ratified the 4.0 spec, which among other things doubles the bandwidth from 16 GB/s per lane to 32 GB/s by re-basing on PCIe 7.0. However, it'll be a while before we see appliances based on the spec. Where’s my memory godbox? There are several companies developing hardware for these kinds of networked memory appliances. Panmnesia’s CXL 3.2-compatible PanSwitch is one of the most sophisticated examples. The switch features 256 lanes of connectivity for CXL memory modules, devices, or CPUs to connect, pool, or share resources. If you’re okay with memory pooling and don’t need the niceties of CXL 3.0, then there are already several memory appliances available that are compatible with the latest generation of Xeon 6 and Epyc Turin processors. Liqid’s composable memory platform, for example, can provide a pool of up to 100 TB of DDR5 to as many as 32 hosts. Meanwhile, UnifabriX Max systems provide CXL 1.1 or 2.0 connectivity to 16 or more systems with support for CXL 3.2 already in the works. We suspect that as more CXL 3.0 compatible CPUs and GPUs hit the market, more of these memory godboxes will appear. AI eats everything Don’t get too excited. While network attached memory has the potential to reduce an enterprise's infrastructure spend, those same qualities make it attractive for the very thing driving the memory shortage in the first place. AI adoption has driven demand for DRAM off the charts. In addition to the HBM used by GPUs, DDR5 is being used for key value cache offload during inference. These KV caches store model state and can chew significant amounts of memory — often more than the model itself — in multi-tenant serving scenarios. Rather than discard these caches and recompile them when the model state is restored, it’s more efficient to offload them to system memory and eventually flash storage. The problem with using flash storage is that it has a finite write endurance. After a while it wears out. Instead, CXL memory vendors are positioning the tech as a more resilient alternative. That’s bad news for enterprises looking to these memory godboxes for salvation from the RAMpocalypse. ®

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Judoka Korrel wint in Astana eerste medaille sinds schorsing

ASTANA (ANP) - Judoka Michael Korrel heeft zijn eerste medaille gewonnen sinds zijn terugkeer van een schorsing. De 32-jarige Nederlander won bij het Grand Slam in het Kazachse Astana de strijd om het brons in de klasse tot 100 kilogram van de Rus Idar Bifov. Korrel keerde begin dit jaar terug na een jaar te hebben gemist vanwege administratieve fouten rond dopingcontroles.

Ook landgenoot Frank de Wit is pas net teruggekeerd van zo'n schorsing. Hij verloor in de klasse tot 90 kilogram van de Kazach Aidar Arapov in de strijd om het brons. Simeon Catharina moest in de troostfinale in de klasse tot 100 kilogram zijn meerdere erkennen in de Braziliaan Leonardo Gonçalves.

Eerder pakte Amber Gersjes in Astana het goud in de klasse tot 48 kilogram. Brons was er voor Shannon van de Meeberg en Sanne van Dijke.


Eerste Nederlanders van cruiseschip Hondius gehaald

GRANADILLA DE ABONA (ANP) - De eerste Nederlandse opvarenden van de Hondius worden van het schip naar de kant gebracht, ziet ANP ter plaatse. Eerder werden alle Spaanse opvarenden al aan wal gebracht en per bus naar het vliegveld Tenerife Zuid gebracht, meldde het Spaanse ministerie van Volksgezondheid.

Naast Nederlanders zullen er op de repatriëringsvlucht ook nog opvarenden van andere nationaliteiten zijn. Hoewel onduidelijk is wie precies, zei minister van Volksgezondheid Mónica García eerder dat aan boord van het Nederlandse toestel onder meer mensen uit Duitsland, België en Griekenland zullen zitten. Ook een deel van de bemanning zal volgens haar meevliegen.

Onduidelijk is vooralsnog hoe laat de Nederlandse repatriëringsvlucht gepland staat. Het toestel is wel al op Tenerife.


thexiffy

Last.fm last recent tracks from thexiffy.

Beak> - Iron Acton

Beak>

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

The EU Considers Restricting Use of US Cloud Platforms for Sensitive Government Data

CNBC reports:


The European Union is considering rules that would restrict its member governments' use of U.S. cloud providers to handle sensitive data, sources familiar with the talks told CNBC.

The European Commission — the EU's executive branch — is expected to present its "Tech Sovereignty Package" on May 27, which will include a range of measures aimed at bolstering the bloc's strategic autonomy in key digital areas. As part of preparations for that package, discussions are taking place within the Commission around limiting the exposure of sensitive public-sector data to cloud platforms provided by companies outside of the EU, two Commission officials, who asked to remain anonymous as they weren't authorized to discuss private talks, told CNBC... "The core idea is defining sectors that have to be hosted on European cloud capacity," one of the officials said. They added that companies providing cloud solutions from third countries, including the U.S., could be impacted. Proposals would not prohibit overseas companies' cloud platforms from government contracts entirely, but limit their use in processing sensitive data at public sector organizations, depending on the level of sensitivity, they added. The officials said that talks are ongoing and yet to be finalized...
The officials told CNBC there are discussions around proposing that financial, judicial and health data processed by governments and public-sector organizations require high levels of sovereign cloud infrastructure.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Feyenoord begint met Bos op opvallende plek: dit is de opstelling tegen AZ

Hoofdtrainer Robin van Persie heeft een onverwachte keuze gemaakt voor de wedstrijd tegen AZ. Linksback Jordan Bos speelt namelijk op de linksbuitenpositie. Jordan Lotomba is hierdoor de linksback. Givairo Read is nog niet fit genoeg om te starten.