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Why must error messages be so complicated?
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By +Sledge · Posted
Plans. Christ at least editorialise this tripe for what it is or put your own journalistic take on it. -
By sagum · Posted
If you have a TV in your living room, chances are you can probably just use the Steam Link app and play your huge PC in big picture mode, effectively giving you the Steam Machine experience to see if you'd actually like it. The good news is the Steam Machine can have it's drives upgraded. It has a USB-C 10Gbs port as well, so the 512GB drive could be quickly moved to an external enclosure and repurposed. -
By sagum · Posted
This machine could very well be a second gaming PC for their living room as a console experience. So we would have to assume their main PC exists as well; With that said, I have 10gb home network with a 2.5gigabit internet connection here so we tend to have more than enough speed to download games. However, we can't make use of the 10gb LAN using Steam's built in transfer tool because it always compresses transfers and that slows the transfer down to well below a standard gigabit port speeds, sometimes as slow as 200-300Mb/s transfers. While that's probably still faster than most internet connections anyway, if they'd fix the LAN transfer issue it'd be upto x5 faster even on a gigabit LAN, than simply dropping a 2.5gbe port on there with hopes of a few people having fast internet connections. There are solutions, work arounds, like using LANCache if you run a NAS... or simply copying the files over manually using a network share. -
By zikalify · Posted
Samsung announces ultra-fast UFS 5.0 storage to supercharge mobile AI by Paul Hill Local AI models tend to run a lot more slowly than cloud services like Claude and Gemini; however, Samsung has just announced that it has developed its UFS 5.0 solution, which increases data transfer to speeds of 10.8GB/s, enabling faster storage and processing in mobile memory that has the potential to provide more optimal local AI experiences. Commenting on this development, Jangseok Choi, head of Memory Product Planning at Samsung Electronics, said: If you’ve tried local AI, you’ll know it can be quite slow, especially if using the larger parameter models. By developing this new solution, Samsung says that storage is evolving from just storing data to a core piece of infrastructure that supports AI computation, too. The Korean company said that UFS 5.0 integrates the latest embedded memory interface standard from JEDEC and achieves up to 10.8 gigabytes per second (GB/s) transfer speeds. Regarding write speeds, Samsung UFS 5.0 can reach 9.5 GB/s. Both the read and write speeds are twice as fast as those of the previous UFS 4.1 standard. Aside from being ideal for local AI, Samsung’s UFS 5.0 is more power efficient by 40% compared to UFS 4.1. Samsung achieved this by implementing innovations such as clock gating and multi-voltage technologies. UFS 5.0 is also ultra-compact at just 7.5mm x 13mm x 0.9mm; that is 16.7% smaller than UFS 4.1. The company said it will be bringing it to multiple devices in the future, including mobile, wearable, and extended reality. -
By sagum · Posted
A bit like the steamdeck, this probably isn't for you.
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+Warwagon MVC
Today I was running Malwarebytes on my moms computer. I was going to do a quickscan to see how fast the scan would go on the new ssd I just installed on the laptop. When I opened Malwarebytes up it wanted to do an update. But I forgot I wasn't connected to my wifi yet, so of course Malwarebytes gave me an error.
While i'm looking at the error, I'm thinking 'Why can't they make that error message more user friendly. You can still have all that gibberish via a "Show more details button, but first and foremost give the user a much cleaner error message. So to give you an example I have a before and after of what the error message said before, and a mockup of what I think a better one would look like. (of course they would make the box look a lot nicer than my ugly box)
Before
Modified
While Malwarebytes was preforming the quickscan I noticed windows 7 had 1 update to install. So I clicked the install button, but of course it must have already been installing the update in the background so I got this message.
First off, do we really need a BIG red X in the top left? That just freaks people out and in this case it wasn't big of deal, another update was just installing. But then we see the words "FAILED!" another thing that freaks people out. Of course it failed, but they really have to see the word. Looking down towards the bottom we see the words "errors" and a nice log error code. Once again, yes you can still have all that information available via a "More details" Button but why not simplify the entire thing. Here is one I put together.
Straight and to the point, the option of seeing more details if you need them, and far less scary for the average user.
Just my 2 cents.
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