[101156] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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4 million deal for these 2 sisters

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Darrell Spencer)
Tue Feb 20 01:02:25 2018

Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2018 09:55:21 -0500
From: "Darrell Spencer" <darrell_spencer@weareclintonnse.com>
To:   <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>

ABC Special
The wildest moment ever on Shark Tank


Best Product for 2018 > > 
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Last night America was in shock as these sisters walked out with millions 

Watch replay/9978
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The entire message is an adver-tisement


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Go now and end these for good
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For Intel, it really has been a Tale of Two Cities scenario: Intel reported the best quarter in its history, as fourth quarter 2017 revenue grew 4 percent year over year to  17.1  . But Intel has also been the face of Spectre and Meltdown, two critical vulnerabilities built into basically every processor it ships into the PC and server markets.


Important questions about the silicon fix remain hanging for end users and corporate customers. Here s what we wished the analysts had asked, and our best guesses as to the answers. Our guess: the end of 2018. Based upon leaked product roadmaps, that would probably mean the reported  Cascade Lake X  14 nm parts, as well as possibly the 10 nm  Cannon Lake  parts due sometime thereafter. 

Why this matters: Intel has been busy working with PC makers and OS vendors like Microsoft to release microcode that includes so called mitigations, microcode updates that patch the vulnerabilities. But even that hasn t gone so well:  Intel advised end users to stop applying patches after systems unexpectedly rebooted. Now, Intel has revealed it s working on a more permanent fix, but the impact on users remains unknown. 

Our guess: Just Meltdown. As our Spectre and Meltdown FAQ explains, Meltdown most strongly affects Intel processors because of the aggressive way those chips handle speculative execution. Spectre appears to require a more fundamental redesign.Our guess: only new PC microprocessors, though potentially Intel could re spin existing processors, especially for cloud servers. Doing so, however, would open up the possibility of an actual recall, something that Intel doesn t seem to be indicating as part of its  everything is fine  guidance. To reassure customers, some chips might carry a suffix to assure buyers that the mitigations are built in.





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