• nVidea's N1 chip

    From crasso@3:633/10 to All on Monday, June 01, 2026 08:43:56
    Anyone have any info/talking points about motherboards being built for
    their new AI chip that eliminates mouse and keyboard? https://gizmodo.com/nvidia-now-has-a-laptop-chip-and-you-can-probably-guess-what-its-built-for-2000765440?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/01/nvidia-launches-chip-ai-laptops-pc-rtx-spark-microsoft-windows

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.15
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Paul@3:633/10 to All on Monday, June 01, 2026 15:21:07
    On Mon, 6/1/2026 8:43 AM, crasso@nycap.rr.com wrote:
    Anyone have any info/talking points about motherboards being built for
    their new AI chip that eliminates mouse and keyboard? https://gizmodo.com/nvidia-now-has-a-laptop-chip-and-you-can-probably-guess-what-its-built-for-2000765440

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/01/nvidia-launches-chip-ai-laptops-pc-rtx-spark-microsoft-windows


    Did you know, that in a gold rush, people would buy
    shovels without handles ?

    I'm trying to imagine why you would want this in a
    laptop form factor, when it's only going to be useful
    if used in an OpenClaw cluster.

    Paul

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.15
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From crasso@3:633/10 to All on Monday, June 01, 2026 21:01:06
    On Mon, 1 Jun 2026 15:21:07 -0400, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On Mon, 6/1/2026 8:43 AM, crasso@nycap.rr.com wrote:
    Anyone have any info/talking points about motherboards being built for
    their new AI chip that eliminates mouse and keyboard?
    https://gizmodo.com/nvidia-now-has-a-laptop-chip-and-you-can-probably-guess-what-its-built-for-2000765440

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/01/nvidia-launches-chip-ai-laptops-pc-rtx-spark-microsoft-windows


    Did you know, that in a gold rush, people would buy
    shovels without handles ?

    I'm trying to imagine why you would want this in a
    laptop form factor, when it's only going to be useful
    if used in an OpenClaw cluster.

    Paul


    Of course I had to Google 'Open Claw' and I don't want it near any
    computer of mine. Sounds like the invasive stuff usoft keeps trying to
    pump into Win11. Those news articles made it seem new and exciting.

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.15
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Paul@3:633/10 to All on Monday, June 01, 2026 22:07:27
    On Mon, 6/1/2026 9:01 PM, crasso@nycap.rr.com wrote:
    On Mon, 1 Jun 2026 15:21:07 -0400, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On Mon, 6/1/2026 8:43 AM, crasso@nycap.rr.com wrote:
    Anyone have any info/talking points about motherboards being built for
    their new AI chip that eliminates mouse and keyboard?
    https://gizmodo.com/nvidia-now-has-a-laptop-chip-and-you-can-probably-guess-what-its-built-for-2000765440

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/01/nvidia-launches-chip-ai-laptops-pc-rtx-spark-microsoft-windows


    Did you know, that in a gold rush, people would buy
    shovels without handles ?

    I'm trying to imagine why you would want this in a
    laptop form factor, when it's only going to be useful
    if used in an OpenClaw cluster.

    Paul


    Of course I had to Google 'Open Claw' and I don't want it near any
    computer of mine. Sounds like the invasive stuff usoft keeps trying to
    pump into Win11. Those news articles made it seem new and exciting.


    I've seen pictures of this. Someone will have a wall in a room at home,
    and they have right angle mounts bolted to the wall, and several thousand dollars worth of computer sits on each mount (these are bigger than a mini-PC but relatively volume-efficient). And there might be ten to twenty of them.
    And OpenClaw would be an example of a tool for harnessing all of them, in a semi-parallel way. For example, you might be writing software, one machine
    has a Python setup for actually running the code, there are test benches,
    the software writing machine makes modifications to the code, until the bugs are removed. That doesn't say the code is "good", merely that the
    loop is closed and the code has met some "expectation" the operator crafted.

    This is fine if you have a large bankroll for the equipment. I suspect
    some of the people doing this, have worked incrementally, using the income
    from one project, to buy another machine and bolt it to the wall.

    You might need some custom wiring for the room, and multiple breakers
    in the panel downstairs to swing it, when the thing is railed and working.

    You might also need theft insurance :-)

    One of my buddies at work, started a business years ago, and he
    put steel plates in his basement windows for the equipment and people
    in the basement. Eventually when the business got large enough,
    he leased space elsewhere. Maybe what he was doing, was violating
    some fire code (only one exit...), but that's just the way he operates.
    So that's how you do it, how you secure a computer-intensive business,
    steel plates over the basement windows. Don't forget to paint them a
    festive color (black). You would not want to attract attention.

    Paul

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.15
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)