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25 Oct 2024   
  
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Family of man who died in train crash thank well-wishers
Tudor Evans, 66, from Aberystwyth, died following the crash near Llanbrynmair, Powys, on Monday evening. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

School unaware killer 'spiked' student - inquest
Scarlett Jenkinson had given another student cannabis sweets before being moved to Brianna's school. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Selection headaches as England meet Germany again
England manager Sarina Wiegman has selection headaches as the Lionesses meet Germany for the first time since the Euro 2022 final. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

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The never-ending cruise story
The story of the world cruise stranded for months in Belfast. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Crime up 10% over past year in England and Wales, ONS says
The latest figures show offences including robbery and violence returned to pre-pandemic levels. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

King Charles drinks kava during ritual in Samoa
The monarch was declared a "high chief" of the archipelago during his trip to the country. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

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How did the Turkey aviation company attack unfold?
The Turkish government says at least five people were killed after an attack on aerospace company which manufactures drones and jets for the military. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Sir Chris Hoy 'blown away' by men seeking cancer advice
Six-time Olympic cycling champion Sir Chris Hoy says it is a 'huge comfort' to know that his story could save lives. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

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'The best player in the game'
MVP contender Aaron Judge talks up his rival Shohei Ohtani. 
© 2024 Sydney Morning Herald 4:35am 

Hyperthreading is dead in Intel’s new Core Ultra PC chips
Intel’s latest Arrow Lake processor for desktop PCs fuses its “Meteor Lake” and “Lunar Lake” architectures together, carrying over Meteor Lake’s NPU and Lunar Lake’s abandonment of hyperthreading. Yes, hyperthreading has been banned from Intel’s desktop chips, based on a similar rationale for excluding the feature from Lunar Lake. Arrow Lake, also known as its Core Ultra 200S processor lineup, is Intel’s first “disaggregated” desktop processor, built on tiles, meaning each part of the chip is individually fabricated on a different process. In a twist, Intel unveiled a deep dive into the architecture of Lunar Lake and the models, prices, and performance of the Core Ultra 200S processor. A key omission? Hyperthreading, which also was not part of Intel’s Lunar Lake mobile processor. The story of Arrow Lake is a simple one: More performance and yet substantially less power than the 14th-generation Core chips. And to get there, Intel executives said they applied the same thinking to both Lunar Lake and its next-gen desktop counterpart: Make its cores as efficient as possible, both for power and for space. Update: Intel’s Arrow Lake processors have now launched. How did the efficiency and performance claims stack up? Find out in Core Ultra 9 285K tested: 10 must-know facts about Intel’s radically new CPUs. Gordon Mah Ung also dived deeper into the 285K’s performance in productivity workloads in the deep-dive video below: What is hyperthreading? Hyperthreading (also known as simultaneous multi-threading) is a fairly simple concept: While each processor core is designed to execute one instruction thread, hyperthreading creates a second “virtual” processor inside the single processor core. With hyperthreading, the idea is that the individual processor core is always executing instructions on at least one of the two cores, keeping it in operation the whole time. The last thing enthusiasts want is a CPU core sitting idle when it could be performing useful work. Intel The problem is that the second core is a virtual core, and not a “true” second physical core. That can lead to some contention of resources and additional overhead, enough that the question of whether to leave hyperthreading on or off while gaming has been a source of debate for years. Intel, meanwhile, has gone back and forth on the feature: Some of Intel’s 9th-, 10th-, and 11th-gen Core processors have excluded hyperthreading, such as the Core i7-9700K, and Intel’s Atom chips never used it. Most of Intel’s Core chips do, however. AMD has pretty consistently used hyperthreading, however, and still does. The question has always been: Does hyperthreading deliver a performance increase that surpasses the toll it takes in terms of system latency, the controller die cost, and the power hyperthreading consumes? In Lunar Lake, the answer was “no,” and that has carried over to Intel’s latest desktop chips, too. In part, that’s because Arrow Lake cribs heavily from Lunar Lake, with the same Lion Cove performance cores and the same Skymont efficiency cores that appear in Lunar Lake. Robert Hallock, a vice president and general manager of client AI and technical marketing for Intel, said that Intel basically comes out ahead in terms of power and performance by not using hyperthreading. Arrow Lake includes both desktop and mobile processors, and Hallock was being asked about the desktop implementation of hyperthreading. But it sounds like Hallock’s response applies to both desktop and mobile chips. “It’s a combination of a couple things, actually,” Hallock told reporters. “First, we knew that we can actually save the wattage for hyperthreading by not including it on the product, and you see that we’re still coming out net ahead by roughly 15, 20 percent in [multicore performance] without it. So we’re able to bump up efficiency and still hit our goals in overall compute performance. “The other thing that I would say is, you know, these are the same designs as leveraged from Lunar Lake,” Hallock added. “We took those cores, those designs, and were able to immediately integrate them because of [Intel’s] Foveros [technology]. So that’s the kind of one-two punch that influenced our decision: speed to market and maximizing performance per watt.” Will hyperthreading ever return? It’s possible it could. But it would have to justify itself in terms of performance, power, and die space, and it appears right now that it isn’t making the cut. Editor’s note: This article originally published on October 10, but was updated to include links to Core Ultra 200S review materials. 
© 2024 PC World 4:25am 

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Man who murdered toddler sentenced to 20 years
Ali Jayden Doyle died from head injuries sustained in a house in Park Avenue in Dungannon in August 2021. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

'Virus made me realise how lucky I am' - Young on England return
Twelve months after a serious virus wrecked his England hopes, winger Dom Young is back, ready to make up for lost time as they face a two-Test series against Samoa, live on the BBC. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Smith and late wickets boost England against Pakistan
Jamie Smith’s fabulous 89 and a trio of late wickets gave England the upper hand on a breathless first day of the third and deciding Test against Pakistan in Rawalpindi. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

The King's Balmoral estate 'has no plans' to become wedding venue
Plans to upgrade facilities for events and functions at the estate do not mean it will host commercial weddings. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Lebanon: Satellite imagery reveals intensity of Israeli bombing
Israel damaged more buildings in two weeks than in a year of fighting with Hezbollah, data shows. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Pub boss warns of closures with many landlords making only 12p a pint
The boss of Britain's biggest pubs group urges the chancellor to extend business rates relief. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Watch out for misuse of obesity jabs, doctors warned
It follows reports of a rise in numbers of people who are not obese, becoming very sick. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Tomato producer's lights mistaken for 'lovely aurora'
A woman's excitement at sharing photos on social media is short lived. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Lucy Letby loses bid to appeal against conviction
The former nurse's bid to challenge her conviction for the attempted murder of a baby is dismissed. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

UK will not pay out over slavery, says Reeves
The chancellor says she understands why countries are making demands but the UK will not pay out. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

Chancellor to change debt rules to release billions for infrastructure spending
Rachel Reeves tells the BBC the change will allow the government to borrow more money - but cuts are still expected in her first Budget next week. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 5:05am 

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