this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
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Nvidia has confirmed "Globes" report that it has chosen the Israel Land Authority (ILA) area in Kiryat Tivon to build its huge campus that will accommodate up to 10,000 employees.

According to the illustration published by the US chip giant, this will be a large campus inspired by the design of the company’s new iconic headquarters in Santa Clara. When built it will be surrounded by commercial areas and restaurants with investment in parks and green spaces.

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[–] hendrik@palaver.p3x.de 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago) (1 children)

Sure. I'm not entirely sure how PCIE works these days. But in it good old days we had methods to read pretty much arbitrary memory regions via PCIE or early Thunderbolt(?).

I just figured it'd be massively complicated to wait for the user to pull something on the screen, do computationally expensive OCR, some AI image detection to puzzle documents back together, and then you'd only get a fraction of what's really stored on the computer and you'd still need a way to send that information home... When you could just pick a plethora of easy options like read all the files from the harddisk and send just them somewhere. I think it's far more likely they do some easy and straightforward solution. And it'd be more effective as well.

[–] WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

do computationally expensive OCR

I think that's easier to do for GPUs than CPUs, and they could do it nonstop with say a 5 fps rate.

but also now that I think of it more, the graphics card doesn't really need to do all this, the manufacturer given binary blob kernel driver has easier access to disk and network