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Updated 2025-05-16 10:01
Compatibility mess breaks not one but two Windows password tools
Windows LAPS and legacy LAPS don't play nicely under certain conditions, Microsoft says Integrating the Local Administrator Password Solution (LAPS) into Windows and Windows Server that came with updates earlier this week is causing interoperability problems with what's called legacy LAPS, Microsoft says.…
FerretDB 1.0 offers fresh approach to open source document databases
How to PostgreSQL MongoDB out of the equation Halfway up a Himalayan mountain might not be the usual place to start a database company but then maybe FerretDB is not a usual company.…
China the largest buyer of chipmaking machines as sales hit an all-time high
Despite US blocks to advanced technology nodes Global sales of semiconductor fab equipment grew by 5 percent during 2022 to hit an all-time high, with China the largest buyer despite a fall in its investment amid the standoff with the US over access to chips and other technology.…
Ex-CIO must pay £81k over Total Shambles Bank migration
Yes, the week-long IT meltdown that sparked a multitude of sarcastic Reg headlines TSB's chief information officer during the British bank's incredible week-long 2018 meltdown didn't check the key supplier responsible for the migration was prepared to push the button before he assured the board that it was, regulators found yesterday.…
The return of the classic Flying Toasters screensaver
OK, here's my question: Would you like to have it on x86 Linux? Friday FOSS Fest If you're old enough to remember After Dark, you might appreciate this: a new screensaver. Yes, in 2023. It was never really about saving screens.…
LiquidStack CEO on why you shouldn't ignore immersion cooling
Depending on use case, the efficiency gains can be significant Interview As chipmakers demand more power than ever, with some chips pushing 700 or even 1,000 watts in the case of some of Nvidia's upcoming parts, datacenter operators are having to get creative about the way they cool these chips.…
While Twitter wants to sell its verification, Microsoft will do it for free on LinkedIn
Redmond expands a digital ID process for its platform as Musk seeks cash for blue check marks As Elon Musk tears at Twitter's credibility by demanding businesses and individuals pay for their blue verification checks, Microsoft is pushing ts own free digital ID technology to companies and their employees on LinkedIn.…
Red Hat at 30: Biggest Linux company of them all still pushing to become cloud power
Middle aged spread begins as it joins IBM Opinion When you turn 30, you're not a kid anymore. For some of us, 30 is a traumatic birthday. For Red Hat, which turned on March 27, it was a cause for celebration. From a business that got started in one of its co-founder's wife's sewing room, it became the first billion-dollar pure-play open-source company and then the engine driving IBM. …
Automation is great. Until it breaks and nobody gets paid
An ill-considered cron job turned into a nasty 2AM job On Call With Friday upon us, and a weekend next on the schedule, The Register once again brings you an instalment of On Call, our weekly reader-contributed tales of being dragged out at all hours to fix failures inflicted by the foolish, flummoxed, or fatuous.…
Linux kernel logic allowed Spectre attack on 'major cloud provider'
Kernel 6.2 ditched a useful defense against ghostly chip design flaw The Spectre vulnerability that has haunted hardware and software makers since 2018 continues to defy efforts to bury it.…
Germany and Intel both want more from planned Magdeburg mega-fab
Chipzilla reportedly wants more cash. Germany wants a bigger facility. And the EU is lurking with a bigger offer If Intel wants larger subsidies for its Magdeburg mega-fab, German officials think the x86 giant should increase its investments to match.…
To improve security, consider how the aviation industry stopped blaming pilots
Pilot turned CISO says when admitting to an error isn't seen as a failure, improvement becomes easier to achieve To improve security, the cybersecurity industry needs to follow the aviation industry's shift from a blame culture to a "just" culture, according to director of the Information Systems Audit and Control Association Serge Christiaans.…
Sony Semiconductor sinks Simoleans into Raspberry Pi to advance edge AI
Raspboss Eben Upton teases products built on AI-enabled edge sensors Sony Semiconductor Solutions Corporation has revealed it’s made a “strategic investment” in Raspberry Pi Ltd, the designer of popular single board computers.…
AWS debuts generative-AI-as-a-service that's so smart you'll pay for it twice
Amazon Bedrock offers APIs for multiple models, plus EC2 to run 'em and create custom LLMs On Thursday Amazon Web Services announced a new API platform, named Bedrock, that hosts generative AI models built by top startups AI21 Labs, Anthropic, and Stability AI on its cloud services.…
Tencent said to have demoted and fired tech bosses after brief outages
Think the news has execs at Microsoft 365 or AWS quaking in their boots? A late March outage of Tencent's two major social platforms, WeChat and QQ, resulted in the firing of managers and directors, thereby proving that the hand of justice at the Chinese tech giant is, well, rather strong.…
Google Pay mistakenly rains free cash on netizens
Go on, take the money and run (Not actual legal advice) Google has — unfortunately for some — fixed a bug in its Pay mobile app that was handing out free money to people.…
Intel pulls plug on server system design division
Blueprints flogged off to Taiwan's MiTAC An Intel division responsible for designing and planning out server-grade systems is the latest victim on CEO Pat Gelsinger's chopping block.…
Don't worry, folks, here comes Chuck Schumer with some ideas about regulating AI
As Europe forms task force to steer probes into ChatGPT US Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is lately bent on passing bipartisan legislation enabling independent public audits of commercial AI products before they're unleashed on the world.…
Pentagon super-leak suspect cuffed: 21-year-old Air National Guardsman
When bragging about your job on Discord gets just a little out of hand? The FBI has detained a 21-year-old Air National Guardsman suspected of leaking a trove of classified Pentagon documents on Discord.…
Microsoft mucks with PrtScr key for first time in decades
In Windows 11 it'll soon default to the Snipping Tool. And that's just fine with users, right? Now that Microsoft has put that whole "aCropalypse" privacy problem in the rear view, the software maker is ready to get the Snipping Tool feature in front of more Windows 11 users.…
IT boss arrested over Cash App exec Bob Lee death
Alleged killer said to be industry pal, faces one count of murder Updated San Francisco police have arrested a man in connection with the killing of tech executive Robert Lee.…
Energy efficiency starts to rock telcos' 5G infrastructure choices
And not only because not considering their options makes them look bad Sustainability goals such as greater energy efficiency have risen up the agenda with telecoms operators, to the point where these concerns are now claimed to be affecting network architecture decisions for the next phase of 5G deployments.…
Twitter users can now trade stocks on the platform – sort of
Musk's everything app begins to take shape ... by adding links to an outside service In what looks to be another move to turn it into Elon Musk's dream "everything app," Twitter will begin allowing its users to trade stocks via "social trading company" eToro.…
Double BSD birthday bash beckons – or triple, if you count MidnightBSD 3.0
Both FreeBSD 13.2 and OpenBSD 7.3 are here New point releases of both the general-purpose Linux rival FreeBSD and the security-focused, traditional and rather minimalist OpenBSD have landed.…
Boffins rewrite the book on how Earth's oceans developed
You don't need alien asteroids, you just need a hydrogen-rich atmosphere and liquid hot magma A new research model shows that Earth's oceans could have formed from interactions between a hydrogen-rich early atmosphere and oxygen within the planet's magma.…
Are accelerators the cure to video's power problem or just an excuse to peddle GPUs?
You could just watch less TikTok or Twitch, maybe go outside Analysis There's no denying the fact that streaming video is insanely popular – now accounting for upwards of 80 percent of all internet traffic, according to some estimates.…
It's time to reveal all recommendation algorithms – by law if necessary
We should know why we see what we see, not be left in the dark Column As it’s been about forty years since I’ve had pimples, it astounds me that YouTube’s recommendation engine recently served me videos of people with some really severe skin problems - generally on their noses. The preview images themselves are horrifying, and should really come with some sort of content warning. I immediately tell YouTube “I don’t want this” and “never recommend this channel.”…
OVH punts hybrid water and immersion cooling for high performance systems
Air by itself just doesn't cut it anymore European cloud operator OVHcloud has just celebrated 20 years of using water cooling technology in its datacenters, leading up to the development of a hybrid system that combines both water and immersion cooling to drive greater efficiency when operating demanding workloads.…
Fancy trying the granddaddy of Windows NT for free? Now's your chance
VSI releases OpenVMS 9.2-1 and x86 hobby licenses VMS Software Inc (VSI) has opened its hobbyist licensing scheme for the x86-64 version of one of the most reliable OSes in the business.…
Launching today: ESA's Juice spacecraft to probe Jupiter's moons for life signs
We speak to professor deeply involved in multi-year, billion-plus-euro mission Updated On December 4, 1973, NASA's Pioneer 10 became the first spacecraft to observe Jupiter up close, zipping by at a distance of 82,000 miles above its swirling clouds. Its twin probe, Pioneer 11, followed a year later, and got three times closer to the gas giant. Now the European Space Agency is about to try for an even closer look at the biggest planet in our locale.…
Italy will say ciao to ChatGPT ban if OpenAI does indeed think of the children
And also, privacy safeguards Italy's privacy watchdog will lift the country's ban on ChatGPT if OpenAI agrees to enforce rules protecting minors and users' personal data by April 30, it announced on Wednesday. …
Europe moves to derail Broadcom's VMware takeover
Strangling competition won't fly here, says Brussels The European Commission has filed a statement of objections regarding Broadcom's proposed purchase of VMware, which the EC said may be harmful to competition.…
Worried about the security of your code's dependencies? Try Google's Deps.dev
Is this what the kids mean by owning the libs? In early 2002, then Microsoft chairman Bill Gates issued his Trustworthy Computing memo to ensure that computing "is as available, reliable and secure as electricity, water services and telephony."…
How insecure is America's FirstNet emergency response system? No one's sure
Senator Wyden warns full probe needed AT&T is "concealing vital cybersecurity reporting" about its FirstNet phone network for first responders and the US military, according to US Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR), who said the network had been dubbed unsafe by CISA.…
FBI: How fake Xi cops prey on Chinese nationals in the US
你好 [insert name], 我在 Ministry of Public Security 工作 [insert shakedown] Criminals posing as law enforcement agents of the Chinese government are shaking down Chinese nationals living the United States by accusing them of financial crimes and threatening to arrest or hurt them if they don't pay, according to the FBI.…
Fortinet's latest firewall promises hyperscale security while sipping power
Need more speed? Just stuff it with custom ASICs Fortinet claims its latest firewall can secure an entire datacenter while consuming about a quarter the power of its competitors.…
San Francisco fog plunges Waymo robo-taxis into chaos
Software fix coming – that'll be a braking change we'd actually like to see A mayhem of self-driving Waymo cars succumbed to San Francisco fog on Tuesday morning and came to a halt, briefly tying up traffic in the city's Balboa Terrace neighborhood.…
NYC Mayor: Robo-pup 'out of the pound' and back to police work
Please don't pair it with ChatGPT, please don't pair it with ChatGPT Video Two Digidog robots will return to New York City for police work despite earlier criticism that ended with the cops terminating a $94,000 contract and sending the remote-controlled machines back to Boston Dynamics.…
America ain't exactly outlawing gas cars but it's steering hard into EVs
Maybe soon all our friends are electric America's Environmental Protection Agency today proposed a bunch of vehicle emissions standards that, while not banning gasoline-powered vehicles outright, could lead to automakers drastically speeding up EV adoption.…
Microsoft's Garage band offers album of experimental Excel jazz
For those who think spreadsheet app isn't wild enough, try some of these potential future widgets Microsoft is going to let organizations try out experimental Excel projects it's working on.…
Colorado sends agricultural right to repair bill to governor
If passed, it'll be the first law in the US to require tractor makers to hand over documentation and parts Updated State legislators in Colorado have advanced an agricultural right to repair bill to Governor Jared Polis's desk for signature that, if passed, would be the first law of its kind in the United States.…
It's time to stop fearing CPU power management
It's (probably) not going to kill your latency and it could save you a buck Feature Over the past few years, we’ve seen the thermal design power (TDP) of all manner of chips creeping steadily higher as chipmakers fight to keep Moore's Law alive, while continuing to deliver higher core counts, faster frequencies, and instructions per clock (IPC) improvements on schedule.…
Elon Musk actually sits down and talks to 'government-funded media' the BBC
Plus: RIP Twitter Inc – it's X Corp now Updated "I said BBC could come [to] Twitter, then, to my surprise, a reporter shows up," Chief Twit Elon Musk announced this morning.…
Arm, Intel make it easier to churn out Arm SoCs from Intel fabs
Energy sipping designs for mobile, ultimately coming to DC, too Intel and Brit chip design outfit Arm have put aside their differences and penned an agreement to make it easier for Arm licensees to have their products manufactured at an Intel fab using an upcoming advanced production node.…
Salesforce lets go of more of its towering presence in San Francisco
Fancy a sublease? Office digs in Silicon Valley hometown hotspot up for grabs Salesforce appears to be pulling out of even more of its San Francisco office tower space, following job cuts and a cost-cutting exercise.…
Goddard Space Flight Center's new boss swears in on holy Pale Blue Dot
Some brilliant toys await Dr Makenzie Lystrup in mega space facility Dr Makenzie Lystrup is the new director at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland – the biggest employer of space exploration techies and scientists in the US – and swore in using the consecrated tome beloved by many a Reg reader, Carl Sagan's Pale Blue Dot.…
UK govt wants standalone 5G by 2030 but won't shell out to help hit target
Instead tech department working on 'range of measures' to foster investment The UK government's updated telecoms strategy wants standalone 5G coverage for all populated areas by 2030, blue-sky funding for 6G research, grants for satellite connections in remote areas, and faster rollout of high-speed broadband.…
Tiny Brit tech firms win spots on £1.84B public sector contract. Kidding, it's the usual suspects
Collective deal to cover software needs for every rung of government The UK government has awarded a contract worth up to £1.84 billion for vertical applications relevant to local authorities.…
Python head hisses at looming Euro cybersecurity rules
Red-tape vague enough to land open source volunteers in hot water for iffy code The Python Software Foundation (PSF) is concerned that proposed EU cybersecurity laws will leave open source organizations and individuals unfairly liable for distributing incorrect code.…
Sanctions-busting exporters sent $2 billion of tech to Russia through China, Hong Kong, and the UK in 2022
Reports find shipments spiked since sanctions were imposed, feeding Moscow's appetite for high-end kit Russia has managed to import over $1 billion of technology despite international sanctions, according to customs data. And some of the contraband was allegedly shipped by a UK-based company.…
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