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by Lindsay Clark on (#60X02)
Or move to Apache Pulsar for efficiency gains, says NoSQL vendor DataStax, the database company built around open-source wide-column Apache Cassandra, has launched a streaming platform as a service with backwards compatibility for messaging standards JMS, MQ, and Kafka.…
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2025-05-04 08:30 |
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by Lindsay Clark on (#60X03)
ERP vendor had promised containerized options, but looks set to focus on the cloud ERP vendor Infor is to end development of on-premises and containerized versions of its core product for customers running on IBM iSeries mid-range systems.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#60WXA)
Next stop – on-chip optical interconnects? Intel is claiming a significant advancement in its photonics research with an eight-wavelength laser array that is integrated on a silicon wafer, marking another step on the road to on-chip optical interconnects.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#60WT1)
Company execs and their lawyers are paying close attention to this one A US judge yesterday threw out an attempt to dismiss wire fraud charges against a former Uber employee accused of trying to cover up a computer crime.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60WT2)
Not trying to spin this as a Linux security hole, surely? Microsoft is flagging up a security hole in its Service Fabric technology when using containerized Linux workloads, and urged customers to upgrade their clusters to the most recent release.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#60WQT)
China claims to have 10 in the pipeline and may pull ahead in HPC arms race The US Department of Energy is looking to vendors that will help build supercomputers up to 10 times faster than the recently inaugurated Frontier exascale system to come on stream between 2025 and 2030, and even more powerful systems than that for the 2030s.…
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by Liam Proven on (#60WNF)
The Reg FOSS deck takes the latest release, 22.6, for a spin EndeavourOS is a rolling-release Linux distro based on Arch Linux. Although the project is relatively new, having started in 2019, it's the successor to an earlier Arch-based distro called Antergos, so it's not quite as immature as its youth might imply. It's a little more vanilla than Antergos was – for instance, it uses the Calamares cross-distro installer.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#60WKP)
Delays risk accounting and government compliance, documents reveal Swansea City Council has been forced to extend an IT service provider contract to keep its unsupported and unpatched ERP system up and running because its replacement is running two years behind.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60WHS)
Consumer-grade camera was refitted with custom housing and software to survive in the vacuum NanoAvionics has unveiled a 4K satellite selfie taken by a GoPro Hero 7 as the company's MP42 microsatellite flew 550km above the Coral Sea and Great Barrier Reef.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60WG0)
'If you ever were rooting for somebody, please do him a favor and go tell him' Jeffrey Snover's lengthy and occasionally controversial term at Microsoft is to come to an end this week, as the PowerShell inventor sets off for pastures new after more than two decades at the Windows giant.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#60WEF)
Gets a grip on tech from Japanese startup to make it work The Japanese outpost of Indian services giant Tata Consultancy Services has revealed it is working on the "Internet of Actions" – an effort to bring the sense of touch to the internet.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#60WD2)
All these worlds are yours, except Europa. Attempt no landing there. Use them together, use them in peace Scientists at top universities in China propose sending a spacecraft powered by nuclear fission to orbit Neptune – the outermost planet in our solar system – in 2030.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60WD3)
The whiff of rebellion among Cloud Solution Providers is getting stronger Microsoft has indefinitely postponed the date on which its Cloud Solution Providers (CSPs) will be required to sell software and services licences on new terms.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#60WD4)
Yes. Of course I human. Why asking? Also, when you give passwords to database? The US FBI issued a warning on Tuesday that it was has received increasing numbers of complaints relating to the use of deepfake videos during interviews for tech jobs that involve access to sensitive systems and information.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60WB3)
Hyperscalers have ordered more than they need, and the ripples are nasty The world's server market will grow in 2022 – but more slowly than in the past – and could dip further, according to analyst firm TrendForce.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#60W9X)
Rogue insider generated keys, resold them to blow the cash on gold, crypto, and more, prosecutors say Three people accused of selling pirate software licenses worth more than $88 million have been charged with fraud.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60W8C)
It’s not IaaS, it's reserved for test and dev – and will feed the golden goose that is the z/OS ecosystem IBM has quietly announced its first-ever cloudy mainframes will go live on June 30.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60W7F)
Store giant brands watchdog's lawsuit 'factually misguided, legally flawed' America's Federal Trade Commission has sued Walmart, claiming it turned a blind eye to fraudsters using its money transfer services to con folks out of "hundreds of millions of dollars."…
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by Dan Robinson on (#60W6J)
Looks like it went with Ampere – which means a certain Reg writer lost a bet Arm has a champion in the shape of HPE, which has added a server powered by the British chip designer's CPU cores to its ProLiant portfolio, aimed at cloud-native workloads for service providers and enterprise customers alike.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#60W6K)
NOAA makes it rain for General Dynamics IT, HPE, AMD Predicting the weather is a notoriously tricky enterprise, but that’s never held back America's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#60W52)
Just after Big Tech comes under fire for left and right-leaning message filters Google has reportedly asked the US Federal Election Commission for its blessing to exempt political campaign solicitations from spam filtering.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#60W2G)
Beijing-linked Dragonbridge flames biz building Texas plant for Uncle Sam The US Department of Defense said it's investigating Chinese disinformation campaigns against rare earth mining and processing companies — including one targeting Lynas Rare Earths, which has a $30 million contract with the Pentagon to build a plant in Texas.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#60W02)
Websites may be forced to verify ages of visitors unless changes made California lawmakers met in Sacramento today to discuss, among other things, proposed legislation to protect children online. The bill, AB2273, known as The California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act, would require websites to verify the ages of visitors.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60VV9)
Gun-detecting AI outfits want to help while root causes need tackling Comment More than 250 mass shootings have occurred in the US so far this year, and AI advocates think they have the solution. Not gun control, but better tech, unsurprisingly.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#60VVA)
Chip design house reveals brains of what might be your next ultralight notebook Arm has at least one of Intel's more capable mainstream laptop processors in mind with its Cortex-X3 CPU design.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#60VR4)
What's your contingency plan? OPINION Broadcom has yet to close the deal on taking over VMware, but the industry is already awash with speculation and analysis as to how the event could impact the cloud giant's product availability and pricing.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60VR5)
Epic copyright saga rumbles on as US giant vows to keep fighting UK data analytics firm The long-running battle between software giant SAS and British data analytics outfit World Programming (WPL) appears to be almost over – after a US court lifted an injunction on sales of the latter's products.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#60VNC)
Plus: IT giant expands relationship with Red Hat and SUSE, tackles hybrid data fabrics Extending a public-cloud-like experience to on-prem datacenters has long been a promise of HPE's GreenLake anything-as-a-service (XaaS) platform. At HPE Discover this week, the company made good on that promise with the launch of GreenLake for Private Cloud.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#60VND)
Inertia of embedded BI and analytics a limiting factor, however Databricks, the company born out of the Apache Spark boom, has let loose a raft of updates at its San Francisco conference, including an elastic compute option for analytics.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60VNE)
Just one more wafer-thin feature to pop in Microsoft's swelling dev suite Microsoft has added the ability to edit code while in Visual Studio's All-In-One Search user interface.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60VJM)
Cloudy vSphere+ can manage multiple on-prem environments but not VMw-powered public clouds… for now VMware today revealed details about Project Arctic, the vSphere-as-a-service offering it teased in late 2021, though it won't discuss pricing for another month.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#60VG0)
British chip designer’s reveal comes months after mobile RT moves by AMD, Imagination Arm is beefing up its role in the rapidly-evolving (yet long-standing) hardware-based real-time ray tracing arena.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#60VG1)
Gyrotrons can super heat plasma, maybe vaporize 20km of rock, too A piece of Soviet-era physics equipment may be the key to worldwide geothermal energy.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#60VDA)
Meanwhile, CEO wants to vacuum up engineering talent amid return to stock market Updated Arm today told The Reg its restructuring ahead of its return to the stock market is focused on cutting "non-engineering" jobs.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#60VAD)
It's easier than retraining PostgreSQL devs, says distributed relational database startup YugabyteDB, the self-styled double-decker distributed relational database, has introduced a read-committed isolation level, allowing for more flexibility for devs and bringing it into step with its more established RDBMS rivals.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#60VAE)
Appointments said to 'strengthen the alignment between shareholders and management' Toshiba has appointed two directors from activist hedge funds to its board in a move that could tip the balance in favor of a sale that would take the company into private ownership.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60V8P)
25kg CubeSat the size of a bar fridge will plot course for Gateway space station, pave way for human boots on Moon Rocket Lab has sent NASA's Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment (CAPSTONE) spacecraft on its way to the Moon atop an Electron rocket launched from New Zealand.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60V6J)
UK outfit's all-electric 630 three-wheeler is eccentric, but supply chain issues are less whimsical Electric vehicles continue to generate headlines while slurping energy from the power grids, but even smaller producers are struggling with supply chain issues.…
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by Richard Speed on (#60V4Q)
Moving to series production and dealing with the US, where things are done slightly differently Interview NASA has set late August as the launch window for its much-delayed Artemis I rocket. Already perched atop the booster is the first flight-ready European Service Module (ESM). Five more are in the pipeline.…
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by Liam Proven on (#60V30)
DOS isn't dead. You can still run it and its apps, even now FOSS Fest There are still ways to run DOS apps under 64-bit Windows and Linux, and a lot of free apps to choose from.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#60V1S)
Communists reckon Bill Gates and Warren Buffet got it right Executives at China's Blockchain-based Service Network (BSN) – a state-backed initiative aimed at driving the commercial adoption of blockchain technology – labelled cryptocurrency "the biggest Ponzi scheme in human history" in state-sponsored media on Sunday.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60V0D)
Fanless fun for the whole family (if the supply chain functions) Cisco has shrunk its Catalyst 9200 switches into three compact models.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#60TZG)
Cash had been burning a hole in company's pocket after deal to buy Siltronic fell through Taiwan's GlobalWafers announced on Monday a new use for the $5 billion it first earmarked for a purchase of Germany's Siltronics: building a 300-millimeter semiconductor wafer plant in the US state of Texas.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60TYD)
Could it be Beijing was right about games being bad for China? Chinese web giant Tencent has admitted to a significant account hijack attack on its QQ.com messaging and social media platform.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#60TVF)
Helpfully announced extension on deadline day India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) and the local Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) have extended the deadline for compliance with the Cyber Security Directions introduced on April 28, which were due to take effect yesterday.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#60TTD)
How many messaging services does this web giant need? It's gotta be over 9,000 Google is winding down its messaging app Hangouts before it officially shuts in November, the web giant announced on Monday.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#60TSG)
Though severity up for debate, and limited chips affected, broken tests hold back previous patch from distribution The latest version of OpenSSL v3, a widely used open-source library for secure networking using the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, contains a memory corruption vulnerability that imperils x64 systems with Intel's Advanced Vector Extensions 512 (AVX512).…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#60TPY)
Don't worry, the tweetings will continue until morale improves Employees at Tesla suffered spotty Wi-Fi and struggled to find desks and parking spots when they were returned to work at the office following orders from CEO Elon Musk.…
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