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Updated 2025-08-28 21:45
Indian developer educator Scaler moves to America with $11k online courses
MOOC dropouts, boot camp avoiders, and college-averse students sought Developers in the US with $11,000 to spend, three spare nights a week, and a desire to level up to become an engineering manager or architect have a new education provider to consider: Indian company Scaler, which has made America its first overseas destination.…
Vivaldi email client released 7 years after first announcement
Multiple accounts, local storage, calendars, and feeds make it worth the wait Browser maker Vivaldi's email client has finally hit version 1.0, seven years after it was first announced.…
Linux Mint adopts Timeshift from overworked original developer
Team lead Clement Lefebvre takes over maintaining backup tool from UMix creator The Linux Mint XApps suite of cross-desktop accessories has a new member – the Timeshift backup tool.…
UK police to spend tens of millions on legacy comms network kit
More evidence of where that half-a-billion-a-year cost of Emergency Services Network delay is going The UK's police service is set to spend up to £50 million ($62.7 million) buying hardware and software for a legacy communication network that was planned to become obsolete in 2019.…
Google calculates Pi to 100 trillion digits
Claims world record run took 157 days, 23 hours … and just one Debian server Google has put its cloud to work calculating the value of Pi all the way out to 100 trillion digits, and claimed that's a world record for Pi-crunching.…
Microsoft trumpets updated HR-friendly policies (that comply with recently changed laws)
Bins non-competes and promises salary transparency Microsoft has announced changes to labour relations policy for its US workforce that touch on noncompete clauses, confidentiality agreements and pay transparency.…
Good news for GNOME fans as Adaptive Sync displays come to Mutter
It may sound like a trivial feature, but this sort of thing matters, and not only to gamers In a sign of how display handling is evolving, the GNOME desktop's 3D-compositing Mutter window manager is gaining support for variable refresh rate (VRR, also known as Adaptive Sync) displays.…
Infosys celebrates first birthday of glitchy Indian tax portal by fixing another bug
Search fail added to list of embarrassing issues since debut Infosys celebrated the first anniversary of the e-filing portal it built for India's tax authorities fixing another prominent glitch – this time a search functionality error.…
AI to help study first images from James Webb Space Telescope
To find dark matter and early galaxies, Morpheus could be The One Scientists around the world are gearing up to study the first images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, which are to be released on July 12.…
AI chatbot trained on posts from web sewer 4chan behaved badly – just like human members
Bot was booted for being bothersome A prankster researcher has trained an AI chatbot on over 134 million posts to notoriously freewheeling internet forum 4chan, then set it live on the site before it was swiftly banned.…
Five Eyes alliance’s top Cop says techies are the future of law enforcement
Crims have weaponized tech and certain States let them launder the proceeds Australian Federal Police (AFP) commissioner Reece Kershaw has accused un-named nations of helping organized criminals to use technology to commit and launder the proceeds of crime, and called for international collaboration to developer technologies that counter the threats that behaviour creates.…
Singapore's Grab enters maps-as-a-service market
Takes on global players with data sourced from customers, plus paid contributions from delivery drivers Singapore's Uber equivalent, Grab, has decided to offer its homegrown maps as a service and asserts it will offer faster and more accurate spatial services than the likes of Google and HERE Technologies.…
Supply chain attacks will get worse: Microsoft Security Response Center boss
Do you know all of your software dependencies? Spoiler alert: hardly anybody is on top of it RSA Conference Major supply-chain attacks of recent years – we're talking about SolarWinds, Kaseya and Log4j to name a few – are "just the tip of the iceberg at this point," according to Aanchal Gupta, who leads Microsoft's Security Response Center.…
VMware customers fear Broadcom acquisition will stall innovation, increase cost
Gartner advises renegotiating subscriptions now to avoid ‘dramatic’ and ‘extraordinary’ price rises Analyst firms S&P Global Market Intelligence and Gartner have both offered negative evaluations of Broadcom's takeover of VMware.…
Now Windows Follina zero-day exploited to infect PCs with Qbot
Data-stealing malware also paired with Black Basta ransomware gang Miscreants are reportedly exploiting the recently disclosed critical Windows Follina zero-day flaw to infect PCs with Qbot, thus aggressively expanding their reach.…
Apple dev roundup: Weather data meets privacy, and other good stuff
No AR/VR glasses but at least RoomPlan will let you make rapid 3D room maps WWDC Apple this week at its Worldwide Developer Conference delivered software development kits (SDKs) for beta versions of its iOS 16, iPadOS 16, macOS 13, tvOS 16, and watchOS 9 platforms.…
Google's Dallas datacenter opens up new cloud region
Okay Google, rustle me up a Lone Star State virtual machine. Google Cloud Platform (GCP) roped the Lone Star State into its cloud empire this week with the launch of its Dallas, Texas region.…
Intel says Sapphire Rapids CPU delay will help AMD catch up
Our window to have leading server chips again is narrowing, exec admits While Intel has bagged Nvidia as a marquee customer for its next-generation Xeon Scalable processor, the x86 giant has admitted that a broader rollout of the server chip has been delayed to later this year.…
GitHub drops Atom bomb: Open-source text editor mothballed by end of year
Embrace, extend technology into other products ... and extinguish On December 15, Microsoft's GitHub plans to turn out the lights on Atom, its open-source text editor that has inspired and influenced widely used commercial apps, such as Microsoft Visual Studio Code, Slack, and GitHub Desktop.…
IT downtime not itself going down, power failures most common cause
2022 in a nutshell: Missing SLAs, failing to meet customer expectations Infrastructure operators are struggling to reduce the rate of IT outages despite improving technology and strong investment in this area.…
Google has more reasons why it doesn't like antitrust law that affects Google
It'll ruin Gmail, claims web ads giant Google has a fresh list of reasons why it opposes tech antitrust legislation making its way through Congress but, like others who've expressed discontent, the ad giant's complaints leave out mention of portions of the proposed law that address said gripes.…
Intel to get $7.3b for Germany fab site as TSMC dismisses Europe plans
x86 giant giddy about making chips on the continent, its foundry rival not so much Intel is reportedly set to receive €6.8 billion ($7.3 billion) in subsidies for a massive chip manufacturing campus it's planning in Germany, and the x86 giant apparently won't have to worry about foundry rival TSMC setting up shop anywhere nearby for the time being.…
Microsoft confirms HoloLens boss Alex Kipman to be reorganized out the door
Mixed Reality to cold reality Microsoft has sought to clarify the reasoning behind the imminent departure of HoloLens boss Alex Kipman.…
IBM CEO explains why he offloaded Watson Health: Not enough domain expertise
And not enough customers, Shirley? IBM chairman and CEO Arvind Krishna says it offloaded Watson Health this year because it doesn't have the requisite vertical expertise in the healthcare sector.…
Feds raid dark web market selling data on 24 million Americans
SSNDOB sold email addresses, passwords, credit card numbers, SSNs and more US law enforcement has shut down another dark web market, seizing and dismantling SSNDOB, a site dealing in stolen personal information.…
Western Digital open to spinning out flash, hard disk businesses
Messrs Elliott strike again Western Digital has confirmed the board is considering "strategic alternatives" for the storage supplier, including spinning out its flash and hard disk businesses.…
Intel offers 'server on a card' reference design for network security
OEMs thrown a NetSec Accelerator that plugs into server PCIe slots RSA Conference Intel has released a reference design for a plug-in security card aimed at delivering improved network and security processing without requiring the additional rackspace a discrete appliance would need.…
Oracle closes $28.3b Cerner buy amid warnings of commercial challenges
Database titan 'does not buy companies and then lowers costs' Oracle has closed the acquisition of Cerner Corporation, a specialist in healthcare software, in a deal set to be worth $28.3 billion.…
Next major update of Windows 11 prepares for launch
Microsoft's flagship OS still leagues behind predecessor in terms of adoption The next major version of Windows 11 is drawing near with the code hitting the Insider Release Preview Channel.…
Citrix research: Bosses and workers don't see eye to eye over hybrid work
Are you working, or watching daytime TV? 80% of leaders have either installed monitoring software or are considering it... Research by Citrix shows business leaders don't entirely trust their employees when it comes to hybrid work.…
Windows on Arm users finally receive Native PowerToys
A full two years after the release of Surface Pro X, but they're ready for action There was good news overnight for the niche of Windows on Arm users as Microsoft released a native Arm64 version of PowerToys.…
Sungard UK offloads three datacenters to Redcentric
But only if enough customers sign new contracts... confirmation deadline is 21 June Managed service provider Redcentric is buying the "business and assets" of three datacenters owned by troubled Sungard Availability Services but it'll only complete if a volume of customers agree to new contracts.…
AI and ML could save the planet – or add more fuel to the climate fire
'Staggering amount of computation' deployed to solve big problems uses a lot of electricity AI is killing the planet. Wait, no – it's going to save it. According to Hewlett Packard Enterprise VP of AI and HPC Evan Sparks and professor of machine learning Ameet Talwalkar from Carnegie Mellon University, it's not entirely clear just what AI might do for – or to – our home planet.…
I love the Linux desktop, but that doesn't mean I don't see its problems all too well
Fragmentation has put paid to the dream of Linux ever being bigger than Windows Comment Recently, The Register's Liam Proven wrote tongue in cheek about the most annoying desktop Linux distros. He inspired me to do another take.…
Beijing-backed baddies target unpatched networking kit to attack telcos
NSA, FBI and CISA issue joint advisory that suggests China hardly has to work for this – flaws revealed in 2017 are among their entry points State-sponsored Chinese attackers are actively exploiting old vulnerabilities to "establish a broad network of compromised infrastructure" then using it to attack telcos and network services providers.…
Photonic processor can classify millions of images faster than you can blink
We ask again: Has science gone too far? Engineers at the University of Pennsylvania say they've developed a photonic deep neural network processor capable of analyzing billions of images every second with high accuracy using the power of light.…
US cyber chiefs: Moving to Shields Down isn't gonna happen
Promises new alert notices but warn 'we can sometimes predict thunderstorms but not lightning strikes' RSA Conference A heightened state of defensive cyber security posture is the new normal, according to federal cyber security chiefs speaking at the RSA Conference on Tuesday. This requires greater transparency and threat intel sharing between the government and private sector, they added.…
Makers of ad blockers and browser privacy extensions fear the end is near
Overhaul of Chrome add-ons set for January, Google says it's for all our own good Special report Seven months from now, assuming all goes as planned, Google Chrome will drop support for its legacy extension platform, known as Manifest v2 (Mv2). This is significant if you use a browser extension to, for instance, filter out certain kinds of content and safeguard your privacy.…
Alibaba continues international expansion – adds two datacenters and a bank
Bit barns in Saudi Arabia, all-digital bank in Singapore Alibaba's cloud business and financial services affiliate Ant Group has expanded further out of China this week, by opening a pair of datacenters in Saudia Arabia and a digital wholesale bank in Singapore.…
Ukraine's secret cyber-defense that blunts Russian attacks: excellent backups
This is why the Viasat attack – rated one of the biggest ever – had little impact RSA Conference The Kremlin-backed cyberattack against satellite communications provider Viasat, which happened an hour before Russia invaded Ukraine, was "one of the biggest cyber events that we have seen, perhaps ever, and certainly in warfare," according to Dmitri Alperovitch, a co-founder of CrowdStrike and chair of security-centric think tank Silverado Policy Accelerator.…
Another VPN quits India, as government proposes social media censorship powers
New Delhi now fighting criticism of eroding free speech and privacy with two proposed regulations India's tech-related policies continue to create controversy, with fresh objections raised to a pair of proposed regulation packages.…
Enemies Waymo, Uber now friends making self-driving-ish trucks for US highways
When you think about it, it makes cents Waymo and Uber announced on Tuesday a "long-term strategic partnership" promising to work together to deploy autonomous freight trucks on US roads, years after both companies fought bitterly over self-driving technology. …
US Copyright Office sued for denying AI model authorship of digital image
What do we want? Robot rights! When do we want them? 01001110 01101111 01110111! The US Copyright Office and its director Shira Perlmutter have been sued for rejecting one man's request to register an AI model as the author of an image generated by the software.…
IBM AI boat to commemorate historic US Mayflower voyage finally lands… in Canada
Nearly two years late and in the wrong country, we welcome our robot overlords IBM's self-sailing Mayflower Autonomous Ship (MAS) has finally crossed the Atlantic albeit more than a year and a half later than planned. Still, congratulations to the team.…
Nvidia taps Intel’s Sapphire Rapids CPU for Hopper-powered DGX H100
A win against AMD as a much bigger war over AI compute plays out Nvidia has chosen Intel's next-generation Xeon Scalable processor, known as Sapphire Rapids, to go inside its upcoming DGX H100 AI system to showcase its flagship H100 GPU.…
IBM finally shutters Russian operations, lays off staff
Axing workers under 40 must feel like a novel concept for Big Blue After freezing operations in Russia earlier this year, IBM has told employees it is ending all work in the country and has begun laying off staff. …
Cable cut blamed for global four-hour internet disruption
Google Cloud, OVHcloud say everything's getting back to normal, which is a shame Google Cloud and other internet service providers are recovering from network issues attributed to a network cable cut that began in the Middle East and Asia just before 0700 PDT (1400 UTC).…
Next six months could set a new pace for work-life balance
The only way to ease transition back to office is reduce the time in the office Poll As return-to-office attempts continue to fail for big tech businesses, another proposed change to the work world is gaining steam: The four-day week.…
MongoDB announces columnstore indexing for its document database
Boost to in-database analytics should help replace some human decision-making, vendor claims MongoDB, the company behind the document store database, has unveiled columnstore indexing designed to help developers build analytical queries into their applications.…
Microsoft updates Azure Form Recognizer: Invoices go multi-language
Power Apps Express Design doesn't get to have all the AI fun Days after the debut of doodle-recognizing Express Design on the Power Apps platform, Microsoft has updated its Azure sibling: Form Recognizer.…
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