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Updated 2025-05-22 18:45
Four new bugs? You shouldn't have: Microsoft celebrates 45 years with dollop of borkage on Windows Insider Fast Ring
Also: Skype goes attention-seeking and Edge shares its scrolling smarts with Chromium Roundup Got time on your hands and an enterprise running on Microsoft 365? The Windows giant wants to hear from you in this week's quick 'n' dirty rundown of Redmond news.…
Roaring trade in zero-days means more vulns are falling into the hands of state spies, warn security researchers
Flaw variety hipper with snoops than cash-hungry crooks right now Zero-day vulns are increasingly likely to be bought and sold by malware vendors targeting the Middle East with their dodgy wares, according to FireEye.…
Just cough into here, please: Cambridge-developed app slurps the sounds of COVID-19
No stethoscope needed – but you don't get to know the results A team at the UK's Cambridge University has created an application to collect the speaking, breathing and coughing sounds of participants in the hope of building predictive models to "contribute to the early diagnosis of COVID-19".…
From Amanda Holden to petrol-filled water guns: It has been a weird week for 5G
Gov.UK to ask social networks to do their part... Comment Amanda Holden is not an epidemiologist. She holds no degree in electrical engineering or physics. Her time is spent judging the (often self-contradictory) Britain's Got Talent, or sitting next to Phil Schofield on the couch of This Morning, where she earned notoriety by asking Brit astronaut Tim Peake if he stole any moon rocks on his mission to the International Space Station.…
Learn how to maintain remote scale, resiliency and intelligence with the Akamai Edge Live | Virtual Summit
From managing during unprecedented times to dealing with wider digital change, these are the sessions you need Promo Business continuity, cyber security, and maintaining customer experience are the order of the day as we all bed in to work from home for the near (or mid) future. The Edge Live | Virtual Summit 2020 has these topics covered.…
Already in final beta? That's Madagascar: Ubuntu 20.04 'Focal Fossa' gets updated desktop, ZFS support
Long-term release with upgraded QEMU virtualization Canonical has dropped a final beta of Ubuntu 20.04 "Focal Fossa", set for full release on 23 April.…
RHEL pusher Paul Cormier appointed CEO to lead Red Hat into the IBM era
20-year veteran takes over as Jim Whitehurst becomes Big Blue prez Long-serving Red Hatter Paul Cormier has been named president and chief exec as his predecessor, Jim Whitehurst, sets off for fields Big and Blue.…
Microsoft 365 Business to gain more Azure Active Directory toys... oh, and it's called Microsoft 365 Business Premium (from 21 April)
Because this Office branding shake-up isn't confusing at all Microsoft is adding a full Azure Active Directory Premium P1 licence to its Microsoft 365 business subscription even as it aims the rebrandogun at its product line.…
Americas' SAP Users' Group chief reckons upgrades to S4/HANA will gather pace despite COVID-19 disruption
If you're almost finished with the ordeal, there's no looking back now Although most organisations would probably put ERP upgrade plans on ice amid a global pandemic, SAP users are likely to press ahead with existing projects to upgrade to S/4HANA, Americas' SAP Users' Group (ASUG) says.…
Kaspersky cleans up poisoned watering hole, Google presses pause on cookie crackdown
Plus: SystemD has a privilege escalation flaw that needs patching, and more bits and bytes Roundup Kaspersky has detailed its takedown of a massive so-called watering-hole attack appearing to target dissidents in China, in the top story in The Reg's infosec roundup that looks at issues of the past week beyond our own detailed coverage.…
Washington state governor green-lights facial-recog law championed by... guess who: Yep, hometown hero Microsoft
Plus more news from the world of machine learning Roundup Here's your quick-fire summary of recent artificial intelligence news.…
We're number two! Microsoft's Edge browser slips past Firefox in latest set of NetMarketShare figures
Though Statcounter puts Moz's finest second. Chrome still top dog It's official that Edge is number two. At least according to NetMarketShare.…
Virtually – no – actually borked: We'd slap ailing ATM's 'OK' button but it's probably against government guidance
Remember when we went outside and used cash machines? Haha, good times Bork!Bork!Bork! Microsoft Windows is everywhere. Everywhere. And sometimes it can catch out the unwary, as the administrator behind this ATM has hopefully discovered.…
British Airways and Marriott UK data protection fines deferred again as coronavirus shutdown hits business
May and June are new due dates and neither firm is going down quietly The UK Information Commissioner's Office has yet again postponed its £280m in fines against British Airways and Marriott Hotels for data leaks.…
Real-time tragedy: Dumb deletion leaves librarian red-faced and fails to nix teenage kicks on the school network
Commanding & Conquering when nobody is looking Who, Me? Another week is upon us, and while April continues to be an uncertain beast, we will always have Who, Me?, and another story from the more sinful niche of The Register's readership.…
Minister slams 5G coronavirus conspiracy theories as ‘dangerous nonsense’ after phone towers torched in UK
Looks like Michael Gove has decided to listen to the experts for a change UK Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove has used a daily briefing to slam those advancing baseless theories that 5G radios are in some way responsible for the coronavirus.…
Bose shouts down claims that it borked noise cancellation firmware to sell more headphones
But reverses its policy on downgrades anyway, to quiet noisome critics Bose has hit back at critics who say that the firm's latest headphone firmware intentionally broke its active noise cancellation feature.…
NASA reveals the new wavy Martian wheels it thinks can crush the red planet
The Perseverance rover gets its grousers ahead of planned July/August launch NASA has revealed the wheels it’s just bolted onto the Perseverance Rover, the new Mars assault robot it plans to send to the red planet in July as part of the Mars 2020 mission.…
Pan-European group plans cross-border contact-tracing app – and promises GDPR compliance
As India joins the list of nations offering Bluetooth-enabled virus-visit-visualisers A European consortium based in Switzerland plans to this week launch an opt-in location-detecting app to expedite contact-tracing those who have encountered coronavirus carriers.…
COBOL-coding volunteers sought as slammed mainframes slow New Jersey's coronavirus response
Huge surge in applications for financial assistance show Governor Phil Murphy the ugly side of technical debt The governor of New Jersey has asked COBOL-capable coders to volunteer their skills as the State’s mainframe computers have struggled to cope with a surge of requests for benefits to help citizens through the coronavirus crisis.…
Watch: Rare Second World War footage of Bletchley Park-linked MI6 intelligence heroes emerges, shared online
A glimpse of life at Whaddon Hall Vid An astonishingly rare film documenting British intelligence personnel, linked to the code-breakers at Bletchley Park, has been released by the park's trust, offering a glimpse of unsung heroes who helped win the Second World War.…
Not only is Zoom's strong end-to-end encryption not actually end-to-end, its encryption isn't even that strong
Video calls also routed through China, probe discovers Updated Zoom has faced increased scrutiny and criticism as its usage soared from 10 million users a day to 200 million in a matter of months, all thanks to coronavirus pandemic lockdowns.…
NSO Group: Facebook tried to license our spyware to snoop on its own addicts – the same spyware it's suing us over
Antisocial network sought surveillance tech to boost its creepy Onavo Protect app, it is claimed NSO Group – sued by Facebook for developing Pegasus spyware that targeted WhatsApp users – this week claimed Facebook tried to license the very same surveillance software to snoop on its own social-media addicts.…
Oracle teases prospect of playing nicely with open-source Java in update to WebLogic application server
'Low cost of ownership'? This must be an April Fools Oracle has chosen this week of all weeks to foist on the world an update of its application server WebLogic, festooned with new features addressing Java EE 8, Kubernetes and JSON.…
Things that go crump in the night: Watch Musk's mighty missile go foom
Testing times for SpaceX as another Starship prototype implodes Video Yet another of SpaceX's Starship prototypes, SN3, was left in pieces last night following tank testing.…
Microsoft brings Mixed Reality toys and other improvements to 'citizen developers' using low-code Power Apps platform
Mobile compatibility issue fixed and working with data in grids made easier Microsoft has updated its "citizen developer" platform, Power Apps, adding Mixed Reality support, fixing a compatibility issue with the mobile app, and improving options for working with data in grids.…
Where's the best place to add Mentos to Diet Coke for the most foam? How big are the individual bubbles? Has science gone too far?
Teachers trek high and low to uncover cola geyser secrets Did you know that the popular Diet Coke and Mentos soda geyser experiment works better at higher altitudes? Or that the average size of the bubbles formed on the scotch mints is about 6μm? Now you do, thanks to the wonders of science and those with a bubbling passion for it.…
ESA missions back doing science after precautionary pandemic plug pull: We talk to space boffins about Mars Express emergency command line
Meanwhile, three-quarters of NASA staff now staying at home ESA's mission operations centre in Germany has got back to doing interplanetary science after a short stand-down due to COVID-19.…
Motorola casually trots out third UK release in as many months: This time it's a 'Lite' take on the Moto G8 Power
No MWC, no problem Hello again, Moto. In the past month, the Lenovo-owned mobile maker has announced three new smartphones for the UK market. The latest is the Moto G8 Power Lite, which retails at £149.99, and offers a surprising amount of battery life for your buck.…
Biz software pusher IFS goes a bit Minority Report with augmented-reality repair suite
But it's still playing catch-up with big boys SAP and Oracle ERP flinger IFS is inflicting more augmented reality on the unsuspecting world of repair and maintenance as it strives to catch up with Oracle and SAP.…
Cabinet Office dangles £15m for help ditching its Single Operating Platform for cloud-based ERP system
Project 'SOP2SaaS'... it just rolls off the tongue The Cabinet Office is offering a £15m contract for a consultancy to help it shift central government enterprise applications to an as software-as-a-service delivery model, part of an ambitious refresh programme.…
UK judge gives Google a choice: Either let SEO expert read your ranking algos or withdraw High Court evidence
Tough choice for adtech monolith in Foundem case Google must either show its "crown jewels" to a man it described to the High Court as a search engine optimisation expert or give up parts of its defence in a long-running competition lawsuit, the UK High Court has ruled.…
Need a new IT role? These organizations are hiring engineers, leaders, analysts – see inside for more details
Our free job ad offer continues and vacancies keep rolling in Job Alert Welcome to this week's jobs list, a rundown of vacancies El Reg is advertising for free to keep tech people in work amid the coronavirus pandemic.…
Tech services biz Allvotec furloughing staff, asking remainder – including top brass – to take pay cut
CEO talks of measures to combat expected sales slide due to pandemic Allvotec – the rebranded Daisy Partner Services business – is responding to the coronavirus crisis by furloughing a number of staff and asking all that remain to take a pay cut to avoid potential redundancies.…
Windows spotted flashing its unmentionables in a Chicago clothier
This season's colours are blue, white and bork Bork!Bork!Bork! Chicago! A town famed for what some might regard as a jumped-up quiche masquerading as pizza and home of the first skyscraper. Could there be a better venue for today's bork?…
Zoom vows to spend next 90 days thinking hard about its security and privacy after rough week, meeting ID war-dialing tool emerges
Passwords-by-default feature may be faulty. But hey, who else just went from 10 to 200 million daily users? Video-conferencing app maker Zoom has promised to do better at security after a bruising week in which it was found to be unpleasantly leaky in several ways.…
Absolutely everyone loves video conferencing these days. Some perhaps a bit too much
Saving Sales from a self-inflicted dirty deed On Call Phew, March is over. Everything will be OK now, right? Right? Oh well... join us in nervously welcoming April with another tale from that special breed tasked with answering the phone, even when the subject matter is perhaps less than savoury.…
Cricket's average-busting mathematician Tony Lewis pulls up stumps
University lecturer and half of Duckworth-Lewis passes, aged 78 Eminent British mathematician Tony Lewis has died, aged 78.…
Automatic for the People: Pandemic-fueled rush to robo-moderation will be disastrous – there must be oversight
EFF raises alarm over increasing reliance on shoddy automation Analysis The Electronic Frontier Foundation on Thursday warned that the consequences of the novel coronavirus pandemic – staff cuts, budget cuts, and lack of access to on-site content review systems, among others – have led tech companies to focus even more resources on barely functional moderation systems.…
Intel's 10th-gen Core family cracks 5GHz barrier with H-series laptop processors
New line-up includes first i9 part in this latest generation Intel has announced its tenth-generation Core i5, i7, and i9 H-series microprocessors for laptops, which max out at 5.3GHz.…
Salesforce publishes self-themed activity book to keep your kids ‘Appy
A new use for App Exchange, with that slightly greasy Ronald McDonald vibe Salesforce has decided to offer some help to parents who are trying to balance working from home with keeping kids entertained.…
Philippines considers app to trace coronavirus carriers
Privacy perspective: President has also threatened quarantine-breaking troublemakers may be shot The Philippines has started planning an app to help the government track the movements and contacts of people who carry the novel coronavirus.…
Australian digital-radio-for-railways Huawei project derailed by US trade sanctions against Chinese tech giant
Uncle Sam's crackdown sparks 'force majeure event that cannot be overcome' One of Huawei’s flagship projects in Australia has been called off because, as the state government put it, “trade restrictions imposed by the US government create a force majeure event that cannot be overcome.”…
NASA's classic worm logo returns for first all-American trip to ISS in years: Are you a meatball or a squiggly fan?
Should boffins keep it old-school space-race era – or embrace the, er, future of the 1970s? NASA has brought back its sleek iconic logo, lovingly named the worm for its curvy red font, in time for its first crewed spaceflight using American rockets in almost a decade.…
If you use Twitter with Firefox in a shared computer account, you may have slightly spilled some private data on that PC
HTTP header ends in own goal Twitter on Thursday warned of an esoteric bug that, in limited circumstances, allowed users' non-public profile information to potentially fall into the hands of other users.…
Why is ransomware still a thing? One-in-three polled netizens say they would cave to extortion demands
American young adults are easiest marks for criminals, study reckons Want to know why ransomware is still rampant? One in three surveyed folks in North Americans said they would be willing to pay up to unscramble their files once their personal systems were infected.…
Google changes course, proposes proprietary in-app purchase API as web standard
Developers rejoice, there may be (eventually) a store-agnostic way to sell in-application items Google has decided to try to openly standardize one of its own APIs for handling in-app purchases in web apps rather than pursuing a previously proposed proprietary plan.…
US prez Trump's administration reportedly nears new rules banning 'dual-use' tech sales to China
Non-military tech rule exception plus other tweaks mulled The US government is reportedly close to introducing stringent new rules that would stop Chinese companies from buying certain high-technology components, including semiconductors and optical materials.…
Tech tracker Tile testifies in Congress: Apple's geolocation nagging is so not fair
Alleges anticompetitive behaviour in the walled garden. There's no party like a third party, eh? Channeling their inner Kevin Patterson, Tile this week bemoaned Apple's unfairness to a US congressional panel in Colorado investigating the iPhone maker's stewardship of its app ecosystem.…
Maintain business continuity in these challenging times with the Akamai Edge Live Virtual Summit 2020
Get the latest advice and insight on scale, resiliency and intelligence Promo Business continuity is another of those aspects of IT that, before, was always pitched on a rather "what if" basis. What if your global cloud comms provider goes down? What if a squirrel chews through one of your server room’s insulation cables?…
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