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by Lindsay Clark on (#51HAD)
K8s 'kind of a universal key' for going multi-cloud MariaDB has updated its cloud-native SkySQL database, promising a slew of features addressing deployment, management and analytics.…
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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 | 2025-05-22 18:45 |
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by Matthew Hughes on (#51HAF)
Low demand, supply glut. Why bother? Samsung Display will discontinue production of LCD panels by the end of the year due to falling demand for the increasingly marginalised tech and a supply glut in the market.…
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by Richard Speed on (#51HAH)
Although you need to hop in the Management API sidecar for the really good stuff NoSQL slinger DataStax has released an open source Kubernetes operator for Apache Cassandra as it seeks to cosy back up to the community.…
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by Matthew Hughes on (#51H1H)
For now. (Having mattresses and smartbogs to fall back on doesn't sound so nuts anymore) Over half of Chinese electronics, scooters and underwear corp Xiaomi's revenue came from smartphone sales, according to audited figures published today [PDF].…
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by Tim Anderson on (#51H1K)
Plus note to admins: sending content to Microsoft is on by default and users cannot disable it Hands On Microsoft made a number of Office 365 Microsoft 365 announcements yesterday, including touting an expanded set of AI capabilities in its core applications.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#51H1N)
Lots of non-savvy users may be recycling previously hacked creds Group video chat app Houseparty has offered a $1m bounty to identify what it claims is an organised campaign to falsely depict it as a hackers' backdoor.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#51GQ2)
If you ignore the T&Cs to probe a site's algorithms, don't expect the Feds to swoop in using the dreaded CFAA Netizens probing websites' algorithms for bias and discrimination, against the sites' terms and conditions, can breathe a small sigh of relief. A US federal court has ruled it's not a criminal offense to flout a consumer-grade website's fine-print.…
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by Richard Currie on (#51GQ4)
Bloody poms are full of great ideas Australian prime minister Scott Morrison may have to eat his words on how to limit the spread of coronavirus after the country's westernmost state announced "extreme and draconian" measures all of its own.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#51GQ6)
How many customers' deets? It's not saying just yet Marriott Hotels has suffered its second data spillage in as many years after an "unexpected amount" of guests' data was accessed through two compromised employee logins, the under-fire chain has confirmed.…
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by Matthew Hughes on (#51GCS)
Gotta find Huawei to handle 2020: Despite rosy 2019 figures, Chinese comms giant sees trouble ahead Huawei's rotating CEO reckons the Chinese government will retaliate against the US tech industry rather than allow the giant of the Middle Kingdom to be "slaughtered on the chopping board"* of US sanctions.…
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by Richard Speed on (#51GCT)
DIY IDE Theia hits 1.0, and it's still compatible with all those extensions The Eclipse Foundation has pulled back the curtains on version 1.0 of Theia, an alternative to Microsoft's developer darling of the hour, Visual Studio Code.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#51GCV)
Proved for all sites, proved for all sites, there is nothing else we can do Two years ago, network infrastructure biz Cloudflare launched the 1.1.1.1 Public DNS Resolver, with the promise that internet users could use the service to surf the internet without being tracked - by Cloudflare at least.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#51G4B)
Filtering, anti-spoofing, coordination, validation to prevent crooks, spies hijacking victims' connections An internet community effort to improve routing security has got a boost from some of the internet’s biggest names.…
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by Chris Williams on (#51G4C)
And few worried about security – are they right? Two-thirds of polled Register readers, on average worldwide, said it was business as usual in their IT departments amid the ongoing global coronavirus crisis. And fewer than one in ten said they were paralyzed by the pandemic.…
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by David Gordon on (#51G4D)
Employers, would-be employees, we're here to help during these trying times Job alert We've received a couple of solid responses to our offer last week, in which we invited organizations seeking tech staff to tackle the coronovirus pandemic to send in their recruitment ads and we would run them for free online. No catch, no snark, nor strings attached.…
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by Richard Speed on (#51FZA)
MEX I can: A tale of ingenuity and innovation Space extenders As the European Space Agency flicked the standby switch on some of its long-lived spacecraft in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, The Register figured it was time for a look at how the agency has kept its fleet flying far beyond expectations. Today, the veteran Mars Express orbiter.…
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by Richard Speed on (#51FZC)
Forget the Lambeth Walk, instead enjoy the Camden Bork Bork!Bork!Bork! Welcome to another in our uplifting series of incidents where someone else's IT misdemeanours are flashed at an unsuspecting world. Behold the bork.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51FZE)
We've asked top tech companies if India's lockdown changes the service you receive. Most say no India is the dominant source of offshored IT workers, and home to big facilities for plenty of global IT companies. India is also in lockdown and workers there cannot leave their homes except under limited cirumstances.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#51FZG)
Is this the end of the DNS? No, but it is curious to see where this is going Opera has updated its lightweight browser for Android so that it can access unofficial .crypto domains, primarily to exchange cryptocurrency.…
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by Robbie Harb on (#51FZJ)
Mum? Dad? What was lockdown like? It went by in a flash, junior, because we studied for a database certification Oracle will offer free training and learning material during the coronavirus lockdown.…
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by David Gordon on (#51FVA)
New digital payment standards are changing the rules – don’t be caught out Promo You’ll probably be more than familiar with open banking standards by now. Launched in the UK by the Competition and Markets Authority in January 2018 and increasingly adopted in the wider world, 202 (and counting) regulated providers are now on board.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#51FVC)
Just use a wee bit of your imagination Future astronauts will need to be prepared to shed blood, sweat, tears, and, erm, possibly urine, too, if they want to build a home base on the Moon.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51FVE)
Good luck if you're a user of Cloud SQL, Cloud Data Fusion, or Cloud Composer Google’s cloud is experiencing trouble.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51FQA)
Now that's a caveat Microsoft has corrected its own claim that it had “seen a 775 percent increase of our cloud services in regions that have enforced social distancing or shelter in place orders.â€â€¦
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51FQC)
Citizens advised to put away their papers and use the national data locker instead India is advising its citizens that cloud storage can help to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#51FHG)
This being America, they weren't too hard on most of them The US government is cracking down on Voice-over-IP (VoIP) providers accused of giving safe harbor to robocall spammers.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#51FHJ)
Plus: Edge sharpened, Teams upgrades promised Microsoft on Monday teased a few future features of its Edge web browser and Teams slack-killer. It also announced the rebranding of its cloud productivity suite Office 365 as Microsoft 365 – a subscription offering that already included Office 365, alongside Windows 10 Enterprise services and security features.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#51F9Y)
You thought thousands of complaints would make a difference? Analysis The price of dot-coms will steadily increase over the next four years following DNS overseer ICANN's controversial renewal of Verisign's contract to run the top-level domain.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#51F9Z)
Bad case of the Mondays European cloud giant OVH is suffering a substantial outage today: if there's a website you can't reach right now, it's perhaps hosted by OVH..…
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by Richard Speed on (#51F0T)
1903 still rules roost, Azure Fabric 6.5 support extended, and more Roundup Cross out the expiry date on your rapidly ageing role-based certification - you've got an extra six months. But that wasn't the only thing to break from Redmond in the past week, here are the best bits.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#51F0W)
Set to replace John Manzoni on 14 April, but no word on the new chief digi officer John Manzoni – permanent secretary for the Cabinet Office and CEO of the UK civil service who had an agenda to introduce more digital services – has been replaced with Alex Chisholm.…
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by Matthew Hughes on (#51F0Y)
We need to get people's nans on WhatsApp BT has begun asking contact centre employees to return to work as it grapples with an increasing number of customer calls resulting from the UK-wide lockdown.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#51EQK)
Still using PhoneGap? Don't Developers using Adobe's PhoneGap framework for building mobile apps for iOS and Android may soon be unable to submit to Apple's App Store, thanks to Adobe's use of an old iOS SDK.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#51EQM)
Couldn't have come at a better time with COVID-19 economic shutdown BT has won a legal application to restart a decade-old court case in the hope of clawing back more than £90m in VAT the telco claims it overpaid to HMRC from 1978 onwards.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#51EQP)
Don't worry, though. Any 'systematic' data extraction would be 'time-consuming' The digital burglary at 118 118 Money exposed recordings of customer service calls that included a raft of personal information although thankfully not payment data.…
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by Richard Currie on (#51EQR)
Encounters the ridge phenomenon: As in, there is one 'at the bottom of my nose you can't get past' We're all told from a tender age not to shove things up our noses – Lego, chickpeas, pencils, fingers – but it seems even grown-up astrophysicists can have difficulty grasping these most basic recommendations when it's in the name of science.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#51EG1)
Swift on more platforms – provided you do not need a GUI The team working on the Swift programming language has said its goals for the upcoming version 5.3 will include "adding support for Windows and additional Linux distributions".…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#51EG3)
Plus, Google warns of fake journo phishing attacks Roundup It's once again time for the El Reg security roundup.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#51EG5)
Your quick summary of neural network news Roundup Hello Reg readers. Here's a quick roundup of bits and pieces from the worlds of machine learning and AI.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#51EBK)
O'Reilly has quit the events game, and it might not be the only one Comment You've been there, done that and you quite literally have the T-shirt. Love them or loathe them, IT conferences are a feature of industry life. My first was CA World in New Orleans in 1998. In front of an audience of thousands, then Computer Associates CEO Charles Wang wandered across the stage pontificating as a chorus of children danced about him (no, really) and I knew I had indeed entered a whole new world of weird.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#51EBN)
Folds up just like a smartphone – if you ignore the size and weight Planet Computers has announced the Astro Slide, a 5G smartphone with a slide-out physical keyboard. It will run Android 10 but with the ability to support Linux in future.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51EBQ)
Amazon promised. Google trialled. UPS got a licence. But only 1% of retailers are interested because they're still mostly rubbish More than a billion people are in coronavirus-inspired lockdown and even going out to shop for essentials increases the risk of the virus spreading.…
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by Richard Speed on (#51EBS)
I like to move it, move it / You like to move it, move it Who, Me? Welcome to a cautionary Who, Me?, a warning to all those lured by the promises of the cloud storage giants and a language lesson for all.…
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by Robbie Harb on (#51EBV)
Keep Calm And Stream Video, on generous new discount plans and payment terms The UK's big five telecoms companies have lifted data caps on all current fixed broadband services to ensure residents get the internet they need while locked down to prevent the spread of coronavirus.…
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by David Gordon on (#51E85)
'The future of cybersecurity is the responsibility of everyone' Promo As women take more senior positions in the field of cybersecurity, there's a shortage of women available to mentor others.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51E87)
Warnings to investors from Dell, DocuSign, Cloudera and MongoDB reveal not all are completely terrified Coronavirus has started to become a staple of the Form 10-K corporate risk disclosure documents filed by public technology companies.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51E4J)
Doesn’t anticipate slowdown because ‘I suspect a lot of us work from home even normally’ Linux overseer Linus Torvalds given the world version 5.6 of the Linux kernel, and been given the title “social distancing champâ€.…
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by Robbie Harb on (#51E4K)
Remember landlines? Cisco service wants you to remember them too, to make dial-in part of your isolation arsenal Cisco's Webex collaboration service has urged users to turn off video and avoid starting meetings on the hour, to help ease pressure on public networks during the coronavirus-avoidance crisis.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51E19)
But Australia’s PM declares it doesn’t align with national values The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) of the United Kingdom has provided advice to the government that it can use anonymised mobile phone data in the fight against coronavirus.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#51D6R)
Admits to ongoing provisioning problems but insists no capacity crunch even as it drops freebies Microsoft has revealed “a 775 percent increase of our cloud services in regions that have enforced social distancing or shelter in place orders†and is “expediting the addition of significant new capacity that will be available in the weeks aheadâ€, but has already imposed some quotas to cope with huge demand for its cloud.…
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