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Updated 2025-08-29 22:16
Surge in home working highlights Microsoft licensing issue: If you are not on subscription, working remotely is a premium feature
Customers on-premises with perpetual licences 'don't have a good story' for remote working Working from home and want to access your PC at work? The best solution may cost thousands in additional Microsoft licensing costs.…
Firefox to burn FTP out of its browser, starting slowly in version 77 due in April
Already sin-binned it in 2018, will keep it around in extended support until 2021, and is way behind Chrome Firefox has decided it’s time to burn the browser’s FTP connections.…
Watching you, with a Vue to a Kill: Wikimedia developers dismiss React for JavaScript makeover despite complaints
Facebook's popular frontend framework can't escape its heritage After several months of debate, the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) has decided to modernize the front-end interface used by Wikipedia and other projects by adopting the Vue.js JavaScript framework, a choice that remains controversial.…
Captain Caveman rides to the rescue, solves a prickly PowerPoint problem with a magical solution
But did our hero break 'Circle rules? On Call Well, that was quite the week wasn't it? Perhaps Friday should start (rather than end) with a stiff drink. The Register's On Call feature is on hand to kick things off.…
Netflix starts 30-day video data diet at EU's request to ensure network availability during coronavirus crisis
Looks like you'll have to stream Derry Girls in lower resolution for a bit Netflix will reduce the quality of its streaming videos in Europe in response to the European Commission's request on Thursday that streaming services and telecom operators throttle their data streams to avoid overloading the internet.…
At last, our AI savior is here to nail the COVID-19 pandemic: A neural network that can detect coughing
False positive rates, we've heard of them The AI community is attempting to tackle the coronavirus pandemic using all sorts of algorithms in its toolbox. As such, it's coming up with ways to predict the virus’ protein structure, crunch through thousands of science papers, and now, er, detecting coughs.…
At last – news that something is guaranteed to be healthy and well looked-after for the next six months. That something is Windows 10 1709
Microsoft extends support because right now we have better things to do with our lives than upgrade Windows Microsoft will extend the support life of Windows 10 1709’s Enterprise, Education, and IoT Enterprise editions, because right now we’ve all got better things to do than upgrade Windows.…
Dell publishes data centre cleaning guidance, suggests hiring pros to disinfect enterprise kit
Urges ‘extreme caution’ if you DIY and reminds you ‘Never spray any liquids directly onto or into any product’ Dell has developed guidance for cleaning its data centre products, on the off-chance you feel like giving them a once-over during these complicated times.…
Former Googler Anthony Levandowski ‘fesses up to pinching trade secrets about self-driving cars
But only for a progress update document, as Feds recommend 30-month stretch after reaching a deal on theft of IP that made its way to Uber Former Google exec Anthony Levandowski has agreed to plead guilty to pinching secrets about Google’s self-driving car tech and sharing them with Uber.…
Bad news: Coronavirus is spreading rapidly across the world. Good news: Nitrogen dioxide levels are decreasing and the air on Earth is cleaner
As humans stay put at home, fossil fuel consumption levels decline As the world scrambles to mitigate the novel global coronavirus pandemic, there is at least one silver lining among the upheaval: air pollution has dropped.…
What do you not want right now? A bunch of Cisco SD-WAN, Webex vulnerabilities? Here are a bunch of them
Switchzilla says remote networking gear has a grab-bag of holes Cisco has issued a series of security updates for its SD-WAN and Webex software, just when they're most needed.…
HMD Global pokes head out of quarantine to show off 3 new Nokia mobiles
Bet you never thought you'd see a 5G Nokia The cancellation of Mobile World Congress might have derailed HMD Global's launch plans, but the Espoo-based licensor of the iconic Nokia marque has nonetheless unveiled three new smartphones. Arguably the most exciting is the Nokia 8.3 5G.…
Russian state-sponsored hackers have been sniffing Middle East defence firms, warns Trend Micro
Artists variously known as Pawn Storm and APT28 are still at it The Russian hacking crew known variously as APT28, Fancy Bear and Pawn Storm has been targeting defence companies with Middle Eastern outposts, according to Trend Micro.…
HMD Global revamps infamous commuter-botherer, the Nokia 5310 XpressMusic
The budget feature phone that reminds you of Ministry of Sound sounds and football fighting Brits... maybe The Nokia 5310 XpressMusic was the bane of any mid-2000s commuter, used primarily by tracksuit-wearing hooligans to blast out head-thumping Ministry of Sound tunes to other weary bus-goers.…
NHS websites will no longer burn up your mobile data allowance, say Brit telcos
Coronavirus advice to become free to view even if you're out of credit Britain's mobile networks are to offer free access to online NHS pages about the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, the UK government has declared.…
Education tech supplier RM smacked by UK schools closure
How do you model for 'closed' indefinitely? As the UK's parents prepare to take kids to school for the last time tomorrow, education tech supplier RM told the London Stock Exchange it anticipates a "material impact on trading".…
Microsoft Teams usage jumps to 32, no, 44 million as Windows-slinger platform slides onto home workers' PCs
UK's National Health Service given free access during the crisis Updated Keeping fingers crossed that its Slack-for-suits platform, Teams, would survive the week, Microsoft today confirmed a slew of a new toys for its corporate collaboration baby.…
7 years after hooking up, SAP gets much, much cosier with Ariba's supply chain and procure-to-pay software
ERP giant targets unified master data management and data model Nearly eight years after buying Ariba, SAP is integrating the UI, data management and analytics across its business applications and procurement software.…
Oh-so-generous ransomware crooks vow to hold back from health organisations during COVID-19 crisis
Don't take their word for it. Governments need to up their security game, says security firm Updated Ransomware operators of DoppelPaymer and Maze malware stated that they will not target medical organisations during the current pandemic.…
Gods of cloud smiled on Chinese server makers in Q4, as mainframe punters chucked a big bone at IBM
Oh to be at the mercy of tech buyers at AWS, Microsoft, Facebook, Google, Tencent, Alibaba... we could go on It was a pleasing end to 2019 for server makers, a community whose sales ledgers list from feast to famine depending on the whims of cloud builders' data centre centre expansion activities in any given quarter.…
Look ma, no Intel Management Engine: Purism lifts lid on the Librem Mini, a privacy-focused micro PC
Aimed at Facebook-eschewing free software types Purism has dropped the veil on the latest computer in its privacy-focused lineup – a small form-factor PC designed for space-conscious free software enthusiasts.…
Beyond JAMstack: Next.js creator on hybrid rendering, TypeScript and Visual Studio Code
Guillermo Rauch: 'One of the biggest performance issues that we see today is to do with advertising' Interview Guillermo Rauch, creator of the Next.js framework for building React applications, spoke to The Register about the just-released Next.js 9.3 and its hybrid approach to web application development.…
NASA to launch 247 petabytes of data into AWS – but forgot about eye-watering cloudy egress costs before lift-off
Audit finds that error could actually mean less data flows to boffins because space agency may not be able to afford downloads NASA needs 215 more petabytes of storage by the year 2025, and expects Amazon Web Services to provide the bulk of that capacity. However, the space agency didn’t realize this would cost it plenty in cloud egress charges. As in, it will have to pay as scientists download its data.…
Out with the old and in with the new as Java 14 arrives, bringing with it first Project Panama enhancements
After all, if the Supreme Court rules the right way, this could be a bonanza Oracle this week released JDK 14, its reference implementation of the Java 14 specification. Java, Big Red claims, continues to be the most preferred programming language among software developers.…
Are machine-learning-based automation tools good enough for storage management and other areas of IT? Let us know
A match made in heaven or hell? Reader survey We hear a lot these days about IT automation. Yet whether it's labelled intelligent infrastructure, AIOps, self-driving IT, or even private cloud, the aim is the same.…
Atlassian finally unleashes free Jira tier – nearly six months late yet just in time for coronavirus crunch
Still, could be worse, Bono might starting singing about COVID-19. Oh Kindly old Atlassian is making cloud-based versions of Jira Software, Confluence, Jira Service Desk, and Jira Core free for teams of up to ten people.…
Remember that blurry first-ever photo of a black hole? Turns out snaps like that can tell us a lot about these matter-gobbling voids
Watch how layers of photon rings reveal things like spin and mass Vid Scientists may be able to calculate a black hole’s mass and rotation from photographs alone one day, according to research published in Science Advances.…
Hong Kong makes wearable trackers mandatory for new arrivals, checks in with ‘surprise calls’ too
Government CIO promises they don’t record location, just change of location Hong Kong has made it mandatory for all new arrivals to wear an “electronic wristband” that links to a smartphone to provide location-tracking services, so that authorities can be sure they’re observing COVID-19 quarantine requirements. And the city-state insists its privacy commissioner has signed off on the idea because it “does not pose privacy concerns.”…
Tencent is now bigger than Cisco and Lenovo – and predicts this virus thingy will help it get bigger still
21 percent growth sees FY '19 revenue hit US$54bn, just a billion or so behind LG and Facebook Chinese internet titan Tencent has revealed its Q4 2019 and full year 2019 results, and the numbers are lovely.…
Google halts Chrome, Chrome OS releases to avoid shipping flawed code, prioritizes security fixes amid coronavirus crunch
COVID-19 raises risk of software bugs due to staff schedule shifts Google has suspended Chrome browser updates after failing to release Chrome 81 on Tuesday.…
Forget James Bond's super-gadgets, this chap spied for China using SD card dead drops. Now he's behind bars
Tour operator used job in America as cover while acting as a data mule for Beijing, stealing secrets from biz An American citizen will spend the next four or so years behind bars in the US for smuggling corporate secrets out of the states to his spymasters in China.…
The show Musk go on: Tesla defies SIlicon Valley coronavirus lockdown order, keeps Fremont factory open
Elsewhere, Geek Squad still sending out techies to elderly people's homes Tesla CEO Elon Musk said employees should continue working at the automaker's Fremont factory despite the site falling under the San Francisco Bay Area's strict near-lockdown order.…
Dear Adobe, Trend Micro users: Please vaccinate your software – at least some of these security holes were exploited in the wild
Genuine Integrity doesn't exactly live up to its name A little more than a week after forgoing March's Patch Tuesday hullabaloo, Adobe has emitted fixes for dozens of security flaws in its applications.…
Reach for the sky: Pixar founders win Turing Award for pioneering 3D animation – and getting rid of jagged edges
Pat Hanrahan, Ed Catmull split $1m for their graphics work Two founders of animation powerhouse Pixar have won the 2019 ACM AM Turing Award, with a $1m prize, for their pioneering work on 3D graphics.…
Git our app, you've pulled: We love open source... but not enough to share code for our own app, says GitHub
Reviews mixed as mobile software hits GA GitHub's mobile app for developers and other team members working on projects in GitHub repositories is now generally available for users of iOS and Android.…
Official: Apple debugs MacBook Air of sucky Butterfly keyboard
Scissor switches in, plus a silicon upgrade As predicted, Apple is steadily purging its laptop line of the fault-prone butterfly keyboard, which infuriated punters and genius bar techies alike.…
Yes, true, fusion reactors don't work quite yet, but, er, maybe AI can help us stop our experiments from imploding
No neural networks here, though, only decision tree algos Machine-learning algorithms may help scientists develop a warning system capable of preventing fusion reactor meltdowns in the future.…
Who needs an iPad Pro? Look everyone, Windows Terminal has mouse input
Version numbering reaches double figures with GA lurking around the corner In a week that saw confirmation that Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 would have its kernel pulled from the base Windows 10 image, another preview of Windows Terminal put in an appearance.…
SpaceX beats an engine failure to loft another 60 Starlink satellites
Falcon 9? Falcon 8 more like, as booster takes an unplanned bath SpaceX has lofted another set of Starlink satellites despite an in-flight engine failure, although those hoping to watch a booster landing were disappointed as the veteran Falcon 9 first stage took a dunking.…
Apple updates iPad Pro with a trackpad, faster processor. Is it a real computer now?
Ooh, check us out rivals, we've got a 'keyboard'.. well, not a real one. It's Magic, OK? A common refrain in Apple’s hymnbook is that the iPad Pro is a legitimate computer, much like a MacBook Pro. Marketing aside, most professionals are yet to be convinced, noting that Cupertino’s increasingly pricey fondleslabs lack the essential features of a computer – like, for example, a pointing device.…
British Army adopts WhatsApp for formal orders as coronavirus isolation kicks in
Yh capten 🎖 bruv, charlie fireteam brups  dat tr33line 🌳 at 9 🕘 The British Army has made a coronavirus-related tech U-turn after telling soldiers that commands issued over WhatsApp are now legally binding.…
All about that DBaaS: NoSQL cheerleader MongoDB sees revenue spike, but expects 'up to' $25m Covid-19 hit for 2021
Vows to be one of 'key beneficiaries' of 'platform shift towards the cloud' NoSQL database bigwig MongoDB is warning the Covid-19 pandemic will hit turnover by between $15m and $25m for fiscal 2021.…
Freedom of Information coverup clerk stung for £2k after deleting council audio recording
ICO notches up first successful FoI prosecution A town clerk in the English county of Shropshire has been the subject of the first ever successful Freedom of Information prosecution after lying to a member of the public who made an FoI request.…
Virtual reality: Now even the online Google Cloud Next event is postponed
No, this is not business as usual as the C-virus continues to wreak havoc A couple of weeks ago Google cancelled its in-person Cloud Next event, saying it would become "Google Cloud Next '20: Digital Connect." Now even the virtual version has been postponed, with no rescheduled date given.…
HPE celebrated diversity on International Women's Day not with pictures of its own staff but stock images of models
Updates with pics from actual event... held on 8 March Hewlett Packard Enterprise celebrated the work of its female staff on International Women’s Day with stock photos of suited models rather than, you know, its actual employees.…
Small business loans app blamed as 500,000 financial records leak out of ... you guessed it, an open S3 bucket
Bank info, driver's license copies and more found, report researchers A now-defunct mobile app for loaning money to small business owners has been pinned down as the source of an exposed archive containing roughly 500,000 personal and business financial records.…
Come to Malmö for St Peter's. Stay for the Bork
Swedish Scandi-BSOD, anyone? Börk!Börk!Börk! In these trying times it is good to see Windows occasionally matching the global mood with a sad face in The Register's series of BSODdery. Welcome to Scandi-Bork.…
IBM puts 1,248 frontline techies at risk of redundo, warns of data centre closures
The axe prepares to fall on Global Tech Services staffers, including former Lloyds and Vodafone peeps that TUPED across Exclusive IBM has put 1,248 heads in its UK Global Technology Services (GTS) division at risk of redundancy with a little over one fifth of those ultimately facing the long walk down the company corridors to collect their P45s.…
BT's Wi-Fi Disc ads banned because there's no evidence the things work
Ad watchdog puts telco on the naughty step over range extender promotion Updated BT has been told to stop claiming its Wi-Fi discs work in “every room” of the home after complaints from rivals and the public alike.…
Ampere's server chip has 80 Arm CPU cores? Yeah, well, our ThunderX3 will have 96 with 384 threads, says Marvell
Plus: Intel ditches forthcoming Cooper Lake single, dual-socket 14nm Xeons from its roadmap Marvell this week teased its forthcoming server-grade ThunderX3 processor, which can, we're told, sport up to 96 Arm CPU cores and 384 hardware threads per socket.…
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