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Updated 2025-05-25 09:34
WeWork's Meetup slaps RSVP fees on events ‒ then tells everyone not to panic amid backlash
Meeting app insists it is running a 'small payment test' after outcry over new prices Netizens are scrambling to find or build alternatives to Meetup.com – after the event-organizing app maker indicated it would charge people $2 per-RSVP.…
The Hurt Docker: Mystery Hub repository, website outage leaves fuming devs unable to deploy containers
Work ongoing as site recovering from morning meltdown Docker says its services are back up and running after a Tuesday morning outage briefly left some developers unable to access its centralized Hub registry service.…
Hands off our phones, says Google: Radar-gesture-sensing Pixel 4 just $999 with a 3-year lifespan – great value!
You're probably holding it wrong already Video At a press event in New York City on Tuesday, Google announced its Pixel 4 phone, revised Pixel Bud earphones, its Pixelbook Go laptop, a revision and rebranding of its Wi-Fi mesh router as a Nest product, and a tweaked Nest Mini smart speaker.…
Sure is quiet from Adobe. No security fixes this month? Great job. Oh no, wait, what's that stampede sound...
If you thought Reader, Acrobat, Experience Manager were skipping October's Patch Tuesday, think again Adobe has finally released its October batch of security updates. It was quiet on Patch Tuesday last week, and now it's roaring in with scores of fixes for Reader, Acrobat, and Experience Manager.…
Telstra chairman: If those darn kids can earn $5m playing Fortnite, why can't execs?
Plus: 35-year-old CEO who took over from dad blasts millennials for being entitled The chairman of Aussie telco Telstra threw a bit of a strop at the firm's AGM in Sydney today, comparing exec pay packets to the vast amounts a small handful of lucky millennials can earn by being good at gaming's current hotness, Fortnite.…
Microsoft says .NET Framework porting project is finished: If your API's not on the list, it's not getting in
Unless you ask really nicely Microsoft's .NET Core 3.0 team is done with the project to port the venerable .NET Framework API to the open source platform.…
Ye olde Blue Screen of Death is back – this time, a bad Symantec update is to blame
The wrong kind of intrusion protection Updated Symantec has acknowledged an issue with an update to its Endpoint Protection Client that causes a Windows kernel exception after users this morning came down with a mild case of Blue Screen of Death.…
First Python feature release under new governance model is here, complete with walrus operator (:=)
No word on eggman counterpart Python's new feature release – version 3.8 – has landed, the first since June 2018.…
Is AWS sponsoring Rust? Only a bit – and so is Microsoft Azure
A confusing announcement from the cloud giant AWS has announced its "Sponsorship of the Rust project", causing some initial excitement in the community. However, in reality it only amounts to a year of AWS "promotional credits."…
Imagine finding this bad boy in your shower: Brit startup pulls the sheets off Moon spider mech
Four-legged robot will scuttle a grand total of 10m Roundup In a week where the space-faring community said goodbye to death-defying cosmonaut Alexei Leonov, Skyrora upped the ante with its rocket testing, Elon Musk and Jim Bridenstine kissed and made up, and Britain said it would be sending mech-spider nightmare fuel to the Moon.…
Dodging derailment by SUSE, OpenStack Train is scheduled to arrive this week
Choo choo mothertruckers With its OpenInfrastructure summit mere weeks away, the OpenStack gang is emitting its next release in the form of "Train" with a focus on data protection and machine learning.…
Conspiracy loons claim victory in Brighton and Hove as council rejects plans to build 5G masts
No next-gen mobile internet for you but, hey, no cancer either Brighton and Hove has been claimed as the latest victory in the battleground against common sense, with the council agreeing to ban the erection of three 5G masts.…
Getronics CEO on HMRC winding-up petition: An 'embarrassing' blip with cash in the wrong places
Corporate expansionism to blame for issues, claims bossman Getronics' CEO has opened up on its recent and "very, very embarrassing" winding-up petition from HMRC over non-payment of VAT, claiming it was an unintended by-product of corporate expansionism.…
Welcome to the World Of Tomorrow, where fridges suffer certificate errors. Just like everything else
Behold the Samsung Family Hu- oh, bugger The connected refrigerator has long been the fever dream of many an IoT enthusiast, and Samsung's Family Hub has demonstrated the power of such a concept by falling over in a heap on a John Lewis sales floor.…
UK govt snubs Intel, seeks second-gen AMD Epyc processors for 28PFLOPS Archer2 supercomputer
HPE's Cray hits 80-million-quid target to build boffinry beast Cray has landed a £79m deal to construct Blighty's 28-petaFLOPS Archer2 supercomputer, which will use second-generation AMD Epyc processors.…
Does voice-controlled tech have a place in business? Talk it over with El Reg and fellow IT pros at breakfast
Join us at a Nuance-powered morning briefing to discuss modern workflows Promo Voice-controlled assistants are popping up in kitchens and living rooms across the world – so what’s stopping us using this technology to take control of our day-to-day working environment?…
Chemists bitten by Python scripts: How different OSes produced different results during test number-crunching
Boffins claim code was fine... when they wrote it Analysis Chemistry boffins at the University of Hawaii have found, rather disturbingly, that different computer operating systems running a particular set of Python scripts used for their research can produce different results when running the same code.…
What the &*%* did you just $#*&!*# say about me, you little &%$#*? 'AI' to filter Xbox Live chat
Let us put it this way: One of your parental units is somewhat obese and has been rather amorous towards me Microsoft is rolling out a new feature that, it hopes, will filter out rude words in messages sent from Xbox Live users in a bid to make the gaming platform “a place where everyone can have fun.”…
YouTube thinkfluencer Siraj Raval admits he plagiarized boffins' neural qubit papers – as ESA axes his workshop
Oops I did it again. And by it, we mean, ripped people off Internet celeb Siraj Raval’s reputation continues spiraling downward – after he admitted plagiarizing real scientists' work to produce a paper on neural qubits.…
Sudo? More like Su-doh: There's a fun bug that gives restricted sudoers root access (if your config is non-standard)
All it takes is -u#-1 ... Wh%& t#e fsck*? It's only Monday, and we already have a contender for the bug of the week.…
Apple insists it's totally not doing that thing it wasn't accused of: We're not handing over Safari URLs to Tencent – just people's IP addresses
Cupertino in China Syndrome meltdown Responding to concern that its Safari browser's defense against malicious websites may reveal the IP addresses of some users' devices to China-based Tencent, Apple insists that Safari doesn't reveal a different bit of information, the webpages Safari users visit.…
Pitney Bowes: Can we be frank? Ransomware has borked our dead-tree post systems
Venerable stamp-machine maker stalled by server infection Pitney Bowes, the US stamping meter maker, has been infected with ransomware, leaving customers unable to top-up their equipment with credit nor access the corporate web store.…
Google unplugs AMP, hooks it into OpenJS Foundation after critics turn up the volume
You want this web tech to be independent? Sure, we'll just put it in an org we bankroll Google's AMP project will join the incubation program of the OpenJS Foundation, which is part of the Linux Foundation.…
How do we stop filling the oceans with Lego? By being a BaaS-tard, toy maker suggests
Firm admits it has considered a bricks-as-a-service biz model Beloved brick maker Lego is considering a rental service as part of a drive to improve sustainability in a world where hatred of plastic is threatening their attractiveness as a toy.…
John Lennon says hello. Hello, hello... as Cancom buys Novosco for £70m
You know, co-founder of the Belfast-based reseller Munich-based Cancom Group is paying £70m to acquire public-sector reseller Novosco.…
Her Majesty opens UK Parliament with fantastic tales of gigabit-capable broadband for everyone
But without a majority, it's more likely to form basis of Tory manifesto than law The UK government has promised to roll out new legislation to achieve nationwide "gigabit-capable broadband" among 26 bills set out in Parliament's State Opening today.…
Visual Studio Code gets more touch-feely, new Windows Server builds arrive for brave admins
Apple flogs Microsoft hardware and Puppet's CTO has a... notepad.exe tattoo? Roundup In a week that left the Windows Insider team facing a leadership vacuum after its Ninjacat-in-chief jumped ship, Microsoft's army of gnomes continued to toil ahead of the company's impending Ignite shindig.…
Tearoff of Nottingham: University to lose chunk of IT dept to outsourcing
Cos that's always gone really well... Exclusive The University of Nottingham has announced it will outsource some of its IT operations in a long-awaited shakeup of the department.…
Swiss wheeze: Microsoft reseller titan SoftwareONE plots IPO on Zurich exchange
If that floats your boat SoftwareONE, one of the world's largest Microsoft resellers, has started pre-booking its shares ahead of an initial public offering on the Swiss stock exchange later this month.…
RIP: First space-walk badass Alexei Leonov, who made it to 85 despite best efforts of Soviet machine
Looking back on Voskhod, Salyut, Soyuz, Apollo and having the right stuff Obit Alexei Leonov, the first man to float out of a capsule and into space, has died at the age of 85.…
Remember, remember, it's now called November: Windows 10 19H2 update has a name
And a release date – sort of Microsoft has given the next version of Windows 10 a name. 19H2 will now be known as the November 2019 Update and is due to land any day now.…
'Technical error' threatens Vodafone customers with four-figure roaming fees
Bills as high as £9k, but don't worry – they're working on it Vodafone has apologised for a "technical error" that left customers abroad facing thousands of pounds in roaming fees over the weekend.…
Private equity to gobble up Brit virus blocker Sophos for £3bn
Will join McAfee, Barracuda Networks, Veracode Software in Thoma Bravo's tum Brit security software slinger Sophos has accepted an all-cash offer from US suitor private equity group Thoma Bravo of just over £3bn.…
Microsoft Teams: The good, the bad, and the ugly
Why Teams is a key product despite its frustrations – and yes, a Linux client is on the way Analysis Microsoft continues to plug Teams as the "fastest growing application" in the company's history, though it is not sold separately, only as a feature of Office 365 (there is also a free version). At the same time, there are major feature gaps that are only now being plugged, and it is not easy to manage. What is the attraction?…
SUSE what, adoption's still growing, shrugs OpenStack Foundation
Attention has shifted away from VMs, however, COO tells El Reg OpenStack chief operating officer Mark Collier told The Reg that while SUSE's decision to abandon its OpenStack Cloud product is "obviously disappointing", adoption is "strong and growing".…
Lies, damn lies, and KPIs: Let's not fix the formula until we have someone else to blame
When 95 + (5 * RAND()) is all your spreadsheet needs Who, Me? Monday has arrived once again and with it the sweet, sweet music of a reader's darkest IT misdeeds in The Register's weekly Who, Me? feature.…
State of play with NVMe: We asked, you spoke, we listened – here's what you had to say
Storage is no longer 'snorage' Survey results Storage is no longer snorage. And long gone are the days when enterprise storage could be taken for granted, or at least forgotten about until either users noticed access wasn’t speedy enough or the IT team realized space was running out.…
Robocop needs reboot, $200m for AI research, UK govt knowingly deployed racist passport system – plus more
Read the latest in the amusing world of AI Roundup It's another Reg summary of recent AI news.…
Imperva cloud firewall pwned, D-Link bug uncovered – plus more
Including: Visual Studio Code debug hole found Roundup It's time for another security news catch-up.…
We, Wall, we, Wall, Raku: Perl creator blesses new name for version 6 of text-wrangling lingo
Perl 6 set to be reincarnated as Raku, as favored by Larry Wall Perl 6 should soon be known as Raku, now that Perl creator Larry Wall has given his blessing to the name change.…
From Libra to leave-ya: eBay, Visa, Stripe, PayPal, others flee Facebook's crypto-coin
Zuck-bucks dead in the water as payment giants snub currency tech Updated The Facebook-backed Libra crypto-currency project was dealt a crushing blow Friday when eBay, Stripe, and others yanked their support.…
How bad is Catalina? It's almost Apple Maps bad: MacOS 10.15 pushes Cupertino's low bar for code quality lower still
Devs lament 'trash fire' 'Windows Vista-like' release Comment Amid Apple's attempt to fend off criticism for its removal, restoration, and re-removal of an app used by pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, the company is also facing particularly voluble criticism from users of its latest desktop operating system, macOS Catalina.…
No ghosts but the Holy one as vicar exorcises spooky tour from UK's most haunted village
Plus: Dumb hipsters spaff $3,000 on 'Jesus Shoes' A vicar has said there's no room for ghosts in the UK's "most haunted village" of Prestbury, Gloucestershire – unless it's one of the Holy variety.…
Openreach's cunning plan to 'turbocharge' the post-Brexit economy: Getting everyone on full-fibre broadband by 2025
£59bn boost – 'if we can get right conditions to invest' BT's pipe laying subsidiary Openreach has published a list of proposals it claims will help Britain gain full fibre by the mid-2020s.…
Experts warn UK court digitisation is moving too fast and breaking too many things
Not that it was moving quickly to begin with Ambitious plans to digitise Her Majesty's Courts and Tribunal Service via a £1bn modernisation programme should be slowed down even further, MPs heard this week.…
I can't believe you've done this: Cisco.com asks visitors to explain to IT why they have broken the website
Switchzilla's online presence beset by mysterious outages Cisco has suffered an odd series of outages that briefly KO'd its website and corporate blogs.…
Tokyo Olympics, US tariffs Trump Europe's Brexit shakes as global PC shipments balloon to fattest figure in 7 years
Extra $37bn levy on notebooks, slabs pushes American retailers to panic buy, buy, buy Businesses heading for the Windows 7 escape hatch and US retailers panic-buying ahead of the next round of trade tariffs helped PC shipments rise globally in Q3 at the fastest rate in seven-and-a-half years.…
Oh dear... AI models used to flag hate speech online are, er, racist against black people
Tweets written in African-American English slang more likely to be considered offensive The internet is filled with trolls spewing hate speech, but machine learning algorithms can’t help us clean up the mess.…
SAP's CEO Bill McDermott quits: Will hand over to co-captains for Next Generation reboot
Subspace communication over, enterprise commander out SAP's chief executive Bill McDermott will not renew his employment contract at the German database software maker.…
Not a death spiral, I'm trapped in a closed loop of customer experience
Much, much worse than a vicious circle Something for the Weekend, Sir? I've got myself stuck in a ring. Yes, again. Medical assistance may be required.…
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