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Updated 2025-09-12 05:15
Microsoft Azure looks to make cloud-native payments SWIFTer
Financial messaging to get a bit more, er, agile Microsoft and money-message flinger SWIFT have announced a proof of concept aimed at demonstrating that Azure could be a good fit for the financial network's infrastructure.…
Alibaba pulls dust covers off its new London cloud presence
Can Chinese cloudy crowd check rise of AWS? Alibaba Cloud has launched in the UK, the Chinese cloud purveyor has declared, as it prepares to take on dominant player AWS and the other also-rans.…
Happy 60th birthday, video games. Thank William Higinbotham for your misspent evenings
Tennis for Two prepares to collect its bus pass The forerunner of today's video games celebrated its 60th birthday last week as the anniversary of William Higinbotham's Tennis for Two rolled around.…
Can't get pranked by your team if nobody in the world can log on
Dirty Den escapes with a slapped wrist Who, Me? Welcome once more to Who, Me? The Register's weekly column featuring readers' tales of the things they'd rather forget having done.…
The code's crashed again, but why? Tell us your war stories of bugs found – and bugs fixed
We need your help in understanding how software issues are solved in production environments Reader study Even the best software goes wrong from time to time. So, what exactly happens when it throws a wobbly, especially when it's a key component in a production environment?…
It's not just you... GitHub.com freezes up as techies race to fix dead data storage gear
TITSUP: Total Inability To Support Users' Pushes GitHub's website remains broken after a data storage system failed several hours ago.…
GitHub.com freezes up as techies race to fix dead data storage gear
TITSUP: Total Inability To Support Users' Pushes GitHub's website remains broken after a data storage system failed hours ago.…
Need a modest Arm Cortex-A CPU in your custom chip? Just apply online. Plus $125,000
That's how much it costs to license the blueprints (and don't forget the royalties) In 2018, a crack commando CPU was sent to an ASIC by a military court for a crime it didn't commit. This processor core promptly escaped from a maximum-security system-on-chip to the Los Angeles underground.…
A DeepMind library to help build reinforcement learning bots, and how Google's Pixel 3 cameras handle zoom
Also applications are now open for OpenAI's Scholars programme Roundup Hello, here's a quick roundup of interesting or useful bits of AI news that happened this week.…
Apple boss demands Bloomberg Super Micro U-turn, Russian troll charged, NSA hands out cash, and more
Plus, hackers find a safe haven in West Haven Roundup After we encountered a libssh security blunder, a leaky Tea Party, and a dodgy Redmond sports marketer, another week is in the book.…
Oz intel committee: Crypto-busting is only bad if you're a commie, and we're not by the way
El Reg listened to the whole depressing folly so you don't have to Comment Tech vendors: don't worry about Australian law enforcement demanding you decrypt user messages. It's OK, because we're not a communist regime.…
FYI: Faking court orders to take down Google reviews is super illegal
NYC biz boss gets nine months in the clink for profound idiocy A New York business owner will be spending the next nine months behind bars after he was convicted of forging court orders to take down unflattering online reviews.…
London flatmate (Julian Assange) sues landlord (government of Ecuador) in human rights spat
WikiLeaks overlord challenges housemate rules in court Housemate from hell Julian Assange is taking his landlord, the government of Ecuador, to court to stop its officials from, allegedly, running roughshod over his human rights.…
Core-blimey! Riddle of Earth's mysterious center finally 'solved' by smarty seismologists
So solid crew confirm old idea by spotting tiny waves The Earth’s core is solid, according to a pair of geophysicists who claim to have solved an 80-year-old conundrum concerning the planet's center.…
Spotted: Miscreants use pilfered NSA hacking tools to pwn boxes in nuke, aerospace worlds
High-value servers targeted by cyber-weapons dumped online by Shadow Brokers Miscreants are using a trio of NSA hacking tools, leaked last year by the Shadow Brokers, to infect and spy on computer systems used in aerospace, nuclear energy, and other industries.…
Pull request accepted: You want to buy GitHub, Microsoft? Go for it – EU
Eurocrats reckon that anti-competitiveness from Redmond would be a massive foot-shooting exercise The European Commission has given the thumbs up to Microsoft’s acquisition of GitHub.…
Atlassian: Look at our ginormous Jira revenues!
But about that loss... Atlassian, the collaboration outfit responsible for inflicting Jira on the world, has announced a jump in revenues for the first quarter of fiscal 2019 and an equally eyewatering jump in losses.…
Ericsson's very good bad quarter, Mozilla encrypts SNI, new TIP projects, and more
Your weekly dose of networking Coming off a long string of losses, Ericsson probably hoped to turn in some good news, but at its latest financial results, the company announced the sacking of 50 people in response to a corruption scandal.…
Samsung claims key-value Z-SSD will be fastest flash ever
Plus: 7nm LLP, QLC, stacked RDIMMS and brainy drives Among a blizzard of news from Samsung's Tech Data, El Reg has spotted smaller processor nodes, FPGAs added to SSDs, stacked and cubed memory, quad-level cell flash and object-storing SSDs on the way.…
Yale Security Fail: 'Unexpected load' caused systems to crash, whacked our Smart Living Home app
All working now says biz. No, no, no, no, say customers, it is NOT! An unspecified and “unexpected load” on its infrastructure broke the Smart Living Home app for a day, an apologetic Yale Security UK confirmed to customers yesterday - however the smell of failure still lingers today.…
There's no 'I' in 'IMFT' – because Micron intends to buy Intel out of 3D XPoint joint venture
Chipzilla has to go it alone or turn to a partner Micron has announced its intent to buy out Intel's interest in Intel Micron Flash Technologies (IMFT), the pair's flash and 3D XPoint foundry joint venture.…
Facebook names former Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg head of global affairs
Zuck and Clegg in Silicon Valley – no, it's not the latest Netflix satire Facebook has hired former British deputy PM Nick Clegg to head up its global affairs – a move that reportedly involved boss Mark Zuckerberg spending months “wooing” the Lib Dem has-been.…
Metadata-farming, data-silo-killing startup: Go on. Bring us your unstructured stuff
Former Primary Data boss talks to El Reg about Hammerspace +Comment Newcomer on the storage software-as-a-service scene Hammerspace announced the general availability of its eponymous SaaS application this week. This software has been engineered using technology from Primary Data – yes, that Primary Data – applied to hybrid IT and cloud environments, providing a SaaS cloud-control plane.…
Sounds like a massive, risky UK.gov scheme, but let's not keep too many tabs on it, OK?
Spending watchdog slams transparency and record-keeping on major projects The UK's spending watchdog has said it isn't possible to tell whether the biggest and most risky government projects are doing what they're supposed to because of poor records and incomplete reporting.…
Insects with farts that smell like coriander assist in covering up Paris's aroma d'urine
Sightings of Asian stink bug in French capital spike Oh, c'est mal, les punaises diaboliques sont arrivés à Paris! But before you pack the holy water if sojourning in the French capital this winter, you should know a clothes peg might be more suitable.…
Peter Thiel's Palantir reportedly eyeing up $41bn IPO
Spies' fave data mining biz could go public as early as late 2019 – reports CIA-backed data-mining business Palantir is reportedly in talks with banks to take the company public for a blockbuster sum, and could move as early as next year.…
European Commission: We've called off the lawyers over Ireland's late collection of Apple back taxes
Case closed month after Apple coughs $14.3bn in 'illegal State Aid' The European Commission has decided to withdraw court action against Ireland over the delayed recovery of €14.3bn worth of back taxes that were ruled as illegal state aid, it has confirmed.…
It's Two Spacecraft, One Mission as BepiColombo gets ready to launch
JAXA and ESA in a tree, going to visit Mercury BepiColombo, the first mission to Mercury for the European Space Agency (ESA), is due to lift off tomorrow morning at 0145 UTC on an Ariane 5 rocket.…
Have you made DevOps, Containers or CD work for you? Tell us about it
Continuous Lifecycle London ‘19: Call for papers closes tonight Events If you want to tell hundreds of your peers how you've used DevOps, containers, continuous delivery or agile to improve your software operations, be quick - the call for papers for Continuous Lifecycle London closes tonight.…
Ex-Huawei man claims Chinese giant is suing his startup to 'surpass' US tech dominance
Both parties accuse each other of IP theft CNEX Labs co-founder and CTO Yiren Ronnie Huang have accused Huawei and its subsidiary Futurewei of engaging in industrial espionage to steal CNEX's SSD intellectual property.…
Silent running: Computer sounds are so '90s
'Do not disturb' mode isn't for you, it's for the rest of us Something for the Weekend, Sir? Hold down the Shift key as you drag the vertical divider horizontally, and you find that you can adjust the column width in your table without changing the……
Anonymous Amazonian demands withdrawal of face-recog kit from sale
Was your anti-surveillance letter sinkholed? Write a blog about it Seemingly annoyed at being ignored, an anonymous person claiming to be an Amazon employee has repeated demands for the online behemoth to stop selling its Rekognition product to American police agencies.…
Haunted disk-drive? This story will give you the chills...
Techie called in after computer always starts the day with a go-slow On-Call Welcome once more to On Call, The Register’s regular foray into the freaky world of tech support.…
You like HTTPS. We like HTTPS. Except when a quirk of TLS can smash someone's web privacy
Never-closed browsers and persistent session tickets make tracking a doddle Analysis Transport Layer Security underpins much of the modern internet. It is the foundation of secure connections to HTTPS websites, for one thing. However, it can harbor a sting in its tail for those concerned about staying anonymous online.…
FYI: Drone maker DJI's 'Get it on Google Play' website button definitely does not get the app from Google Play...
Quadcopter slinger rudely palms folk off to .apk download Drone manufacturer DJI is under fire because the "Get it on Google Play" button on its website for its smartphone app does anything but that.…
From dank memes to Krispy Kremes: British uni eggheads claim viral lol pics make kids fat
Turns out getting diet advice from popular internet images is a bad idea Plus-sized pea-brained progenies, sorry, impressionable youths pile on the pounds because they're using internet memes as a handbook for living life.…
Finally, a use for AI and good old-fashioned simulations: Hunting down E.T. in outer space
Targeted ads, coming to a galaxy nowhere near you Google Cloud has teamed up with NASA’s Frontier Development Lab to search for extraterrestrial life using simulations and machine-learning technology.…
F5: Don't panic but anyone can log into our load balancers, thanks to libssh's credentials-optional security goof
Also: AWS talks how to avoid TLS state machine slips Network box maker F5 says it has shipped load balancers that are vulnerable to the libssh authentication-bypass bug – meaning anyone who can reach the devices over the network or internet can potentially dive in simply by asking nicely.…
Oz to turn pirates into vampires: You won't see their images in mirrors
Internet piracy crackdown looms over Google and search engines, file-sharing sites in proposed legislation Australia's federal government hopes to expand the piracy-blocking regime it introduced in 2015 to include injunctions against search engines, include file drop-sites in bans, and catch so-called “alternative pathways” to pirated content that emerge after a primary site has been blocked.…
Good news: Largest, most ancient known galaxy supercluster is spotted. Bad news: It's collapsing on itself
Five quadrillion solar masses – and you'll need a Farcaster to get there An international team of astronomers have stumbled upon the largest and oldest galaxy supercluster found to date, measuring more than four quadrillion solar masses.…
Is this cuttlefish really all that cosmic? Ubuntu 18.10 arrives with extra spit, polish, 4.18 kernel
El Reg vulture gets his claws into Canonical's latest OS Ubuntu 18.10 is about to make its scheduled appearance: Cosmic Cuttlefish will take centre stage from previous incumbent, Bionic Beaver.…
All through the house, not a creature was stirring... especially Samsung smartwatches: Batteries empty at 3AM
Firmware update fingered for draining power as folks sleep Samsung Gear smartwatch owners are complaining the batteries in their strap-on gizmos are mysteriously and rapidly draining overnight – and it's only just started happening.…
Talk about a curveball: Microsoft director of sports marketing fired, charged with fraud over 'fake' invoices
He tells investigators: 'I was hacked!' Microsoft's former director of sports marketing has been indicted on five counts of wire fraud, based on allegations that he created fake invoices to defraud the software giant and sold its property as his own.…
Equifax exec's inside trade shame: Software boss sentenced for mega-hack stock profit
Thrown in the small house rather than the big house An Equifax executive – who knew the biz had been hacked before it was made public and banked over $75,000 in stock trades using this inside knowledge – has avoided jail.…
SAP: We're all about the cloud – never mind those stagnating software numbers
German ERP giant's revenues up, operating profits down A successful quarter for SAP's cloud business has been tempered by a 6 per cent drop in profits and a dip in its share price.…
Apple to dump Intel CPUs from Macs for Arm – yup, the rumor that just won't die is back
Star analyst uses 2020 vision to predict macOS move Apple will abandon Intel processor chips for its Macs in favour of homegrown Arm-based chips, according to a securities analyst. Formerly at KGI, Ming-Chi Kuo of KeyBanc Capital Markets, has a strong record of reliable Apple predictions.…
Love Microsoft Teams? Love Linux? Then you won't love this
Learn to love the browser instead Microsoft loves Linux. Unless you are a Linux user who happens to want to use Teams. In that case, you probably aren’t feeling the love quite so much.…
WD shoots out 96-layer embedded flash chips
What do you get for 50 per cent more layers? Not a lot Western Digital has a 96-layer NAND chip for smartphones and has spoken of higher embedded storage capacity while seemingly delivering exactly the same capacity as before.…
Brace yourself, Britain: Health minister shares 'vision' for NHS 'tech revolution'
National Programme for IT Mark 2? Given the track record of project failures in NHS IT, some might say that Matt Hancock - former Minister for Fun who now runs the Department of Health - is marching with ill-founded confidence towards what he describes as a “tech revolution”.…
Android creator Andy Rubin's firm might think its phone is Essential, but 30% of staff are not
Promises 'truly game changing consumer product'... Please, not the Clippy mobe The phone startup founded by Andy Rubin – creator of WebTV, the Sidekick and Android – has reportedly laid off 30 per cent of its staff. Essential is still in the game, but only just.…
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