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Updated 2025-09-12 10:31
Look at me! Phone industry contracts nasty case of 5g-itis
Our 5G is bigger and better than theirs, promise Ericsson, Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T It may not exist yet but the mobile phone industry is determined to let everyone knows that when it does, their 5G is going to be the best.…
America-China tariff tiff could flip the switch on Cisco price hikes
Chief exec warns Prez Trump's proposed soaring import charges will hit biz, customers Cisco chief exec Chuck Robbins has warned that a US-China trade war over tariffs could lead to price rises for Switchzilla’s networking kit.…
Law firm seeking leak victims to launch £500m suit at British Airways
Prosecutors rub their hands with glee British Airways faces a £500m lawsuit over its recent mega-breach that exposed payment card details of 380,000 customers.…
Live broadcast: Threat hunting in the modern attack landscape
Tune in now to hear from Carbon Black Promo New research from Carbon Black shows that a staggering 92 per cent of UK businesses have been breached in the past year and nearly half of companies have reported falling victim to multiple breaches.…
Raspberry Pi supremo Eben Upton talks to The Reg about Pi PoE woes
The Pi has got its HAT on. Hip hip hip... oh dear People are reporting problems with the newly released Power Over Ethernet adaptor for the new Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+, with non-functional USB ports causing much anguished wailing.…
By gum: Supermicro's Samsung storage ruler server uses secret SSD
10 million IOPS, half a petabyte, one U – hella fast Analysis Supermicro's latest Samsung ruler-based thin storage server can cough up 10 million IOPS, has a 20GB/sec throughput and 576TB capacity, which is all very well, but its Intel ruler one can provide 13 million IOPS, 52GB/sec and a whole petabyte.…
Guys, you need to sit down and have a chat: Skype rolls out SMS a week after Microsoft
Skype also does MMS. Your Phone also does photos. Neither talks to iOS Skype demonstrated that it does indeed exist as a separate entity within Microsoft by bringing SMS functionality to its Insiders a week after something similar was flung out to Windows Insiders.…
Guess who's still in charge of your gas safety, Brits? Capita
Out of the frying pan into the... frying pan Hard-pressed outsourcing biz Capita was today selected by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) to manage the Gas Safe Register (GSR) for five years, including overseeing the competence of engineers listed.…
All aboard the Hype Cycle! What's DataOps? Well, it has no standards or frameworks. Got it?
Gartner's rollercoaster trundles into exciting world of data management Gartner has turned its annual Hype Cycling gaze upon data management and found that – shock – expectations of Blockchain remain hopelessly inflated.…
It's here! Qualcomm's new watch chip is finally here! Oh, uh, never mind
Ancient tech – but it isn't so bad Loyal Android Wear users are dismayed that the first new Qualcomm silicon for smartwatches in three years uses ancient technology – and won't offer the gains in performance they were hoping for.…
British Airways hack: Infosec experts finger third-party scripts on payment pages
Airline yet to reveal breach's cause Security experts are debating the cause of the British Airways mega-breach, with external scripts on its payment systems emerging as a prime suspect in the hack.…
MPs' proposal to cash in on public-private algos given a solid 'maybe'
UK.gov pats self on back in response to MPs' report on data-driven decision-making The UK government has tentatively accepted calls from MPs to monetise public sector data – but would rather brag about existing efforts to encourage responsible use of algorithms.…
Dust off that old Pentium, Linux fans: It's Elive
Distro emerges blinking after 8-year hibernation What were you doing in 2010? The Space Shuttles were still flying, Toy Story 3 ruled the cinemas, and Apple released its very first iPad. Oh, and Linux distro Elive locked down its last stable build. Until now.…
Email security crisis... What email security crisis?
Let them eat phish In late August, Microsoft announced a free service that arguably reveals more about the future of the email business and its struggles with security than several years' worth of earnest press releases.…
AI beats astroboffins at sniffing out fast radio bursts amid the universe's clutter
Who knows if the signals are signs of extaterrestrial activity? AI is helping astronomers spot fast radio bursts, a mysterious class of signal emitted from a new type of object very rarely found in space that boffins are still trying to classify.…
Nvidia promises to shift graphics grunt work to the cloud, for a price
Nvidia waxes lyrical about 5G and GeForce Now leveling the playing field for gamers It's a fact of life for gamers: If you want to be able to compete, you need the best hardware to give you an edge.…
It's a mug's game: Watch AI robot grab a cuppa it hasn't seen before
Machine-learning software taught how to pick up things it hasn't seen before Video A trio of researchers have trained a robot that can pick up new objects it hasn’t seen before.…
Safari, Edge fans: Is that really the website you think you're visiting? URL spoof bug blabbed
Egghead says Apple has yet to patch spoofing vulnerability A security researcher has disclosed a flaw that could be used to spoof website addresses in either Edge or Safari.…
Register-Orbi-damned: Netgear account order irks infosec bods
Marketing data collection opens potential security nightmare Netgear has irked some security pros by demanding people register accounts before they can use a mobile app to control their Orbi mesh routers.…
Boffins bash Google Translate for sexism
Word shifting code shares Silicon Valley male chauvinism Google Translate is used by over 200 million people daily and, according to boffins from Brazil, its AI-powered tongue twisting tends to deliver sexist results.…
Tor(ched): Zerodium drops exploit for version 7 of anonymous browser
Bug allows malicious scripts to run even with protections active Bug broker Zerodium has released word of a flaw in the Tor browser that would potentially allow an attack site to bypass security protections and execute malicious code in the supposedly secure internet system.…
Guys, geez... finally 5Gs: AT&T grows super-fast mobile net city rollout
More American cities will get super-fast mobile internet AT&T has promised real-world rollouts of 5G super-fast mobile internet in five more US cities before the end of the year, taking the total to 12, with another seven due next year.…
Arms race: SiFive, Hex Five build code safe houses for RISC-V chips
Those developing custom CPUs can now tap a TrustZone-ish trusted execution environment If you've been looking at SiFive's RISC-V-based chip technology and thinking, y'know what, it's missing an Arm TrustZone-style element to run sensitive code, well, here's some good news.…
Trend Micro tools tossed from Apple's Mac App Store after spewing fans' browser histories
Data caught being siphoned off to outside server Updated A bunch of Trend Micro anti-malware tools have vanished from Apple's Mac App Store – after they were spotted harvesting and siphoning off users' browser histories.…
Visual Studio Team Services squeezes into new Azure DevOps togs
Azure here, there and everywhere. Except last week when VSTS was nowhere Microsoft announced the arrival of Azure DevOps on Monday, an ‘evolution’ of its veteran Visual Studio Team Services into which developers will be enrolled - whether they like it or not.…
Seagate passes gassy 14TB whopper: He He He, one for each of you
Misses no one: PCs, NAS, workstations, enterprise, surveillance Seagate has spread its 14TB, 7,200rpm helium-filled disk drive tech across the PC, NAS, enterprise capacity and surveillance market sectors.…
Cisco shoves more GPUs in AI server for deep learning, still doesn't play Crysis
More power and faster interconnect Cisco has beefed up its C480 AI/machine learning sever, adding a faster GPU interconnect and more GPU slots while losing two CPU sockets.…
So what's Microsoft's counter-AWS cloud strategy? Don't be evil
Lil pupper yaps at big doge A Microsoft VP has optimistically opined that Amazon's expansion will help Microsoft nibble a little harder at the ankles of the world’s top public cloud firm.…
Virtual SAN-worshippers aren't eating external storage's breakfast... yet
Listen up, SAN-shine: IDC numbers – read 'em and weep Server SANs aren't eating into the external SAN market, at least as far as analyst IDC's storage tracker numbers are concerned.…
Yada yada, take my money: Firms do not scrutinise software support spend – report
$250bn market ripe for savings Companies waste cash by failing to scrutinise software maintenance and support spend, with contract renewal seen as the line of least resistance, the Campaign for Clear Licensing has said.…
Volkswagen faces fresh Dieselgate lawsuit in Germany – report
Angry investors want to know why they weren't told before everyone else In the latest fallout from the Dieselgate scandal, Volkswagen is facing down a German lawsuit for $11bn over the company's use of software to thwart emissions performance tests.…
Expanding Right To Be Forgotten slippery slope to global censorship, warn free speech fans
Top EU court to rule whether order made in France should be applied everywhere Europe's top court will tomorrow hear a case that could extend the scope of right to be forgotten rules globally – which free speech campaigners warn would amount to mass online censorship.…
Sextortion scum armed with leaked credentials are persistent pests
If you're going to batter 8,497 folk with over 60,000 threats, odds are someone will crack Persistence pays off for crooks when it comes to sextortion-based phishing scams, research into its effectiveness suggests.…
SpaceX dodges lightning while storms keep Japan earthbound
Telstar to blast broadband over Asia while ISS astros face fresh underwear delay Grim weather at Cape Canaveral almost caused a scrub of this morning's Falcon 9 launch as heavy cloud and lightning storms blanketed the region.…
x86 marks the spot: Dell reports upswing, keeps mum on going public
Why so hush-hush? Dell outearned IBM in its latest quarter, reporting revenues of $22.94bn in Q2 2019 ending 3 August, compared to the $20.1bn turned over by Big Blue in its own latest quarter.…
Want to learn about AWS Lambda, FaaS and more in the heart of London?
We’ve extended our early bird offer offer... Events If getting to grips with AWS Lambda, Azure Functions or FaaS is on your todo list, you should add something else – joining us at Serverless Computing London this November.…
Hungry, hungry network firms: Ericsson, NXP chow down, Ciena on the prowl
Also: New gear out, plus ENISA overlooks squirrels Freed from the attentions of Qualcomm, NXP Semiconductor has been looking around for its own acquisitions, and this week announced it had slurped OmniPHY.…
Microsoft's next Windows 10 release creeps closer with a cluster of builds
Also: Your Phone gets a bit more useful Still reeling from The Great Azure Outage Of September 2018? Fear not – new builds, new apps and some slightly flaky Android integration were the order of week.…
Pull your chair closer: It's the Reg autumn lecture series
Join us in the tavern for a pint and a chinwag Summer's fading and the season of mists and mellow fruitfulness is dawning. As the evenings darken, The Reg is proud to unveil its full season of autumn lectures.…
Activists rattle tin to take UK's pr0n block to court
ResistAV warns it's 'curtains for privacy' if age checks approved Campaigners are crowdfunding a legal challenge against plans to block smut in the UK.…
UK.gov went ahead with under-planned, under-funded IT upgrade? Sounds about right
Nothing important, just NATIONAL SECURITY stuff An "under-planned and underfunded" IT upgrade delayed national security vetting and is costing about £17m a year in inefficiencies, according to the UK government's spending watchdog.…
A boss pinching pennies may have cost his firm many, many pounds
Redundant PSUs and power buses are all well and good, but they need cables Who, Me? Welcome once more to Who, Me?, where El Reg readers share their IT catastrophes. And it doesn't get much more catastrophic than this week's story from "Bob".…
US military chucks $2bn at AI, Google touts machine-learning data search, and more
The AI stories you may have missed this week Roundup Here's a quick roundup of AI announcements this week beyond what we've already covered.…
Gits exposed, kinky app devs spanked, Feds spy on spyware buyers, etc
Mac APT unearthed and other infosec bits and bytes summarized just for you Roundup This week brought with it a Supermicro shoring up firmware security, a North Korean hacking charge, and a spying anti-adware macOS tool getting yanked by Apple from its App Store. Elsewhere, we had……
PPI pushers now need consent to cold-call you
Regulations in Blighty tweaked to appease the masses Brits will have to opt in to receive cold calls selling personal injury claims or payment protection insurance under new UK government rules.…
AI biz borks US election spending data by using underpaid Amazon Mechanical Turks
Senate disclosure forms rife with errors from 'hi-tech' outfit Captricity, a company that touts AI software capable of reading text better than people, has been blamed for a bumper crop of data entry errors that misrepresent what many US Senate candidates are actually spending for their campaigns.…
$200bn? Make that $467bn: Trump threatens to balloon proposed bonus China tech tariffs
Manufacturers, and ultimately US citizens, will pay the price US President Donald Trump is threatening to tack import duties on $267bn of imported Chinese tech gear and other goods – on top of the $200bn already planned.…
Y'know what? VoIP can also be free from pesky regulation – US judges
It may be a phone service but it's over 'the internet,' so yeah, f**k me, right? The US Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has decided that a phone service over the internet is no longer a phone service but an "information service" – freeing it from regulatory oversight.…
Pluto is more alive than Mars, huff physicists who are still not over dwarf planet's demotion
C'mon, please, please reinstate its status... The drama surrounding Pluto’s planetary status just won’t die.…
Dear America: Want secure elections? Stick to pen and paper for ballots, experts urge
Computer voting not yet ready for prime time, say boffins The upcoming 2020 US presidential election should be conducted on paper, since there is no way currently to make electronic and internet voting secure.…
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