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by Gareth Corfield on (#2DHSC)
World + dog can buy licensed spectrum IoT connectivity Internet of Things bods Sigfox have struck a global deal with Telefonica to offer their unlicensed spectrum connectivity tech through the telco.…
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The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2026, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2026-04-03 22:01 |
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by Chris Evans on (#2DHPS)
No scaling limit? Do go on Storage Architect I've been messing about with databases for a long time. I say "messing about" because I've never been a DBA, but as a systems programmer and storage administrator, I've been on the periphery of the application layer and of course I've deployed many personal databases.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2DHNG)
Opportunity knocks ahead of G6 unveiling So this is how consumer electronics marketing works in 2017.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2DHGQ)
Pint-sized outfit which couldn't handle support tickets gives out £10 vouchers After provoking dissatisfaction from customers during its recent support ticket pile-up, Smart Hosting has apologised and offered £10 in service credit.…
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by Dave Cartwright on (#2DHDE)
Anything Bezos can do, you can do better, right? You can't move without IT companies telling you about the "amazing" new technologies and features they've just launched, how you can't live without them, and what a shock it is that you've managed all these years before they were developed. And of course the bigger the company, the more new stuff they tend to pump out and the more critical it is that you sign up NOW.…
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by Team Register on (#2DHBG)
Bill Gates, Microsoft, pay-per-use... this is sounding familiar
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by Chris Mellor on (#2DH9P)
How levels, layers, stacks and DIMMS are boosting speeds Analysis Up until very recently the main thrust of data access and storage technology development was to make the media faster, hence the move from disk to flash, and flash technology developments to increase capacity.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#2DH7T)
August 4th, er, February 20th, 2017: Simple cyber-brain goes online A team of engineers has built an artificial synapse with the hopes of creating a neural network system with similar processing powers as the human brain.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2DH4N)
Software scrutinizes device defenses, is better than just yelling IT policies at staff Netflix has released the source code of a web application called Stethoscope for evaluating the security of mobile and desktop computing devices.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DH3R)
Hopes to turn terrible triangles into more profitable routes Delivery company UPS has become the latest concern to experiment with schlepping stuff about by drone, instead of wheeled vehicles.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2DH1V)
Just six per cent of banks using DNSSEC on domains The Dutch banking industry is doing a terrible job of online security, according to the company that runs the country's .nl internet domains.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2DGZ3)
Small biz wakes up to find online homes defaced Hundreds of websites have been defaced by hackers who hijacked a web-hosting server run by UK domain registrar DomainMonster.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2DGY5)
Spectators swallow hard as cloud seeds flow forth Vid + pics Drone operators have been gazing in fascination as, for the first time in over a decade, the Lake Berryessa glory hole has been swallowing up excess water and shooting it down into Putah Creek.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DGVS)
What China wants, China gets: A biz running a too-big-to-fail cloud What China wants, China gets – in this case an exception to SAP's usual practice of running its own cloud.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DGRQ)
You know what they say. Follow the money Hard on the heels of a second-quarter result in which software subscriptions provided one of the few bright spots, Cisco's revealed a slew of new software-based systems.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DGQC)
Universal file sharing is hard because Services and CDNs scramble HTTP. Enter 'Upspin' Wouldn't it be nice if there was a universal and consistent way to give names to files stored on the Internet, so they were easy to find? A universal resource locator, if you like?…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DGMB)
Can build clouds, can't schedule email announcing stablization release The OpenStack Foundation has announced Ocata, its fifteenth edition. And then tried to un-announce it again.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DGJG)
NoSQL server, but a big unhappy Yes to the question of security worries Aerospike NoSQL server DBAs, make sure you've rolled out version 3.11.1.1, because the vulnerabilities it fixes have been made public.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DGEZ)
*aaS-es are, however, fattening faster than any other segment of the market For all the hype about cloud it's a bit of a revenue wimp: the abacus-shufflers of IDC have just told the world that it will account for about five per cent of the world's tech spend in 2017.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DGBP)
Don't get rung out about planting bugs in ladder logic: they should be easy to spot One of the world's oldest programming styles, the ladder logic that runs on industrial programmable logic controllers, remains dangerously vulnerable to attack, according to boffins from Singapore and India.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#2DG7H)
Microsoft roadmap lays out second big update for 2017 Microsoft has confirmed it is planning a second major update for Windows 10, which is to be piloted this year, and is seriously considering releasing it before 2018.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2DFYQ)
Nothing like a post-holiday IT cockup US Department of Homeland Security staff returning to work on Tuesday after the Presidents' Day holiday have apparently had a tough time getting computer systems to function.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2DFVN)
Private Docker Swarm keys leak into public containers IBM left private keys to the Docker host environment in its Data Science Experience service inside freely available containers.…
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Google rents out Nvidia Tesla GPUs in its cloud. If you ask nicely, that'll be 70 cents an hour, bud
by Shaun Nichols on (#2DFNV)
AWS, GCE price war looming? Google will this week start offering Nvidia Tesla K80 GPU-equipped virtual machines for its Compute Engine and Cloud Machine Learning hosted services.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#2DFM8)
Boffins demand rule rewrite to restore glorified moon's dignity The ongoing argument over whether Pluto is an actual planet or just a dwarf on the outskirts of the Solar System has heated up again – with a new proposal to reapply planetary status to the distant iceball.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#2DFF0)
Civil liberty groups, security experts, law profs, lawmakers slam looming US policy Over 50 human rights and civil liberties groups, nearly 100 law professors and security experts, and lawmakers have launched a campaign against digital searches at the US border.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#2DF8D)
Starting with literally piles of crap (no, not the code) Interview In the months ahead, Idaho National Laboratory aims to open-source software for analyzing the quality of cow manure.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2DEX9)
One device for the next billion, Jide hopes Jide, the company founded by three ex-Googlers, has shown how a phone can act as a Continuum-style hub. When plugged into an external monitor, the Android device – with the new and as-yet unreleased cut of Jide's Remix OS – allows the user to work with "desktop-friendly" versions of the apps that are already installed on the phone.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2DES6)
Push for majority stake sale in memory business Toshiba is looking to raise almost $9bn (‎¥1 trillion) by selling off a majority stake in its memory chip business, according to Reuters, and so repair its finances, which have been devastated by cost overruns in its US nuclear power business.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2DEJC)
Backup data streams and now snapshots flash between firms After announcing an initial backup integration between Pure's all-flash array and Cohesity's converged secondary storage a year ago, the two have now gone further with snapshot-level integration.…
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by John Leyden on (#2DEC2)
Attacks of great concern to Russian financial institutions Cybercrime group RTM is deploying complex malware based in the Delphi programming language to target Remote Banking Systems (RBS), a type of business software used to make bulk financial transfers.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2DEA5)
$4.48bn... cheap! (apols to Alfred E Neuman) Yahoo! will be gobbled by Verizon for $4.48bn, $350m cheaper than the initial deal, apparently due to the damage done to the company's value by widely reported successful cyber-attacks.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2DEA6)
There's an app that maps public toilets – how could it not be core infrastructure? The chief executive of the Civil Service, John Manzoni, says the UK needs to begin to consider the "collection and storage of data as part of [our] core national infrastructure".…
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by Team Register on (#2DE78)
Take your pick of our six workshops Reg Events We’ve added the final session to our workshop lineup for Continuous Lifecycle London, giving you six options for diving deep into the technologies and tools driving cutting edge software development and deployment.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#2DE32)
A fabulous start to the year! Everyone's favourite cuddly outsourcing corp Capita is writing off a cool £50m worth of assets related to certain deals with customers after a "comprehensive review across its major contracts" base.…
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by John Leyden on (#2DDVC)
Remote-control app hijacked for use as snooping tool – again Cybercrooks have once again begun slinging malware that subverts elements of the legitimate TeamViewer remote control app to snoop on victims.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2DDRW)
And they've already got an integrated modem to show for it Japanese-owned chipmaker ARM has bought Swedish firm Mistbase and Brit biz NextG-Com – staking its flag firmly on the NB-IoT narrowband communications standard.…
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by Andrew Orlowski on (#2DDQV)
Article 29 has 'concerns' about Microsoft's data slurp The EU’s top privacy body has been probing Windows 10, but isn’t satisfied, even after Microsoft agreed to tweak the consent settings.…
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by Chris Mellor on (#2DDKB)
Well... if machines're gonna learn learn learn learn learn... Backgrounder Do we need a new processor architecture? Graphcore says that machine learning computation is different from existing computational types, and will be broad enough in its usage for – as well as accelerated significantly by – a dedicated processor architecture.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#2DDCK)
Why chase balloons for hundreds of miles when you can drop the payload outside? NASA will soon be testing high-altitude parachute systems that let astroboffins land valuable scientific research payloads from altitudes of 60,000 feet.…
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by Alexander J Martin on (#2DD9V)
Just over $180m in revenue, it turns out... and gross profit of $138m!? Oh, net loss though... App integration software business Mulesoft is set to make its initial public offering after revealing its financials.…
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by Darren Pauli on (#2DD86)
Cupertino files defence against back tax claim, claiming errors and overreach Stop terraforming taxation, says Cupertino, and let us get on with it Apple has filed its defence against the European Commission's claim it owes €13bn in back taxes in Ireland.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DD70)
Space. The Final Frontier (for copyright). These are the free images and videos of the ESA The European Space Agency has flung the data doors open: from today, it's adopted an open access policy for its trove of images and videos.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DD39)
CEO Travis Kalanick uses alternative diversity facts to prove Uber's goodness Uber CEO Travis Kalanick has appointed Eric Holder, once United States attorney-general under Barack Obama and now a partner of law firm Covington & Burling, to conduct a review of the “specific issues relating to the work place environment raised by Susan Fowler, as well as diversity and inclusion at Uber more broadly.â€â€¦
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DCYD)
El Reg surveys fun stuff that's popped up on GitHub and beyond Git, Bad, Ugly It's a slow day, the boss is absent enduring the travails of analysts with lunches to offer, so Vulture South found itself wandering around the odd corners of GitHub.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#2DCQT)
Developers want the new shiny, users forget integration and then along come the vendors ... Your attempt at putting Hadoop or Spark to work probably won't work, and you'll be partly to blame for thinking they are magic.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DCP3)
The plan is to build a database of 'stuff we don't want bombed' Last month, Australia's federal government established a Critical Infrastructure Centre. Now it's decided to ask what the centre should protect.…
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by Richard Chirgwin on (#2DCGX)
This gets interesting when you find your way into a mail server, says dev who found it Stop us if you've heard this one: Java and Python have a bug you can exploit to cross firewalls. Since neither are yet patched, it might be a good day to nag your developers for a bit.…
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