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Updated 2025-04-07 07:15
With version 117, Firefox finally speaks Chrome's translation language
It also beats its main rival in some speed tests now The latest version of the flagship FOSS browser is out, and it's picked up one of the main features for which we keep Chrome around....
Another thing AI is better at than you: First-person drone racing
May as well give up already A fully autonomous flight AI has steered a drone through a racetrack faster than human pilots in the fledgling sport of first-person view (FPV) drone racing....
We all scream for ice cream – so why are McDonald's machines always broken?
iFixit takes aim at the John-Deere-for-frozen-milk situation Having won victories for iPhone and tractor owners alike, the right-to-repair crusaders at iFixit are turning to the really important stuff as summer enters its last death throes - ice cream....
Germany's wild boars still too radioactive to eat largely due to Cold War nuke tests
Scientists one step closer to cracking the case of these atomic swine You may be surprised to know that Germany's wild boars are too radioactive to eat - and Chernobyl may not be solely to blame. Fallout from nuclear weapons testing decades ago during the Cold War is a significant contributor to that radiation, it turns out....
As VMware says goodbye, leadership thinks Broadcom buy is a win
Exec chuffed regulators accepted perhaps-overstated lame duck argument "You write what you need to win."...
Chinese vendor apologizes for claiming Microsoft open source code was its own product
CEC-IDE is re-skinned Visual Studio Code with added censorware to spot terms like Taiwan Independence' Chinese consultancy Digital Guandong has apologized after publishing a product based on open source code from Microsoft without properly disclosing that fact....
China's top RISC-V players form patent alliance
This sort of group usually sees members share IP and vow not to sue each other, to accelerate innovation Nine of China's most prominent explorers and purveyors of processors built on the permissively licensed RISC-V architecture have formed a patent alliance....
OpenAI urges court to throw out authors' claims in AI copyright battle
ChatGPT's prose harvesting protected by fair use, super-lab argues OpenAI is trying to dismiss various claims in two legal actions launched by authors and comedians, who sued the machine-learning super-lab for scraping their books to train ChatGPT without explicit permission....
Oracle Cloud, Netsuite, and Azure go down, hard, Down Under
Storm that passed through Sydney saw clouds sleep early and struggle to wake up Updated Oracle, Netsuite, and Microsoft's clouds have gone down, hard, in the Sydney, Australia, region likely due to an issue at a datacenter provider in which both are tenants....
Barracuda gateway attacks: How Chinese snoops keep a grip on victims' networks
Backdoors detailed, plus CISA releases more IOCs for IT depts to check Nearly a third of organizations compromised by Chinese cyberspies via a critical bug in some Barracuda Email Security Gateways were government units, according to Mandiant....
Microsoft maybe still dreams of bendy phones, judging from 360° folding screen patent
Could a Surface mobe with one of these displays eliminate all that bad press from the Duo? Microsoft's first attempt at a folding phone didn't go so well, though a fresh patent from the Windows giant suggests it might be holding out hope that a 360-degree foldable screen could make the difference....
After injecting pop-up ads for Bing into Windows, Microsoft now bends to Europe on links
Clicking a URL from a system service will actually open in your chosen browser. For some. How fancy Microsoft has released a Windows 11 preview build that will open links generated by Windows system components in the user's default browser - but only for those in the European Union and a few other countries....
Microsoft ain't happy with Russia-led UN cybercrime treaty
Could be used to put ethical hackers, and citizens, behind bars A controversial United Nations proposal has a new foe, Microsoft, which has joined the growing number of organizations warning delegates that the draft version of the UN cybercrime treaty only succeeds in justifying state surveillance - not stopping criminals, as originally intended....
Tesla's purported hands-free 'Elon mode' raises regulator's blood pressure
NHTSA is already worried Autopilot and FSD make drivers irresponsible - this surely won't help matters The discovery of a secret Tesla Autopilot configuration that allows the self-driving system to operate without driver attention isn't sitting well with US regulators who have cut a special order to get more information for their ongoing investigation....
HP blames discounted PCs and China chill for Q3 revenue drop
At least the cost-cutting scissors are still sharp HP is putting a brave face on its third quarter 2023 results, claiming it's making progress to long-term growth priorities while enacting structural cost savings, despite revenue being down nearly 10 percent year-on-year....
Google wants to takes a byte out of Oracle workloads with PostgreSQL migration service
Third-party and bespoke apps most likely candidates for the switch Google is looking to capture some of Oracle's workloads by promising to help users migrate from Big Red's databases to PostgreSQL with a set of services and automation tools....
USENET, the OG social network, rises again like a text-only phoenix
Alive and still quite vigorous considering its age The USENET management committee has reconvened and there are green shoots of growth in the original, pre-World Wide Web social network....
UK air traffic woes caused by 'invalid flight plan data'
Former BA boss slams resilience, says explanation 'doesn't stand up from what I know of the system' Mystery still surrounds the technical issue at the UK's National Air Traffic Service (NATS) on Monday, which is being blamed on incorrect flight plan data being received, leading to the system reverting to manual processing and causing delays and cancellations of flights....
Google throws down gauntlet with first compute instances powered by AmpereOne chips
Though this is still a preview so another provider could swing it Interview Google looks set to become the first cloud provider to offer virtual machine instances powered by Ampere's 192-core AmpereOne datacenter chip, which Ampere is now pitching as a solution for AI inferencing workloads....
Meteorite is 4.6 billion years old and still rocking the solar system dating scene
Presence of aluminium isotope might help age other objects from space At 4.6 billion years old, meteorite Erg Chech 002 is among the oldest found on Earth. A new analysis of its composition promises to help understanding of the early solar system and date other space rocks....
Tesla hedges Dojo supercomputer bet with 10K Nvidia H100 GPU cluster
Keeping full self-driving dream on the road just needs more graphics chips? Tesla still dreams of fueling its motors with actual full self-driving (FSD) capabilities, and it's blowing piles of cash on AI infrastructure to reach that milestone....
Let's give these quadruped robot dogs next-gen XM7 rifles, says US Army
Black Mirror? Never heard of it Sometimes it feels like the most terrifying ideas from science fiction are simply fodder for the future of the military - case in point, word reaching us that the US Army wants to strap its next-gen service rifle to the top of robot sentry dogs....
This profiler chatbot promises to help speed up your Python – we can believe it
Scalene, Scalene, Scalene, Scalene, I'm beggin' of you please improve my code Interview To make Python code run faster, you can now get performance optimization advice from the Scalene Python profiler and its associated chatbot - and mostly its recommendations help....
The printout may be dead but that beast of a print queue lives on
A queue gone mad leads to surprising results for 3D printing - but still no regulation Opinion Just like an owner of a new puppy waking up to a scene of destruction, 3D printer users who leave long jobs running overnight may be appalled to see what they find in the morning....
We're about to hit peak device count, says HTC veep, as AR takes over
First you'll live in a headset. Then come the chip implants ... The number of screens people use each day has probably peaked, according to Alvin Wang Graylin, global vice president of Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC....
India set to launch Sun-spotting satellite on Saturday
Meanwhile its Moon rover dodges a crater and spots sulphur India's Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is already busy running its successful Chandrayaan-3 Moon mission, but still plans to put even more items on its to-do list with the launch of Aditya-L1 - a mission to observe the Sun....
Toyota Japan back on the road after probably-not-cyber attack halted production
Malfunction took 14 plants offline for 36 hours. Oh, what a ... nah, too obvious Toyota Japan has recovered from what it's described as a "malfunction in the production order system" that halted production on 28 lines across 14 plants starting on Monday evening....
AI-powered monitors to defend Washington DC against aerial threats
Replaces surveillance systems installed after 9/11 - and years before drones became a threat The Pentagon will upgrade the air surveillance technology it uses around Washington DC with a computer vision system that can identify and warn officials of suspicious objects flying around or near the capital....
Meta reckons China's troll farms could learn proper OpSec from Russia's fake news crews
Claims to have taken down two colossal networks, with 'Secondary Infektion' schooling 'Spamouflage' Russia appears to be "better" at running online trolling campaigns aimed at pushing its political narratives than China, according to Meta's latest Adversarial Threat Report....
AMD on the edge: Stripped down Siena Epycs teased
Hopes cool-running Zen cores can socket to Intel's Xeon-D - maybe with a smaller socket Hot Chips At the Hot Chips conference this week AMD teased its upcoming edge-friendly Siena family of Epyc processors, revealing modest power consumption and designs that allow them to nestle into relatively small devices....
Google threatens to inject Duet AI bot into more corners of Workspace: Meet, Chat, etc
And adds rivals Claude 2, Falcon, Llama 2 to Vertex AI Cloud Next Google is rolling out a bunch of generative AI models and tools across its Workspace apps and Cloud, including an expansion of the promised Duet AI, its personal virtual assistant....
University cuts itself off from internet after mystery security snafu
Halls of learning are stuck offline, but go Wolverines! The University of Michigan has isolated itself from the internet but, hey, everything's fine!...
Apple security boss faces iPads-for-gun-permits bribery charge... again
'We will continue fighting this case' global chief's lawyer tells us An appeals court has reversed a 2021 decision to drop a bribery charge against Apple's head of global security, who is accused of donating iPads worth up to $80,000 to a sheriff's office in exchange for giving his Cupertino agents concealed carry weapon licenses....
FBI-led Operation Duck Hunt shoots down Qakbot
Totally plucked: Agents remotely roast Windows botnet malware on victims' machines Uncle Sam today said an international law enforcement effort dismantled Qakbot, aka QBot, a notorious botnet and malware loader responsible for losses totaling hundreds of millions of dollars worldwide, and seized more than $8.6 million in illicit cryptocurrency....
Perhaps AI is going to take away coding jobs – of those who trust this tech too much
Llama 2 avoids errors by staying quiet, GPT-4 gives long, if useless, samples Computer scientists have evaluated how large language models (LLMs) answer Java coding questions from the Q&A site StackOverflow and, like others before them, have found the results wanting....
NASA to outdo most Americans on internet speeds, gigabit kit heading to the ISS
See hot singles in your area! Well, -453.8 F singles at least NASA's laser-based, gigabit-speed space internet is set to get its first orbital users just as soon as a new refrigerator-sized piece of hardware makes it to the International Space Station....
Reports of the PC's death are greatly exaggerated, says IDC
Demand may be 'tepid at best' but analyst sees return to pre-2019 levels next year The PC market is expected to return to growth in 2024, according to estimates from IDC analysts....
Google sharpens AI toolset with new chips, GPUs, more at Cloud Next
TPU v5e, A3 VMs, and GKE Enterprise headline first in-person shindig since pandemic Cloud Next Google is razor-focused on AI at this year's Cloud Next, with a slew of hardware projects, including TPU updates, GPU options, and a bevy of software tools to make it all work....
FreeBSD can now boot in 25 milliseconds
On AWS Firecracker - but there are other new micro-VM engines around, too Replacing a sort algorithm in the FreeBSD kernel has improved its boot speed by a factor of 100 or more... and although it's aimed at a micro-VM, the gains should benefit everyone....
More UK cops' names and photos exposed in supplier breach
All 47,000 Met Police officers and staff reportedly accessed in break-in London's Metropolitan Police has said a third-party data breach exposed staff and officers' names, ranks, photos, vetting levels, and salary information....
NHS watchdog expresses vendor lock-in concerns over Federated Data Platform deal
Quango must show Palantir does not have unfair advantage in procurement England's health data watchdog has warned the government quango in charge of the country's health service that it must show how it will avoid vendor lock-in in the forthcoming 480 million ($604 million) deal for a Federated Data Platform (FDP)....
Southern Water to drink up tech deals worth up to £358M
Wide-ranging procurements hint at prospect of SAP ERP system replacement Southern Water - the 792 million ($996 million) UK utility business - is on the hunt for technology suppliers to take part in a 358 million ($450 million) framework deal which includes help selecting and implementing a replacement for its current SAP ERP system....
OpenAI pops an enterprise sticker on ChatGPT to give big biz some peace of mind
Here's what you actually get for this VIP level. And how is Microsoft happy with this? OpenAI launched ChatGPT Enterprise on Monday, a tier of the text-generating chatbot focused on alleviating concerns about privacy and other fears business customers may have. What does enterprise-level access actually get you?...
Japan complains Fukushima water release created terrifying Chinese Spam monster
Asks Beijing to stop the phone calls harassing civilians, as tests show impact of nuke plant water Japan last week commenced the release of water from the Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant, and the neighbors aren't pleased....
Nvidia just made a killing on AI – where is everyone else?
It doesn't matter if your GPU is better at training if no one can get hold of them Comment Nvidia's latest quarter marked a defining moment for AI adoption....
US and China to keep talking about chip bans, just not when they'll end
Intel and Micron made the agenda, but action to ease their woes did not The US Commerce Department said on Monday that it's reached an agreement with Chinese authorities to facilitate the exchange of export control enforcement information - a pact that means the two nations will talk about tech export bans, without seeking to alter them....
Samsung realizes behaving ethically is good for business, says compliance boss
Mega-corp has mastered the complexity of numerous technologies but it took several scandals to impart this obvious lesson Samsung's compliance committee chair has told local media the massive conglomerate is now on the straight and narrow, after years spent dealing with the legal fallout of past ethical lapses....
The US Air Force wants $6 billion to build 2,000 AI-powered drones
Pilots' Goose cooked as uncrewed vehicles prove cheaper and perhaps more versatile The US Air Force wants to spend around $5.8 billion on up to 2,000 pilotless AI-powered drones, to serve alongside human pilots....
America's financial cops say Impact Theory's NFTs were unregistered securities
Dissenting opinion asserts position is wrong and that many headaches linger In its first enforcement action concerning the issuance of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, if you can remember that sad fad, the SEC has declared they should be considered and thus regulated as conventional securities under some circumstances....
Need a datacenter processor? Try our take-and-bake Neoverse N2 cores, says Arm
Just bring your own accelerator Hot Chips Arm has unveiled a set of blueprints called Neoverse Compute Subsystems (CSS) that - inadvertently or not - takes the biz an inch closer to straight-up designing processors for its customers, rather than customers designing processors from Arm's technologies....
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