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Updated 2024-10-08 23:46
Cisco warns it won't fix critical flaw in small business routers despite known exploit
Software support ended in 2021, so we’re relying on SMBs knowing how to block ports Cisco "has not and will not release software updates" to address a critical flaw in four small business routers, despite having spotted proof of concept code for an exploit.…
NASA overspent $15m on Oracle software because it was afraid an audit could cost more
Houston, we have a problem: Millions wasted on license penalties NASA is rubbish at software asset management, has not implemented federal government guidance on how to address it, and as a result is spending too much on code it doesn't use – including $15 million on unused Oracle software alone, under a twelve-year-old license the space agency was afraid to examine.…
Intel offers desktop chip that can hit 6GHz if everything goes right, you can keep it cool, stars align, pigs fly
It'll do 8GHz when overclocked, if Chipzilla is to be believed Intel delivered on its promise of a 6GHz Raptor Lake chip this week with the launch of its Core i9 13900KS.…
Amazon's attempt to crush New York union slapped down
Wouldn't it be a terrible shame if other warehouses now followed JFK8's footsteps The US National Labor Relations Board squashed Amazon's attempt to overturn the first-ever successful union formed against the internet goliath at a warehouse in Staten Island, New York, this week.…
Google polishes Chromium code with a layer of Rust
Mozilla-incubated systems language should make Chrome shine Google plans to support the use of third-party Rust libraries in its open source browser project Chromium, a significant endorsement of the programming language and its security characteristics.…
US blocks $400m Army HoloLens orders, Microsoft left with a tenth for R&D
Nausea and headaches do not a fit fighting force make, so back to the lab for version 1.2 Congress is putting its foot down on funding the US Army's experiments with Microsoft HoloLens headsets, eliminating program funding in fiscal year 2023 for all but research into newer, less nauseating hardware.…
Lawyers slam SEC for 'blatant fishing expedition' after Exchange mega-attack
Not a 'whiff of wrongdoing' here, says attorney now fighting off Uncle Sam The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has sued international law firm Covington & Burling for details about 298 of the biz's clients whose information was accessed by a Chinese state-sponsored hacking group in November 2020.…
Fat EVs may cause 'more death on our roads' – watchdog
Is there a weight watchers for Hummers? As the popularity of electric vehicles grows, safety leaders are concerned that road injuries could increase due to how much heavier battery-powered cars are over their gas-guzzling predecessors.…
Version 5 of the Endless OS enters testing
This may show a future direction for Linux desktops Endless Computers is preparing a new version of its Endless OS distro, an easy-to-use OS for computing novices of all ages. It's a unique distro which shows how desktop OSes may evolve.…
The years fly by on first exoplanet confirmed by James Webb Space Telescope
LHS 475 b same size as Earth, rocky, but hotter, and so close to its star it orbits in 2 days NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed its first exoplanet: a rocky, hot world with a diameter 99 percent the size of Earth that completes an orbit around its star in just two days. …
What goes up must come down: Logitech sales tumble amid PC slump
CEO 'disappointed' by prelim top and bottom lines for latest full quarter With PC makers cutting prices to spur demand and reduce inventory holdings in the channel, peripherals maker Logitech is facing its own share of commercial problems.…
Move over, Kraftwerk: These musical instruments really are the robots
One Hacker Band is a guitar, bass and drums that play themselves We all love a good engineering passion project here at The Register and hopefully guitar-oriented music too. With One Hacker Band, these realms collide with surprising tunefulness.…
Microsoft to offer unlimited time off for US staff
Incoming corporate policy may lead to stress and burnout for staff, reduced costs for Redmond Microsoft is to allow US staff to take unlimited time off in a policy change that is supposed to give them more flexibility but, unsurprisingly, will also have a cost benefit to Redmond.…
TSMC bucks chip biz trend with Q4 sales lift, but will cut spending in 2023
Advanced chipmaking lifts world's biggest chipmaker, but softer demand, US trade issues lie ahead TSMC beat market estimates to turn-in higher than expected revenue for calendar Q4, however, its forecast for the start of 2023 is less optimistic and it expects to hold down capital investment spending in response.…
Security tech chief quits Salesforce as list of top-table departures grows
CRM slinger's annus horribilis continues as 'father of SSL' departs for VC fund The exodus of senior execs from Salesforce has continued with chief technology officer of security Taher Elgamal using LinkedIn to announce his departure.…
EU plan to make big tech pay 'fair share' of telco fees reportedly weeks away
All traffic is equal but some traffic is more equal than others The European Commission could issue draft legislation calling for cloud providers and hyperscalers to offset traffic generated by their services by directly funding telco infrastructure as early as March.…
Years late and 36 cores short of AMD, who are Intel’s 4th-gen Xeons even for?
A $17,000 Xeon chip for less than a third of competing players Analysis After countless delays, Intel's long awaited Sapphire Rapids Xeon Scalable processors are finally here, but who are they for?…
Games Workshop once again battles scariest monster of all: ERP gone wrong
Worldwide expansion reliant on delayed Microsoft Dynamics project as Amazon deal beckons UK tabletop wargames maker Games Workshop's seemingly neverending battle with its own ERP implementation has entered another chapter, as global projects are delayed owing to the difficulty integrating the new system.…
Questions asked about Chinese takeover of UK tech company
Are flow sensors such a big deal? In any case, MP invokes National Security and Investment Act A UK Member of Parliament has called on government to review the purchase of a Cambridge-based fabless semiconductor biz which turns out to have been taken over by a Chinese organization with links to the state.…
Heata offers free hot water by mounting servers on people's water tanks
Novel use of waste heat by UK company – but it's still in trial Heata has developed a novel way to use the waste heat generated by servers: mounting them on domestic hot water tanks to cut energy bills for homeowners.…
VALL-E AI can mimic a person’s voice from a three-second snippet
Are you really saying what I’m hearing? Microsoft researchers are working on a text-to-speech (TTS) model that can mimic a person's voice – complete with emotion and intonation – after a mere three seconds of training.…
Space startup ABL emulates Virgin Orbit failure by crashing
Second time this week a satellite-ferrying vehicle has failed ABL Space Systems, a US rocket startup, failed to launch its RS1 payload during the startup's first-ever flight attempt this week.…
Flaming USB battery halts flight from Taiwan to Singapore
And that’s why aviation authorities don’t allow power banks in checked luggage A passenger's USB power bank caught fire as a plane taxied towards the runway on a flight from Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport to Singapore's Changi Airport on Tuesday, causing the airplane to return to its gate.…
Hong Kong ups its SEO game to stop Google playing a protest song as its national anthem
It's not the anthem – it's the algorithm After several failed attempts to get Google to stop referring people to a protest song when they search for Hong Kong's national anthem, the Special Administrative Region of China has decided to take measures into its own hands by improving its search engine optimization.…
Fujitsu has a yen for 'large-scale' acquisitions and billions of yen to fund them
Digital transformation is still a thing and Japanese giant wants to buy anyone that can do it Japanese tech giant Fujitsu has revealed a plan to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on acquisitions.…
Cloud Software Group confirms 15 percent headcount cut
CEO of Citrix/TIBCO mashup says company has 'strong foundation' and rolls out the Broadcom playbook of focusing on 'top customers' The Cloud Software Group, the mashup of Citrix and TIBCO, has confirmed it made at least one thousand staff redundant yesterday.…
US think tank says China would probably lose if it tries to invade Taiwan
But even a short conflict would wreck the economy, which would be bad news for semiconductor supplies Three years from now, hypothetically, China launches an amphibious invasion of Taiwan. It does not go well, according to a top Washington think tank report.…
IBM shifts remaining US-based AIX dev jobs to India – source
Around 80 positions moved to another continent, Big Blue stays silent The Register has learned that IBM has shifted the roles of US IBM Systems employees developing AIX over to the Indian office.…
Draft climate law threatens fines for datacenters that don't cut their carbon count
Legislation also puts cryptocurrency farms in the crosshairs A law bill introduced in the Oregon state assembly has carbon dioxide emissions from crypto farming operations and datacenters in its sights.…
Royal Mail, cops probe 'cyber incident' that's knackered international mail
Don't go postal and call it a cyberattack because nobody knows (yet) what knocked out key system Royal Mail confirmed a "cyber incident" has disrupted its ability to send letters and packages abroad, and also caused some delays on post coming into the UK.…
Scientists tricked into believing fake abstracts written by ChatGPT were real
Study warns tool could be used to create fake research papers for paper mills Academics can be fooled into believing bogus scientific abstracts generated by ChatGPT are from real medical papers published in top research journals, according to the latest research.…
Native Americans urge Apache Software Foundation to ditch its name
Open source org called out for ignoring own code of conduct Natives in Tech, a US-based non-profit organization, has called upon the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) to change its name, out of respect for indigenous American peoples and to live up to its own code of conduct.…
AI-generated phishing emails just got much more convincing
Did a criminally minded robot write this? In part, yes. GPT-3 language models are being abused to do much more than write college essays, according to WithSecure researchers.…
Fedora 38 is finally taking shape
New Budgie and Sway spins, Xfce 4.18, and initial support for Unified Kernel Images A Fedora Project meeting this week is starting to set the shape of the next release, Fedora 38, due in April.…
Stranded ISS astronauts are getting a new Soyuz to ride home
The coolant-deprived vessel that got them there will return to Earth alone Russian space agency Roscosmos has decided to send another Soyuz capsule to the International Space Station to rescue crew stranded by a coolant leak in their return ride. …
Microsoft fixes Windows database connections it broke in November
January Patch Tuesday update resolves issue caused by Patch Tuesday update late in '22 Included in the usual tsunami of fixes Microsoft issued this week as part of Patch Tuesday was one that took care of a connectivity problem for applications using the Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) interface.…
German cartel watchdog objects to the way Google processes user data
Not transparent, not specific, and too easy to say yes to Google users don't have enough choice over whether – and to what extent – they agree to "far-reaching processing of their data across services," Germany's competition regulator says, adding that the tech giant should change its "data processing" terms and practices.…
Robot seal tested for stress relief on pretend Mars mission
Anything to avoid interacting with Elon Musk We must have all heard about "emotional support animals" by now – pets that provide comfort to people with psychiatric disabilities. They're also used as an excuse to try to take peacocks and more recently boa constrictors on airplanes.…
That NHS England patient data platform procurement, FDP, is live. And worth up to £480m
References to Palantir use cases, 'unique tools' litter the tender docs as critics mull legal action NHS England has kicked off the formal competition for its Federated Data Platform, giving suppliers just one month to bid for the increased contract value of up to £480 million ($581 million) over seven years, as rights groups threaten legal action.…
FAA grounds all US departures after NOTAM goes down
Air traffic resuming (but chaos remaining) after thousands of flights cancelled, 'no evidence of a cyberattack at this point' The US Federal Aviation Administration ordered airlines to "pause all domestic departures" this morning as it tries to deal with an outage in a critical computer system.…
PC sales slump to pre-pandemic level in Q4. 'Boom' is over, says IDC
Vendors lower prices to stimulate demand but inflation, fears of recession trump discounts Global PC shipments – desktops, notebooks and workstations – saw out 2022 with something of a whimper as sales volumes crashed to levels last seen before the pandemic.…
Meta develops AI targeting system to show housing ads to wider range of users
Part of a settlement with US Department of Justice after ads discrimination case Meta is rolling out a more open-minded AI-powered system that promises to reduce discrimination after it was sued by the Department of Justice for preventing Facebook users from seeing housing ads based on personal characteristics like their ethnicity, sex, and marital status.…
Haiku beta 4: BeOS rebuild / almost ready for release. / A thing of beauty
Open source reimplementation could be even better than the original in its prime Haiku is an open source OS with a few differences. The big one is that it's not a Unix. The next is that it's pretty close to being a realistic, usable alternative OS for ordinary, everyday use.…
Government tech spending in England more than doubles in five years
Researchers see pandemic boom in computer-related tech spend England's public spending on information technology has at least doubled, to reach £17.3 billion ($21 billion) over the last five years, according to research.…
New software sells new hardware – but a threat to that symbiosis is coming
Complex software packages need ever gruntier specs... and Koomey’s Law awaits Comment A few months back, I wrote that buying software is a big lie. All lies have consequences, of course. The worst kind of consequences are the ones you didn't see coming. So let's look at some of those, and some other lies they conceal.…
Swiss Army's Threema messaging app was full of holes – at least seven
At least the penknives are still secure A supposedly secure messaging app preferred by the Swiss government and army was infested with bugs – possibly for a long time – before an audit by ETH Zurich researchers.…
Asia’s digital divides mean some can’t afford tech upgrade they need to compete
International Monetary Fund report suggests 'diffusion' - a kind of tech trickle-down - might sort things out Asia is the biggest user of industrial robots, its residents account for nearly 60 percent of the world's online retail sales, and the region's researchers created the same proportion of patents in digital tech before the pandemic. Yet a report published this week by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) asserts that the region is not digitizing fast enough to avoid a slowdown in productivity growth, and attendant economic unpleasantness.…
Microsoft to move some Teams features to more costly 'Premium' edition
Wants around $10 a month for stuff you get free today, plus plenty more new features Microsoft has revealed that a Premium cut of its Teams cloudy collaborationware suite will debut in early February, and some features that are currently included in Microsoft 365 will move to the new – more costly – product.…
Citrix and Tibco staff report sweeping redundancies
Future is cloudy at the Cloud Software Group After months of speculation, job cuts appear to have commenced at the Cloud Software Group (CSG) – the company formed by the odd couple merger of Citrix and Tibco.…
Health insurer Aflac blames US partner for leak of Japanese cancer policy info
Zurich’s Japanese outpost also leaks a couple of million records Global insurer Aflac's Japanese branch has revealed that personal data describing more than three million customers of its cancer insurance product has been leaked online.…
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