by Katyanna Quach on (#61Q6T)
Just as NASA urged to reuse Musk hardware no more than five times A SpaceX flight sending the next bunch of astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) has been pushed back a few weeks after the Falcon 9 rocket to be used for the journey was damaged during transportation.…
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The Register
Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
Copyright | Copyright © 2024, Situation Publishing |
Updated | 2024-10-10 00:16 |
by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#61Q5T)
Con man blew victims' cash on antiques, artwork, other riches A crook who created a business called My Big Coin to cheat victims out of more than $6 million has been found guilty by a jury.…
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Blockade against VBA scripts in downloaded files is back on by default Microsoft is trying to shut the door on a couple of routes cybercriminals have used to attack users and networks.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#61Q2B)
Liquidity scams cost victims more than $70m, agents say The FBI has warned cryptocurrency owners and would-be owners about a scam involving phony liquidity mining that the bureau says has cost victims more than $70 million in combined losses since 2019.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#61Q0M)
No, we're not reverting to steam power – lignin just makes great cathodes A Swedish-Finnish commercial partnership could be the first step toward commercially viable wood-derived batteries for electric vehicles.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#61PYF)
CEO claims 60 percent of deployments are new buyers. It may all depend on how you define deployment In a week when SAP lowered its profit outlook due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, one analyst firm highlighted “deeper issues” with the global ERP vendor’s plans to move customers to its latest software.…
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by Dylan Martin on (#61PW8)
Foiled again, Team America Chinese semiconductor giant SMIC has reportedly been manufacturing 7-nanometer chips since last year, the best sign yet that China has found a way to develop advanced components despite US efforts to curb the country's homegrown silicon capabilities.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#61PS3)
Clinical systems 10 years old, new software due to go live next year Doctors at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, one of the UK's largest healthcare organizations, were this week left unable to access patient records and forced to cancel appointments following an IT outage caused by the extreme heatwave.…
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by Liam Proven on (#61PPF)
Dell certifies certain models for Linux, but if yours isn't, all is not lost Some of the changes in modern kit, especially portables, seem to be intentionally obstructive to Linux users however you can mostly work around them.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#61PM1)
US datacenter demand holding up, floundering in China. Consumers? 'Spending money on other things' Seagate's share price plunged this morning on the back of a lower than expected financial forecast that signals more cautious tech spending amid buyers' fears of a sustained global economic slowdown.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#61PH1)
What to buy your favorite misanthrope: booze, choc, sports tickets or fewer stupid users? Tell us, please tell us All Mariah Carey wanted for Christmas was you. Freddie Mercury and Queen wanted a lot more. All in fact. But what will the league of sysadmins desire most when their Appreciation Day rolls round next week?…
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by Nicole Hemsoth on (#61PH2)
Here on Earth, we bury our problems and simulate our way out of them later Over the course of four decades, global carbon dioxide emissions increased by 90 percent and it goes without saying, especially this summer week, that the impact is keenly felt.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#61PEC)
As British element of IPO is put on ice by SoftBank, Julia Hoggett says 'compelling case' remains The boss of the London Stock Exchange Group is refusing to give up on chip designer Arm listing its shares in the UK.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#61PCD)
Tried silicon substitutes but that effort fell flat. Literally and tonally A television interview on Thursday revealed an unexpected victim of the global semiconductor shortage: musical instrument-maker Yamaha.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#61PAQ)
And who's listening to those MP3s instead of me? Something for the Weekend Billy Idol has run off with Madonna. That's the third time this year and it's getting annoying.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#61P97)
Tribunal says broadband company failed to show it had been treated unfairly by regulator's decision Broadband company CityFibre has lost its appeal against an Ofcom decision that allowed Openreach to offer discounts for internet service providers (ISPs) to access its fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) products.…
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by Richard Speed on (#61P7R)
Hang on a minute. I've got a great idea On Call Friday is normally the end of the working week – unless you're one of those brave souls dangling from the end of a phone. Welcome to On Call.…
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by Iain Thomson on (#61P68)
Levy and Robinson are at it again Comment Two notorious characters from the British security services have published a paper that once again suggests breaking end-to-end encryption would be a good thing for society. …
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61P51)
The alternative is a paid subscription service. What's the bet it's more expensive than the current offering? Microsoft has announced it will "sunset" the Windows Information Protection data leak prevention offering baked into its client operating system.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#61P3R)
National Security and Investment Act used to prevent export felt to have nasty defense implications The Government of the United Kingdom has used a national security law to block the licensing of locally-developed technology to a foreign entity, preventing a deal that would have provided a Chinese company with robot vision tech.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61P1B)
Proposed working group would see Moscow's miltech conglomerate Rostec operate in Tehran Iran's Communications Ministry joined in a pledge with Russian state-owned defence and technology conglomerate Rostec to explore future collaboration in e-government, information security, and other areas.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61P04)
Billion-dollar fine for eight billion items lifted from clipboards, 107 million facial recognition files … and more The Cyberspace Administration of China has fined ride-sharing company DiDi global ¥8.026 billion ($1.2 billion) for more than 64 billion illegal acts of data collection that it says were carried out maliciously and threatened national security.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#61NZA)
When the next cloud datacenter fails, will your software go with it? Interview In the wake of Google and Oracle's UK datacenter meltdowns earlier this week, many users undoubtably discovered that deploying their apps in the cloud doesn't automatically make them immune to failure.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#61NWZ)
Exec, his brother, and a pal raked in $1.5m in illicit gains, Feds claim A now-former Coinbase manager, his brother, and a friend were today charged with wire fraud conspiracy and wire fraud in connection with the first-ever cryptocurrency insider trading scheme in the US.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#61NVB)
It now owns your store, your doctor, and your shopping history. What's next? Amazon is acquiring One Medical, a company operating a chain of primary care clinics, for $3.9 billion in an all-cash deal, as it ramps up efforts to expand its consumer healthcare offerings.…
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by Jessica Lyons Hardcastle on (#61NSC)
Plus Mandiant, Cisco Talos uncover digital espionage US Cyber Command has disclosed 20 new strains of malware among the numerous software nasties and cyberattacks being used against Ukrainian targets over the last few months.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#61NQ8)
ADPPA doesn't make everyone happy, particularly California America took a step closer to getting a federal privacy law: a bill proposing just the thing is headed to the House of Representatives to debate after clearing an early hurdle. …
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by Dylan Martin on (#61NN5)
Stark warning of a 'deep and immediate recession' if China takes over Taiwan controls most of the world's chip manufacturing capacity, and that worries US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#61NJP)
How can you have these worries as a software business? Just ask Cisco Machine automation specialist ABB is hoping supply chain disruption may have peaked and is forecasting a smoother ride from hereon in.…
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by Liam Proven on (#61NFY)
Computer giant's Project Sputnik extends to the 2022 model series Dell's latest XPS 13 ultrabook is now certified for version 22.04 of Ubuntu's operating system.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#61NFZ)
Spying allegations around Chinese comms giant refuse to go away The Biden administration has quietly probed Huawei over fears cell towers outfitted with its hardware could be spying on US military bases and missile silos. …
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by Lindsay Clark on (#61NDC)
Sticker shock: Russia, Belarus withdraw to cost it more than initially thought. SAP is downgrading its outlook for the current financial year, saying its decision to withdraw from both Russia and Belarus following the conflict in Ukraine is going to cost it more than initially thought.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#61NA7)
And guess which ACDC classic will blare at the 2024 ribbon cutting? The United Kingdom - or, rather, a 165-mile stretch of it - will soon be the home of the longest autonomous drone highway in the world.…
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by Richard Currie on (#61NA8)
Screwdriver fiends iFixit ponder the wisdom of a 'fanless, heatspreader-less, non-upgradable laptop' The engineers at iFixit have turned their tools on Apple's flash new M2-powered MacBook Air to find a startling lack of cooling.…
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by Lindsay Clark on (#61N6S)
Estimates suggest it could take a $460 million hit on the exchange Electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla has decided to sell three-quarters of its holdings in Bitcoin just a year after it promoted the "long-term potential" of the controversial cryptocurrency.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#61N6T)
Despite growth and strong demand in these areas, Redmond keeps trimming investment Even Microsoft's rapidly growing cloud business and the strategically important area of security are not immune to cooling economic conditions with previous job openings said to have now closed unfilled.…
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by Dan Robinson on (#61N4G)
How much did Intel fork out last quarter? Records were broken Intel is expanding its lobbying spend as it tries to convince the US government to pass the CHIPS Act, which would open $52 billion in funding to boost chip production in the US.…
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by Brandon Vigliarolo on (#61N2G)
New Matter integrations, financial incentives for well-written Skills, and future plans are all on display today Amazon's annual Alexa Live event was staged this week and saw new features revealed for developers and device makers alike. …
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by Richard Speed on (#61N0M)
People turn amateur sleuths to discover that the source of all those sign-ins seems to be in Redmond Strange things are afoot in the world of Microsoft email with multiple users reporting unusual sign-in notifications for their Outlook accounts.…
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by David Gordon on (#61N0N)
This Immersive Labs webinar will make it feel mighty real Webinar The explosion of open-source projects in recent years has allowed organizations to build ever more complex architectures using their pick of components developed by specialists or "the community".…
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by Bruce Davie on (#61MYQ)
Perhaps a QC can help us work out why we'd want a QC Systems Approach Back when I was field CTO for VMware in Asia-Pacific and Japan, many of my colleagues expected me to know something about everything in tech, and it was sometimes hard to bring myself to say "I don’t know."…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61MWZ)
Steering wheel not required, if desired – or you could add a coffee machine Chinese tech giant Baidu has revealed a self-driving car it claims can be produced for ¥250,000 ($37,000) – a quarter of the cost to manufacture comparable vehicles.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#61MVJ)
Americans need more time rebuilding their Moon sound stage, clearly NASA is pushing back the launch of VIPER, a rover designed to hunt for water ice on the Moon, by a year to November 2024.…
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by Tobias Mann on (#61MSZ)
A semiconductor empire built under the water-starved Texas sun? What could go wrong? As the US senate prepares to vote on a $50 billion bill to subsidize stateside chip manufacturing, Samsung has lodged an 11th hour proposal to build 11 semiconductor fabs around Austin, Texas over the next two decades, at an estimated total cost of $200 billion.…
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by Richard Speed on (#61MT0)
Also: Marketplace and Remote Support, for when you'd like an engineer to peer at your infrastructure Microsoft previewed the impending arrival of Azure Stack HCI 22H2 as well as Azure Remote Support and Marketplace during its Inspire partner event.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61MT1)
Cites flakiness of NFT community and speculative activity as inimical to the game's goals Mojang Studios, the Microsoft-owned-and-operated developer of Minecraft, has decided not to allow integration of non-fungible tokens or other blockchain-related tech in the game.…
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by Laura Dobberstein on (#61MQH)
Bain and Japan Industrial Partners among those in the running Toshiba announced on Tuesday it has settled on a shortlist of potential buyers, with local reports suggesting its list of suitors includes Bain, Japan Industrial Partners, Brookfield Asset Management and CVC Capital Partners.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61MP6)
Remember: telephones exist, are handy for collaboration, and usually work Updated Microsoft's Teams collaboration environment is experiencing an outage, depriving unknown numbers of people of the opportunity to enjoy video and/or audio conferences, or to access documents.…
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by Simon Sharwood on (#61MNE)
By watching how you use it, Virtzilla might figure out how to sell it VMware will start tracking customers' use of its experimental hypervisor for Arm CPU cores. But don't worry – it's not too creepy.…
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