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Updated 2024-10-14 05:15
Ardour goes harder: v6.0 brings 'huge engineering changes' to open-source digital audio workstation
Dev sticks with elderly GTK+2 GUI toolkit because 'we would gain nothing' by upgrading The sound-tinkerers among you will be pleased to learn that Ardour 6.0 is out, representing a major upgrade of the open-source digital audio workstation for Linux, macOS and Windows.…
Boeing brings back the 737 Max but also lays off thousands
And still no sign of safe software or approval to fly Boeing has resumed production of the 737 Max, its passenger plane with software so flawed that its certification was yanked after being found to have caused two fatal accidents.…
The time of annealing has come upon us, says Nutanix after beating revenue guidance
Losses deepened, optimism increased Nutanix has beaten the interim guidance it offered investors as the COVID-19-induced economic slowdown impacted its operations.…
FYI: There are thousands of Chrome extensions with so, so many fake installations to trick you into using them
Unethical developers drum up bogus user counts to gain trust Efforts to manipulate installation counts in Chrome Web Store extension listings appear to be alive and well, despite a developer's personal crusade to call attention to the problem.…
Switzerland 'first' country to roll out contact-tracing app using Apple-Google APIs to track coronavirus spread
Launch comes ahead of UK rolling out its controversial version Switzerland says it is the first country to roll out a contact-tracing app for the COVID-19 coronavirus using technology and a set of APIs produced jointly by Apple and Google.…
Vietnam accelerates – dare we say it? – digital transformation for a fourth industrial revolution
Prime Minister gives e-cash and e-government a hurry-up as Apple tunes in to its manufacturing smarts Vietnam has accelerated its adoption of all things digital.…
Made-up murder claims, threats to kill Twitter, rants about NSA spying – anything but mention 100,000 US virus deaths, right, Mr President?
Trump's throwing everything at the social wall to see what will stick Opinion “In their natural habitat, when chimpanzees become angry, they often stand up, wave their arms, and throw branches or rocks – anything nearby that they can get their hands on. When chimps are removed from the wild and kept in captivity, they experience stress and agitation, which can cause them to react in the same way – by throwing things,” explains the Jane Goodall Institute of Canada.…
Before IBM started axing staff, it told them Q3 2020 would be super-busy with post-lockdown catch-up jobs
Workers told to take five days of compulsory leave ‘so we can better care for each other’ In the halcyon days of April, before IBM initiated its latest round of mass redundancies, the IT giant told staff in its Australian and New Zealand operations to take a break – and brace for a deluge of post-lockdown work in the third quarter of 2020.…
HP Ink sales are in the red: Total revenue down 11 per cent as CEO says coronavirus knackered supply chain
Demand high, components MIA The three months to April 30 were "complicated," HP Inc said on Wednesday while trying to explain why its sales dropped by double digits in its fiscal second quarter of 2020.…
Turns out Elon can't control the weather – what a scrub: Rain, clouds delay historic manned SpaceX-NASA launch
Lightning strike threat postpones lift-off to Saturday NASA's attempt to launch American astronauts to the International Space Station aboard an American-made rocket from American soil for the first time in nearly a decade was aborted today due to bad weather.…
Apple promises third, no, fourth, er, fifth time's a charm when it comes to macOS Catalina: 10.15.5 now out
Just don't expect a full battery Apple has released the fifth version of macOS Catalina, and fixed yet another stability issue that saw machines crash during large file transfers; the latest in a long series of problems with version 10.15 of the operating system.…
Gone in 9 seconds: Virgin Orbit's maiden rocket flight went perfectly until it didn't
'Something malfunctioned' as timer was about to hit double digits Wannabe satellite flinger Virgin Orbit has shared more detail on what went wrong and right in the very brief maiden flight of LauncherOne.…
26 million logins believed to be stolen from LiveJournal in 2017 pop up on hacker forum
Best change any recycled credentials from your blogging days Russian-owned blogging service LiveJournal has reportedly suffered a hack affecting 26 million user accounts.…
Watch live: Backup and restore on AWS can be a challenge – is there a way to make it better, faster, cheaper?
You’ve come to the right place: We’re running a webcast to show you how Webcast “The journey to cloud” echoes through all organisations. It’s a Bildungsroman – a story of empowerment and betterment. A shiny, towering cityscape of gleaming edifices and elegant spires. It’s like an ascension into the actual clouds. Like dying and waking up in heaven.…
Motorola sticks a suit on Moto G Stylus mobe, pushes it towards European corporate types
Same specs, but now it's a Pro Almost four months after it was first unveiled, Motorola has finally announced a European release for its Moto G Stylus phablet.…
Photostopped: Adobe Cloud evaporates in mass outage. Hope none of you are on a deadline, eh?
More than dozen services down, customers left unable to work Adobe technicians scrambled on Wednesday to restore multiple cloud services after a severe outage left customers stranded.…
5G mast set aflame in leafy Liverpool district, half an hour's walk from Penny Lane
You know sick people call ambulances using mobile phones, right? Another 5G mast has gone up in flames in Liverpool in the UK, in this case mere days after it was erected.…
Google brews up a fresh pot of Java for its serverless Cloud Functions service
Still on Java 8? You'll need to upgrade to 11 to use it Updated Google Cloud Platform has added Java 11 support to its serverless Cloud Functions service.…
Not going Huawei just yet: UK ministers reportedly rethinking pledge to kick Chinese firm out of telco networks by 2023
Reality intrudes into politics and tech once again Updated Cleansing Britain's phone networks of Huawei equipment by 2023 might not be possible, ministers are said to have realised after UK policy changes on the Chinese company in the last few weeks.…
Highways England plumps up contract for National Traffic Information Service by £12m after brief chat with vendors
If you're anything like us, you dream of reorganising your country's highways. This is a new system they want to tighten up data streams, but still Highways England is shopping for a new £62m National Traffic Information Service to help collect, process and disseminate real-time data and information about traffic on 4,300 miles (6,920km) of road.…
Surf's up: Microsoft emits new security baseline for Edge 83 with way to shut off access to built-in browser game
How may I secure thee, let me count the ways... There was good news for enterprises keen to inflict Microsoft's Edge browser on their users with the arrival of a new security baseline and a way to turn off the Surf game that arrived in version 83.0.478.37.…
Nope, still can't find them. Skullcandy slips Tile's gadget-tracking hardware into individual earbuds
Although perhaps your lockdown digs are tidier than ours Audio kit flinger Skullcandy has embedded Tile's gadget-tracking tech to help you skin your knuckles fishing out its latest all-wireless earbuds from under the well beneath your handbrake.…
cmd.exe is dead, long live PowerShell: Microsoft leads aged command-line interpreter out into 'maintenance mode'
'It should not be used for interactive shell work' – Windows Terminal chief Microsoft senior program manager Rich Turner took to Twitter in recent days to remind everyone that it really is time to move on from Windows' ancient command processor, cmd.exe.…
Oh cool, tech service prices are plummeting. And by tech services, we mean botnet rentals and stolen credit cards
Supply and demand in action Crime has never been cheaper to pull off, so long as you're not particular about quality.…
Rich Communication Services: Nobody uses it, nobody wants it, but analysts reckon it's on the verge of a breakthrough
A viable alternative to the platforms with billions of active users between them? There's still work to be done Analysis Rich Communication Services (RCS) was initially pitched as the inevitable successor to SMS, offering enhanced multimedia functionality and other fun stuff, like read receipts.…
IBM resurrects Netezza data warehousing kit in the cloud, which will delight clients midway through migrating
Surprise! IBM has brought Netezza back from the dead in a move likely to sow further confusion among customers of Big Blue's enterprise data products.…
Twitter ticks off Trump with new 'Get the facts' alert on pair of fact-challenged tweets
Tweeter-in-chief responds by alleging bias and electoral skulduggery Twitter has for the first time acted on inaccurate tweets made by US president Donald Trump.…
While waiting for the Linux train, Bork pays a visit to Geordieland with Windows 10
Behold, the three error dialogs of the borkpocalypse Bork!Bork!Bork! As the UK tentatively returns to work and those who must venture back onto public transport, we were happy to learn that even in these changed times, Windows remains as wobbly as ever.…
Uber plans to ride out of stable Singapore, move APAC HQ to high-tension Hong Kong
Ride-sharing monster doesn't operate in current home, is illegal in special administrative region Uber has proposed moving its Asia-Pacific headquarters from Singapore to Hong Kong.…
Microsoft banishes Trend Micro code at center of driver 'cheatware' storm from Windows 10, rootkit detector product pulled from site
Infosec's Drivergate scandal deepens Microsoft has blocked a Trend Micro driver from running on Windows 10 – and Trend has withdrawn downloads of its rootkit detector that uses the driver – after the code appeared to cheat Redmond's QA tests.…
China to test digital version of its currency at 2022 Winter Olympics
Peer-to-peer currency exchange without an institution in the middle but with 'controllable anonymity' for central bank China will test a digital version of its currency at the 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Beijing.…
Work unleashed: How to work smoothly and securely, wherever you are
You're working at home, but who’s got the remote control? Promo The COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic has propelled the trend for flexible and remote working into the stratosphere. Millions of people worldwide are cocooned at home and bent over all manner of devices and apps as they carry on working. But remote working on a giant scale also means the threat attack surface just got much, much bigger.…
Mulled Chrome API shines light on long-neglected privacy gap: Sites can snoop on your find-in-page searches
Naughty JS can watch you hit control+F, start typing, see what's on your mind Analysis A browser feature being developed for the open-source Chromium platform has raised data-leakage privacy concerns – though the Google engineers working on the project contend the potential benefits outweigh the risks.…
IBM’s sacking spree reaches Australia – and as staff wait to exit, they're offered AU$4k to find new workers
Axed IBMers given chance to write almost-certainly futile letters to defend their jobs after the pink slip arrives IBM’s new round of “resource actions” – Big-Blue-speak for sackings – has reached Australia, The Register has learned, and will result in the creation of new cross-disciplinary teams to serve clients.…
India said its coronavirus contact-tracing app is perfect... adds bug bounty and open-sources it anyway
As the legalese changes to extend data retention period India has open-sourced its Aarogya Setu contact-tracing app and announced a bug bounty program to detect any security issues.…
US cable subscribers are still being 'ripped off' by creeping price increases – and this lot has had enough
Lawsuit claims Charter's 'fixed' monthly fees are anything but Analysis In many ways it’s a rite of passage in America: being ripped off by your cable company and trying to figure out how they did it. Now a lawsuit against Charter Communications is seeking to uncover just that.…
Frontier: Yes, yes, we've filed for bankruptcy protection, but that's not stopping us giving key staff $38m in bonuses
Judge tells US ISP: OK, seems fair Despite filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, US ISP Frontier Communications has insisted on giving key staff $38m in bonuses and other incentives – and an American judge has agreed.…
US lawmakers get a second shot at forcing FBI agents to obtain a warrant before they leaf through web histories
Bi-partisan amendment aims to take away easy access to your online life US lawmakers will get another vote on whether the FBI must get a warrant before agents can search Americans’ search and web-browsing histories.…
You E-diot! Formula E driver booted off Audi team after getting video game ace to take his place in online race
Daniel Abt's career stalls after he struggled to shift from physical to virtual courses mid-pandemic With motor sports going virtual amid the coronavirus pandemic, it appears not everyone is coping well with the change in gear to online.…
If someone could stop hackers pwning medical systems right now, that would be cool, say Red Cross and friends
The rules of war that protect hospitals should extend into cyberspace Following the surge of cyber attacks on medical facilities, the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and more than 40 other international leaders asked the governments of the world to do more to safeguard critical medical organizations amid the coronavirus pandemic.…
Consumer hardware shipments forecast to drop 14% for 2020, but hey, it could be worse, says Gartner
Thank heavens everyone had to start working from home, right? IT number-cruncher-in-chief Gartner has predicted a sharp fall in the sales of personal hardware during 2020.…
'I wrote Task Manager': Former Microsoft programmer Dave Plummer spills the beans
'There should be nothing that TaskMgr can't kill' – sadly no longer the case The Microsoft developer who wrote Task Manager, along with other utilities and games, has popped up to "write this stuff down before I forget it all".…
Airline-chasing lawyers leap on Easyjet for £18bn after 9m folks' data, itineraries nicked
No win, no fee. But if they win it's an up to £5.4bn fee A law firm that is already chasing British Airways now claims it is suing Easyjet for up to £18bn, intending to take a modest £5.4bn cut for itself, after nine million people's data was stolen from the airline's servers.…
The Last J-Freighter: HTV-9 arrives at the ISS as ESA inks a deal for a third Moon-bound service module
Meanwhile: the UK government is going to clear everything up. Or at least keep an eye on it Roundup Musk may be about to fire off a crewed missile and Virgin Orbit's first attempt to reach space might have fallen flat, but there was plenty of other fun to be had in the rocket-bothering world last week.…
Unmanned drones to slash NHS delivery times to one-fifth of road 'n' rail transport
Scottish trial will courier PPE and COVID-19 tests to remote hospital Remote-control drones are to be used to deliver coronavirus testing kits to a remote Scottish hospital – and they're being flown outside of the operators' direct line of sight.…
HTC co-founder Peter Chou's new startup picks great time to tease super-social VR headset
But you'll have to convince your mates to part with $599 for 5G-enabled Mova XRSpace, a startup founded by one-time HTC chief Peter Chou, has announced plans to introduce a new 5G-enabled virtual-reality headset in Q3 of this year.…
Arm goes off road... map: Cortex-X1 touted for phone, tablet, laptop processors needing Apple-level oomph
Meanwhile, A78, Mali-G78 and Ethos-N78 announced, too Arm today will unveil its Cortex-A78 CPU core, lined up for next-gen phones, tablets, and laptops, and go off roadmap with its Cortex-X1.…
eBay users spot the online auction house port-scanning their PCs. Um... is that OK?
Fraud is a big issue for etailer, but there are privacy and consent concerns too Updated Users visiting eBay have spotted that the website runs port scans against their computer, using the localhost address to inspect what may be running on your machine.…
Man responsible for least popular iteration of Windows UI uses iPad Pro as a desktop*
Plus: Getting over the Build hangover with new Windows 10 preview, UK Azure services, and more Updated While Microsoft's virtual Build event rumbled its way through last week, the minions at work in the Windows mines beneath Nadella's cloudy stronghold continued to toil.…
Galaxy S20 security is already old hat as Samsung launches new safety silicon
Passport-grade chippery to help mobile devices prove their identity Samsung will launch a new standalone turnkey security chip to protect mobile devices, the company announced today.…
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