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by Chris Mellor on (#4R7FN)
Plus: 144-layer NAND coming in 2020... and a consumer-level QLC flash drive Intel has dropped the veil on its gen 2 Optane technology, code-named Barlow Pass, although the details are still light, and revealed it is developing 144-layer QLC (4bits/cell) NAND technology.…
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The Register
| Link | https://www.theregister.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theregister.co.uk/headlines.atom |
| Copyright | Copyright © 2025, Situation Publishing |
| Updated | 2025-11-05 21:31 |
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#4R7CX)
By hiding most of the emails you get Analysis Feeling overwhelmed by the number of unread emails in your inbox? Frustrated that you had to trawl through 1,000 Slack messages before finding the one you were looking for? Unable to find the latest version of the presentation your team has to give tomorrow?…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4R7AR)
Another ex-customer struggles to get hacked account killed off Months after The Register first wrote about TalkTalk failing to close a former customer's email address, the firm is still using the General Data Protection Regulation as an excuse for dragging its heels.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4R77Z)
It's not a joke, it's a programming language tuned for distributed systems At the Strange Loop conference in St. Louis, Missouri, earlier this month, Paul Chiusano, founder of Unison Computing, gave the audience a tour of Unison, an emerging programming language designed for building distributed systems.…
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by Team Register on (#4R781)
Book your ticket now to get a real-world intro to machine learning and analytics Event MCubed, our machine-learning conference, kicks off in London next week, and we really want you to join us for three days of practical AI and analytics.…
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Oh cool, Alibaba's first home-grown AI chip. Oh wait, it's only for its own cloud servers... for now
by Katyanna Quach on (#4R75F)
The 12nm Hanguang 800 chip has 17 billion transistors Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce conglomerate, revealed its first cloud AI accelerator chip on stage at its Aspara Conference held in Hangzhou, China, on Wednesday.…
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by Katyanna Quach on (#4R72P)
Three becoming one Pic Astronomers have spied a rare cosmic curiosity: three supermassive black holes appear to be on the brink of merging with one another after a gigantic galaxy collision took place, a billion light years away.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R6T6)
Cyber-terrorists, your game is through, 'cause now you have to answer to: America, fsck yeah! The US Congress has, near enough, approved a law bill to create a new set of dedicated cyber-security teams within the Department of Homeland Security.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R6R0)
You have a new message, please pay to see it. Oh, it's from Klick4_n00dz_9000 America's trade watchdog claims the owner of Match.com, Tinder, and other dating sites, shafted its lonely-hearts by allowing obviously bogus bot profiles to feign interest in the singletons.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4R6GZ)
Fresh code gives file systems a /var-sectomy – see inside for a manual fix On Tuesday, Google halted deployment of a Chrome update that damaged the file system on some macOS computers and rendered them unable to boot up as normal.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#4R6DD)
File storage company launches new Spaces service Dropbox now longer wants to be just a cloud storage service but the provider of “a calmer and more focused working environment†its CEO announced this morning.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R6DF)
Security biz that probed 2016 DNC hack makes an odd cameo in revealed transcript A garbled remark by President Donald Trump in a just-released phone-call transcript with the Ukrainian head of state has focused attention on cloudy security shop CrowdStrike.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R69G)
Linux darling faces the lawyers over Shotwell shenanigans The GNOME Foundation, maker of the eponymous Linux desktop, has been hit with a sueball over how its Shotwell photo manager, er, manages photos.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4R69J)
People who signed off the type rating course weren't qualified, claims whistleblower A whistleblower has claimed America's Federal Aviation Administration misled investigators checking whether FAA personnel were fully qualified to sign off Boeing 737 Max training standards.…
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by John Oates on (#4R63J)
But he forgot about the Streisand effect, tsk-tsk A four-month-old video has been dredged up and given a massive publicity boost thanks to legal threats sent by Australian would-be politician Clive Palmer to YouTube comedian Jordan Shanks.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R5X4)
Command line new and shiny mere months from 'feature complete' Those brave souls previewing Microsoft's new Windows Terminal were given a treat last night, as the team emitted an update to its latest take on command line shenanigans.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R5QC)
Make room! For a fee... Microsoft has finally begun rolling out the updates it promised OneDrive users back in June in the form of the Personal Vault and desperately needed additional storage.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4R5HQ)
Half of government grant to infosec training biz suspended as MPs demand probe Infosec training biz Hacker House has been catapulted to Parliamentary prominence after reports that co-founder Jennifer Arcuri secured UK government funding because of her personal relationship with now-Prime Minister Boris Johnson.…
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by Paul Kunert on (#4R5CY)
Hurry up – nearly beer o' clock Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC), the UK tax collector, has issued a winding-up order against tech services outfit Getronics over unpaid VAT, an issue the company said will be "resolved today".…
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by John Oates on (#4R57N)
There's an 'undeclared war' going on A US lobbying group is calling for open standards as a solution to the supposed security threat posed by Huawei.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#4R52K)
Want a peek at what's coming in Red Hat? Step this way CentOS has told devs that they can now get stuck into Stream, a new Linux distro it built with code planned for the next minor release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL).…
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by John Oates on (#4R52N)
Jeez, this building lark is hard... Hinkley Point nuclear power station in Somerset, southwest England, will cost about £2bn more to build than previous estimates and will miss its deadline for completion.…
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by John Oates on (#4R4TV)
A K9 to tide you over until hoverboards come out Shambling military-grade mechanical monstrosity maker Boston Dynamics has officially launched its dog-like robot, Spot.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R4TX)
A billion by next year? Microsoft dropped a fresh build of 2020's Windows 10 last night as the company trumpeted 900 million devices running the operating system.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#4R4QG)
I want mine on parchment right now, young man, and none of your diggy-till nonsense "Our research shows that most people do not want digital receipts. Consumers prefer and trust paper and there is the very real worry about data security that needs to be considered."…
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by Tim Anderson on (#4R4QJ)
Systemd-managed home folders are secure, portable, extensible... albeit with broken SSH login All Systems Go Systemd inventor Lennart Poettering told the crowds at the All Systems Go Linux user-space event in Berlin he intends to reinvent home directories to fix issues with the current model that are otherwise insoluble.…
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by John Oates on (#4R4N1)
Rip and replace only $3.5bn! Won't slow 5G rollout either The cost of banning Huawei from European 5G markets would be minimal, and not significantly slow the deployment of upgraded networks, according to an analyst whose opinion flies in the face of some mobile operators.…
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by Verity Stob on (#4R4JC)
The Good, the Bad, and the Wunderful Stob In the opening chapter of his latest book How JavaScript Works (pub. Virgule-Solidus, 2018, c. £24.19, pp 279), Douglas Crockford introduces us to a selection of English linguistic idiosyncrasies that he will inflict on his readers.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R4JD)
Plus: Who needs a visa to Europe when you've got a Space Bridge? Roundup While NASA splashing the cash on Orion modules may have grabbed the headlines, the fate of India's lander continued to perplex, assembly of the Space Launch System continued and Blighty pondered a Space Bridge.…
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by David Gordon on (#4R4FR)
Tune in to discover how you can make the best of both worlds, private and public Webcast Public, private, hybrid, multi... with so many options open, how do you build a full-stack cloud solution that takes advantage of all available resources in the best possible way?…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R4FS)
While you're at it, fix Java too Adobe has released an update to clean up a trio of vulnerabilities in ColdFusion, its long-running web application platform.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4R4DA)
Lone 'no' vote nixes renewal of W3C's Privacy Interest Group Google has blocked a proposed revision of the charter of the Privacy Interest Group (PING), a part of the W3C web standards body, over concerns that establishing an unchecked "authoritarian review group" will create "significant unnecessary chaos in the development of the web platform."…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#4R4A8)
Pro tip: When you’re removed as a Reddit moderator, you may want to review your life choices Yesterday, September 23, was officially autumnal equinox in the northern hemisphere: a fact that prompted a very frustrated gamer to ask Atari what was going on with the product that he had forked over hundreds of dollars for more than a year earlier.…
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by David Gordon on (#4R4AA)
This persistent large-capacity memory may be the fuel your app needs Comment Among all the uncertainties in this world right now, there is at least one constant: applications still absolutely rely on data storage.…
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by Thomas Claburn on (#4R3ZC)
Hack spee included 2014 JP Morgan Chase data theft On Monday, Andrei Tyurin, a 35-year-old Russian national, pleaded guilty in New York to charges of computer intrusion, bank and wire fraud, and online gambling in connection with a sustained hacking campaign targeting US financial institutions.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R3S0)
Hackers can inject system commands via version 5 of software, no patch available An anonymous bug hunter has publicly disclosed a zero-day flaw in the version 5 of the popular vBulletin forum software than can be exploited over the internet to hijack servers. No patch is known to be available.…
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by Kieren McCarthy on (#4R3MN)
Workers brought over from India were supposed to tackle specific projects – not fill a pool for short contracts Pradyumna Kumar Samal, the CEO of two US tech firms, was this month jailed for seven years for what prosecutors called “the largest and most sophisticated H-1B scheme ever prosecuted" in Seattle.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R3FW)
Office rental biz supremo huffs about 'scrutiny' as he ejects WeWork's wildman CEO and co-founder Adam Neumann has been pushed out as chief exec of his post-profit property management biz.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4R3B5)
As Reg readers will know, you'll have to click a few buttons first Firebox builder Mozilla has confirmed to UK Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan that Britons won't be getting DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) by default once the feature is included in the next run of browser updates.…
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by Tim Anderson on (#4R36S)
With the hope of running more enterprise applications AWS has joined the .NET Foundation as a Corporate Sponsor, which means the cloud giant gets a seat on the Foundation's Advisory Council as well as helping to fund the foundation's activities.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#4R2VG)
UK.gov wants 'algorithm' to be shared with other tech firms UK prime minister (at time of writing) Boris Johnson announced to the UN Security Council today a plan to block the sharing of violent videos on social media after terrorist attacks.…
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by John Oates on (#4R2NF)
Court green-lights Franco's exhumation from opulent mountainside mausoleum The Supreme Court in Spain has ruled that the government can exhume the remains of General Francisco Franco, who became dictator after the Spanish Civil War in 1939 until his death in 1975.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R2NH)
Three more months before all jobs stop and deletion starts In what seems to be becoming a bit of a habit within the halls of Redmond, Microsoft has extended the life of another product, this time the doomed Azure Scheduler.…
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by Alistair Dabbs on (#4R2HX)
See? That Trump fellow's not so bad after all Texas Senator Ted Cruz hailed "a great day for the men and women at Johnson Space Center" as NASA awarded the contract for building Orion spacecraft to Lockheed Martin of Littleton, Colorado.…
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by Richard Speed on (#4R2HZ)
Preview Insiders up to date with 19H2 toys. Or are they? Microsoft last night loaded up the confus-o-canon once more with updates for those more cautious Windows Insiders in the Release Preview ring.…
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by Gareth Corfield on (#4R2CQ)
International sites needn't worry about European findings The so-called Right To Be Forgotten from unflattering search results does not extend outside the EU's borders, the European Court of Justice ruled this morning.…
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by Shaun Nichols on (#4R28Q)
McAfee study finds poor setups, even worse visibility The ongoing rash of data leaks caused by misconfigured clouds is the result of companies having virtually no visibility into how their cloud instances are configured, and very little ability to audit and manage them.…
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