The Brutalist Report - register
- Even Windows 10 cannot escape the new Outlook [329d]
- IBM seeks $3.5B in cost savings for 2025, discretionary spend to be clipped [329d]
- Ransomware attack at New York blood services provider – donors turned away during shortage crisis [329d]
- Microsoft talks up 'significant capital investments' in AI as sector reels over DeepSeek [329d]
- Vodafone aims to offer satellite-to-phone connectivity starting later this year [329d]
- Canvassing apps used by UK political parties riddled with privacy, security issues [329d]
- A good kind of disorder: Boffins boost capacitor tech by disturbing dipoles [329d]
- WFH with privacy? 85% of Brit bosses snoop on staff [329d]
- Startup plugs AI datacenters into biogas-powered energy [329d]
- Amazon sued for allegedly slurping sensitive data via advertising SDK [329d]
- And now something fun for a change: Building blocks of life in Bennu asteroid samples [329d]
- DeepSeek's not the only Chinese LLM maker OpenAI and pals have to worry about. Right, Alibaba? [330d]
- Wacom says crooks probably swiped customer credit cards from its online checkout [330d]
- Guess who left a database wide open, exposing chat logs, API keys, and more? Yup, DeepSeek [330d]
- North Koreans clone open source projects to plant backdoors, steal credentials [330d]
- Helion bags $425M in fresh funding despite fusion power still being a distant dream [330d]
- White House asks millions of govt workers if they would be so kind as to fork right off [330d]
- Remember those pesky drones? Turns out the FAA was behind it all along [330d]
- Tiny Linux kernel tweak could cut datacenter power use by 30%, boffins say [330d]
- Datacenters are hotter than ever, and we're not talking about rack temperatures [330d]
- Boom's XB-1 jet nails supersonic flight for first time [330d]
- Garmin pulls a CrowdStrike, turns smartwatches into fancy bracelets [330d]
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