The Brutalist Report - register
- Intel drops the deets on UK's Dawn AI supercomputer [766d]
- When it comes to personal data, we're on a highway to hell [766d]
- Your online store down? Can't get to your fave web shop? Maybe blame Shopify [766d]
- Strike over? US actors may return to work with top-tier 'progressive AI protections' [766d]
- Aurora dawns late: Half-baked entry secures second in supercomputer stakes [766d]
- Want a Cybertruck? You're stuck with it for a year, says Tesla [766d]
- HPE and Nvidia offer 'turnkey' supercomputer for AI training [766d]
- AWS staffer shows off the workplace that used to be a prison [766d]
- Ubuntu for Arm64 laptops (plus RISC kit) [766d]
- YMTC accuses Micron of 'freeriding' on its 3D NAND patents [766d]
- Inside Denmark’s hell week as critical infrastructure orgs faced cyberattacks [767d]
- Google Photos' AI Magic Editor won't change pictures of IDs, receipts, faces, or bodies [767d]
- Amazon's retail outfit tops list of orders from EU member states under new DSA law [767d]
- Fujitsu says it can optimize CPU and GPU use to minimize execution time [767d]
- RIP: Frank Borman, NASA commander of first Moon mission [767d]
- Introducing the tech that keeps the lights on [767d]
- Kubernetes' Tim Hockin on a decade of dominance and the future of AI in open source [767d]
- 48-nation bloc to crack down on using crypto assets to avoid tax [767d]
- Bright spark techie knew the drill and used it to install a power line, but couldn't outsmart an odd electrician [767d]
- Royal Mail cyber security still a mess, say infosec researchers [767d]
- Foxconn launches its first satellites on a SpaceX rideshare, to advance Microsoft space plan [767d]
- China’s annual e-tail frenzy broke records – trust us, say government, Alibaba and JD.com [767d]
- Australia declares 'nationally significant cyber incident' after port attack [767d]
Previous Day