Yeah, it's always good to end the week with a bit of spooning...
Posts by Korev
4934 publicly visible posts • joined 26 Aug 2016
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BOFH and the case of the disappearing teaspoons
Tesla owner gets key fob chip implanted in his hand
UK's largest water company investigates datacenters' use as drought hits
Intel's Gelsinger talks up 'systems foundry' era of trillion-transistor chips
Network congestion algorithms have design flaw, says MIT
Google shuts off IoT Core services shortly after announcing API stability commitments
In a time before calculators, going the extra mile at work sometimes didn't add up
Re: And don't work too fast either!
A friend's brother got a summer job whilst a student doing some kind of boring data manipulation. He realised that it was easily automatable and spent a day or so writing a programme to do it. The end was result was that he and all the other temps got rapidly given the boot...
LibreOffice improves Microsoft compatibility with version 7.4
Scientists use supercritical carbon dioxide to power the grid
Google promises to adjust search algorithm to favor 'people-first content'
Australian wasps threaten another passenger plane, with help from COVID-19
Mouse hiding in cable tray cheesed off its bemused user
Janet Jackson music video declared a cybersecurity exploit
NASA wants a hundredfold upgrade for space computers
Excel @ mentions approach general availability on the desktop
Apple to compel workers to spend '3 days a week' in the office
Airbnb turns its anti-partying tech on American lodgers
Microsoft Azure cloud region settles over desert in Doha, Qatar
Apple tells suppliers to use 'Taiwan, China' or 'Chinese Taipei' to appease Beijing
More datacenters coming to Ireland, despite energy concerns
Keep your cables tidy. You never know when someone might need some wine
'I wonder what this cable does': How to tell thicknet from a thickhead
We once had someone decide that they wanted to connect their phone to a network and plugged in a D-Link router. This muppet didn't realise they plugged in the wrong port and the router's DHCP tried spraying out IP addresses; QIP then crapped itself and gave up meaning the whole subnet went down...
Icon 'cos scientists are supposed to know better...
BOFH: Who us? Sysadmins? Spend time with other departments?
General Motors charges mandatory $1,500 fee for three years of optional car features
Re: Microtransactions?
>For people who can afford the haberdashery known as "a brand new BMW", 18 bucks per month is probably so low as to be off the radar
But in ten years time when the car is on its third owner, that $216 will be a lot more money.
That's assuming BMW haven't turned off the infrastructure to support the subscriptions on that model....
Facebook hands over chats to cops in abortion case
Rescuezilla 2.4 is here: Grab it before you need it
Microsoft's fix for 'data damage' risk hits PC performance
DoE digs up molten salt nuclear reactor tech, taps Los Alamos to lead the way back
Polaris supercomputer boots up, paves way for Aurora exascale system
Burger King just sent spam receipts to customers
Slack leaked hashed passwords from its servers for years
UK wants criminal migrants to scan their faces up to five times a day using a watch
Yeah, we'll just take that first network handshake. What could possibly go wrong?
Remember the humanoid Tesla robot? It's ready for September reveal, says Musk
Scientist shares spicy pic of 'James Webb' discovery
Intel close to deal for semiconductor plant in Italy
Post-quantum crypto cracked in an hour with one core of an ancient Xeon
Fights, floods, and fortunes when cloud giants roll into town
Eggs in one basket
Why on all earth do we[0] allow these cross-cloud single points of failure to happen? It's not hard to imagine a disaster (see icon) or even "just" a hurricane or flood that would take out a lot of civilisation's compute and everything that relies on it.
[0] Trying to work out who's responsible here is quite an effort. Maybe the UN should compel governments to ensure large spaces between the companies' bitbarns.
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