TechEye | |
- Thin clients get skinnier
- Intel’s China plans show mobile agenda
- US tech snooping is a trade barrier
- Cyber criminals steal a quarter of digital adverts
- Microsoft releases the hounds on subscription activators
- Why does Intel need Broadwell H?
- Sony gets hacked again
- Ofcom says broadband coverage patchy
- 3D nanostructures mean low cost
- Storage revenues continue to grow
| Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:25 AM PST
IDC said shipments of terminal clients and thin clients amounted to 1.35 million units in the third quarter of this year, falling by 1.8 percent and bucking predictions. more» |
| Intel’s China plans show mobile agenda Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:09 AM PST
The move was a little unusual, as it did not come with the huge tax breaks and other sweeteners that Intel has required from Israeli governments and the US. more» |
| US tech snooping is a trade barrier Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:08 AM PST Paul Nemitz, a director in the European Commission’s justice department said that US citizens are deterred from using European e-mail providers because they do not get the same protection as they would by using US providers, said Laws which empower the NSA to basically grab everything which comes from outside the United States, is a real trade barrier to a European digital company to provide services to Americans inside America. more» |
| Cyber criminals steal a quarter of digital adverts Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:07 AM PST
A study, by digital security firm White Ops and the Association of National Advertisers, is one of the most comprehensive looks to date at the persistent criminal activity involving online advertising. more» |
| Microsoft releases the hounds on subscription activators Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:07 AM PST
Microsoft has filed a complaint at a federal court in Washington accusing a person behind an AT&T subscription of activating various pirated copies of Windows 7 and Office 10. more» |
| Why does Intel need Broadwell H? Posted: 09 Dec 2014 01:05 AM PST
The rumour is based on pure speculation and common sense. Earlier this year Intel told the world that it would be launching its low-power Broadwell processors in “early spring” and Kirk Skaugen, who heads up Intel’s PC Client Group, showed a roadmap to prove it. more» |
| Posted: 08 Dec 2014 06:48 AM PST
The Financial Times reported that the PlayStation store was downed earlier today for a couple of hours. A gang that dubs itself the Lizard Squad has claimed that it is responsible for the hack – and the attack may be nothing to do with the Sony Pictures incident – blamed by some on North Korean hackers. more» |
| Ofcom says broadband coverage patchy Posted: 08 Dec 2014 06:40 AM PST
Ofcom said in a report that communication services are used by an average UK adult for over half of their waking hours. more» |
| 3D nanostructures mean low cost Posted: 08 Dec 2014 06:31 AM PST
The structures will be of use in electronics, biomedics, and photonics, the researchers said. Dr Chih-Hao Chang, a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at NCSU claimed the approach will reduce the cost of nanolithography "to the point where it could be done in your garage". more» |
| Storage revenues continue to grow Posted: 08 Dec 2014 06:21 AM PST
With revenues of $8.8 billion, up 5.1 percent from the same period last year, 25 exabytes shipped in the quarter, said IDC. more» |
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The move towards thin clients has slackened after some growth prompted by Microsoft's decision to deck Windows XP support.
Intel's recently announced plans to invest shedloads into its Chengdu plant might be revealing much about its cunning plan for the future.
The US government's mass surveillance of the whole world has become a trade barrier for European Internet companies trying to provide services in the United States, a top EU official claims.
Almost a quarter of video ads and 11 percent of display ads are viewed by fake consumers created by cybercrime networks to steal the billions of dollars spent on digital advertising.
In a new move against software pirates, the software king of the world has unleashed its legal hounds on those offering subscription activating software.
The Dark Satanic Rumour Mill has manufactured a hell on earth yarn which claims that Intel has bumped off its Broadwell H range.
Reports said that Sony has come under a fresh cyber attack following the break in which crippled Sony Pictures two weeks ago.
Despite the government maintaining that the UK is on track to deliver broadband just about everywhere in the country, regulator Ofcom said economics mean that's just not going to happen.
Scientists at North Carolina State University (NCSU) said they created a new lithography technique that uses nanoscale spjeres to create 3D structures.
The generation of vast amounts of data continues to fuel the disk storage systems revenue in the third quarter.
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