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The Stonehenge of PC design, Xerox Alto, appeared 50 years ago this month [Fri Mar 17 2023]

From

theregister.co.uk

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update-769969-651fb42d@news.theregister.co.uk

Sent On

Fri, Mar 17, 2023 05:47 AM

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Hi {NAME}, Daily Headlines - 17 March 2023 *********************************************************

Hi {NAME}, Daily Headlines - 17 March 2023 ***************************************************************** The Stonehenge of PC design, Xerox Alto, appeared 50 years ago this month We all owe three things to this pioneering machine – two more than you might think ***************************************************************** Off-Prem * Microsoft pauses delayed partner ecosystem security update to count its money Active Directory privilege de-escalation will run for nine days in May before taking June off On-Prem * As chip sales slump, inflation makes the price of Samsung's Texas fab blow out South Korean titan budgeted $17 billion. Could now need over $25 billion to bring the facility online * Dual Tesla lawsuits pull Elon Musk into right-to-repair war The nearly identical class action suits claim Tesla unlawfully restricted access to third party repairs and parts * ReMarkable emits Type Folio keyboard cover for e-paper tablet Distraction-free long-life e-ink handheld writing tool becomes a typing tool too... but leaves us conflicted * Globalization is over, and it'll cost you, according to TSMC founder Free trade not quite as dead, 'but it's in danger' says Morris Chang * Budget: UK chip strategy still nowhere to be seen. Money for quantum, AI? Sure Um, folks? All this tech kinda needs semiconductors * The Stonehenge of PC design, Xerox Alto, appeared 50 years ago this month We all owe three things to this pioneering machine – two more than you might think * Google taps Fastly to make cookie-free adtech FLEDGE fly Online ad colossus hopes it can still make money when users want privacy * Workers don't want these humanoid robots telling them to be happy Shocking! Security * Here's how Chinese cyber spies exploited a critical Fortinet bug Looks to be the same baddies attacking VMware hypervisors last year * FTX inner circle helped itself to $3.2B, liquidators say SBF alone pocketed $2.2B, or so this bankruptcy paperwork goes * Got Conti? Here's the ransomware cure to avoid paying up Kaspersky cracks the code, so get busy before the next update comes * UK.gov bans TikTok from its devices as a 'precaution' over spying fears Gov staff using it on personal mobes just fine... it's not like ministers use WhatsApp etc for business ... oh wait Software * AI-generated art can be copyrighted, say US officials – with a catch Some non-artificial intelligence needs to be involved * The npm registry's safe word is Socket GitHub's JavaScript failings are someone else's opportunity * Microsoft's Copilot AI to pervade the whole 365 suite Clippy 2.0 to help us 'reconnect with the soul of our work' ... just don't mention that lawsuit * Adobe reckons it'll complete $20B Figma mega deal by year-end Ups financial forecasts on back of 'healthy' Q1, as more and more of world goes digital * China’s Baidu claims its ERNIE chatbot reinvents the computing stack We're headed for models-as-a-service, apparently, and the OS doesn't matter * Google stops selling its biz-grade augmented reality specs In case of apathy, break Glass Offbeat * Capital crunch: Virgin Orbit confirms all ops on pause until Tuesday Staff reportedly furloughed as firm scrambles to find funding after failed launch * NASA spots first evidence of an active volcano on Venus – in a big pile of CD-ROMs Disc-trawling expedition of 30-year-old data turns up trumps * Reg fashion: Here's what the well-dressed astronaut will wear on the Moon in 2025 Charcoal gray with orange highlights – so chic, and so deliberately fake ------------------------------------------------------------------------ This email was sent to {EMAIL} You can update your preferences here: or unsubscribe from this list: Situation Publishing Ltd, 315 Montgomery Street, 9th & 10th Floors, San Francisco, CA 94104, USA The Register and its contents are Copyright © 2023 Situation Publishing. All rights reserved. Find our Privacy Policy here:

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