Saturday 31 December 2016
Thursday 30 June 2016
Hacker puts 9.3M patient records up for sale
A hacker that claim to have stolen database from three U.S. healthcare organisation and has advertised more than 650,000 patient record is up for sale on Dark Net, increased that number to over 9 million.
Hacker puts 9.3M patient records up for sale
A hacker that claim to have stolen database from three U.S. healthcare organisation and has advertised more than 650,000 patient record is up for sale on Dark Net, increased that number to over 9 million.
3D Printer seeks killer app
While 3D printer sales will experience healthy growth over the next for years, consumer machine remain a technology in search of a purpose.
Wednesday 29 June 2016
Microsoft's Windows 10 anniversary update will arrive August 2nd
Microsoft has just announced thant the Windows 10 anniversary update would be lunched by August 2nd which would include more features for both consumers and enterprises.
On the enterprise side, the update would include new security features and including advance threat protection in Windows defender and Windows information protection services to ensure that enterprise data remains secure
It was also announced that Windows 10 now runs on over 300 devices and users have spent 135 million hours using it so far.
As Windows senior director Lisa Gurry said, "the company doesn't want to bring out any update on 29th because it's a Friday and also because the Windows team needed more time to finish the product". She also noted that the expiration of the offer was communicated for a year now, so Microsoft can not change it anymore
Gurry also included that the update would include a number of new features for schools that want to adopt Windows 10 laptops. It is now easier to setup shared cart of device and to configure the laptop for a task-taking session
New software created by Brown University computer scientists could help website owners and developers easily determine what parts of a page are grabbing a user's eye.
The software, called WebGazer.js, turns integrated computer webcams into eye-trackers that can infer where on a webpage a user is looking. The software can be added to any website with just a few lines of code and runs on the user's browser. The user's permission is required to access the webcam, and no video is shared. Only the location of the user's gaze is reported back to the website in real time.
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