
SECPULSE
SOC Detection Lead
Professional Profile
SecPulse has one of the fastest detection times in the sector. A reference in building and optimizing SOCs.
Key Skills
SOC management; SIEM analytics; Threat detection; SOAR playbooks; Coordinated incident response
Major Achievements
Reduced SOC detection time from 26 minutes to 4.
Articles by SECPULSE
When Security Learns to Remember Too Much
A reflective cyber piece turns oblivion into a security problem, showing how digital systems can make forgetting feel like a flaw.
Microsoft’s AI Pitch Meets a Nervous Next Generation
Brad Smith is trying to calm student distrust of AI, but his own message concedes that automation is already reshaping entry-level work and corporate hiring.
The New Software Power Shift CIOs Can No Longer Ignore
AI-assisted building and business-led development are turning the old build-versus-buy rule into a governance problem, not just a procurement choice.
SAP’s New Autopilot: Why Agentic ERP Changes the Security Problem, Not Just the Interface
The shift from screen-driven ERP to AI-orchestrated workflows may promise speed, but it also moves the real control point toward identity, policy, and runtime verification.
AI Is Becoming the New Control-Plane Risk
A CIO.com opinion piece from the Foundry Expert Contributor Network lands on a hard truth: AI projects fail less from model quality than from weak ownership, unclear approval paths, and unfinished operating models.
A Tiny Glue Joint, and a Better Way to Build Moving Parts
Alex Krush’s glue-in filament hinge is a small 3D-printing idea with a practical aim: add motion without redesigning the whole mechanism.
Nvidia GPUs Enter the Windows Local AI Conversation
Microsoft’s updated Windows 11 AI documentation appears to widen local language model support, with Nvidia acceleration now part of the picture on some non-Copilot+ PCs.
Very Mobile’s Summer Deal Shows How Telecoms Sell Speed, Not Just Price
The 2026 promotion pairs 200 GB in 5G Full Speed with a low entry price, a free month, and free SIM logistics, with separate paths for number portability and new activations.
Inside the Badge Makeover: Why a Small Firmware Change Can Redefine a Radio Device
A handheld Communicator badge with a QWERTY keyboard, LoRa radio, and ESP32 is getting new firmware, and that modest update can change how the device is used, audited, and trusted.
The Real Price Tag of Digital Progress: Why “Smart” Services Still Feel Expensive
AI, digital services, and electric mobility are sold as efficiency plays, but the hidden costs of integration, governance, and infrastructure often decide who actually benefits.
The Hidden Factory Tax: When Decisions Arrive Too Late to Matter
Decision latency is turning into an industrial cost center: if a plant can sense fast but decide slowly, AI and automation lose much of their value.
Brussels Rewires the Backbone: Why the EU’s Telecom Overhaul Matters Beyond Bandwidth
The “One Market” push puts fiber, 5G, and strategic dependence at the center of Europe’s next communications reset.
Retro Hardware’s Cleanest Trick: Packing More Capability into One Wedge
The Amiga 1232 Storm CD is a reminder that compact builds are never just about nostalgia - they are about integration, tradeoffs, and how much engineering can fit into one enclosure.
When a Tiny Converter Becomes the Difference Between Signal and Guesswork
A closer look at analog-to-digital converters shows why one small component can shape how modern devices measure, decide, and record reality.
Oracle’s New AI Price Signal: The Meter Is Still There, Just Harder to See
Oracle’s latest AI billing pilot looks less like a clean break from usage pricing and more like a commercial layer built on top of it, with bigger consequences for procurement, auditability, and control.
A Pair of Vintage Voodoo 2 Cards, and the Fragile Work of Bringing Hardware Back to Life
A repair project for two Dragon 3000-branded 3dfx Voodoo 2 boards shows how legacy hardware depends on patience, verification, and a lot of uncertainty before it can be trusted again.
Italy’s Digital Backbone Faces Its Post-Grant Test
With PNRR-era rollout work fading into the background, Infratel’s next challenge is less about laying fiber than about governing the data, contracts, and coordination that keep public networks usable.
When Back-Office AI Starts Deciding What Gets Paid
Siav and Atacod are putting document AI into the passive cycle, where extraction, matching and ERP integration can remove manual work - or quietly become a control point for business data integrity.
Criminal IP’s AITEM Debut Turns a Trade Show Slot Into a Security Signal
Criminal IP plans to introduce AITEM at Infosecurity Europe 2026, and the framing alone puts attack surface management back in the spotlight.
The Quantum Trap Is Not the Math - It Is the Migration
Post-quantum cryptography may be standardized, but real-world security still depends on whether systems can swap algorithms without breaking the trust layer around them.



