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 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.
The company’s latest efficiency figures are less about a single cooling trick than about how hyperscalers now compete on measurement, accounting boundaries, and the credibility of their infrastructure claims.
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.
pCloud’s up to 20 GB promotion looks simple on the surface, but freemium storage lives at the intersection of convenience, account security, sync behavior, and trust in how data is handled.
The move into technical testing with nine Italian banks turns a policy debate about programmable euro money into an operational question about how money systems will connect, govern, and scale.
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.
The company’s new Discovery Partner Program is a reminder that software supply chain security is no longer just about finding risk - it is about making the evidence usable by the teams that buy, deploy, and defend software.
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.
A new protocol draft tries to solve IPv4 exhaustion and routing sprawl by binding addresses, identity, and management into one design, but its biggest challenge is still proving that theory survives the real Internet.
Criminal IP plans to introduce AITEM at Infosecurity Europe 2026, and the framing alone puts attack surface management back in the spotlight.
A 3D-printed hose sprayer is a small maker project, but it neatly shows how everyday tools now pass through digital design, fabrication, and testing before they ever reach the yard.
A maker-style AI workaround turns a familiar climate complaint into a smaller technical question: what happens when inference has to live within a brutally tight energy budget?
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.
The real influence of a tool is often hidden in its defaults: visibility, timing, permissions, and ranking can quietly shape who participates and who disappears.
Employee experience is not a soft HR slogan when turnover slows releases, weakens customer continuity, and turns hiring into a cost spiral.
A submarine system linking the Adriatic with Croatia, Montenegro, Albania, Greece, and Turkey shows how modern fiber routes are becoming strategic infrastructure, not just telecom upgrades.
The release is a reminder that even routine desktop updates quietly reshape what software users inherit, trust, and maintain.
Companies are chasing AI talent fast, but the roles they want now blend coding, judgment, and security awareness in ways many teams have not staffed for yet.
A closer look at how online life can reshape identity, visibility, and relationships, and why the promise of constant connection does not always produce social closeness.