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Submission + - Peer warns IT suppliers against partnering with Fujitsu in government contracts

An anonymous reader writes: According to publicly available figures, Fujitsu has won over half a billion pounds in government business as prime contractor since January 2024, but there is more than what has been reported

Peer James Arbuthnot has warned suppliers to “think twice” before partnering with Fujitsu on government contracts, to avoid being “tarred by the Fujitsu brush”.

Fujitsu’s central role in the Post Office scandal entered wider public consciousness in January 2024, following the broadcast of an ITV drama.

Submission + - Arch Linux isnâ(TM)t immune: Malware found hiding in AUR packages (nerds.xyz)

BrianFagioli writes: Arch Linux just reminded us all of an uncomfortable truth: Linux isnâ(TM)t bulletproof when it comes to malware.

Earlier this week, three malicious AUR packages slipped into the ecosystem. The names might look familiar: firefox-patch-bin, librewolf-fix-bin, and zen-browser-patched-bin. Each one was quietly laced with a script that fetched a Remote Access Trojan (RAT) from a GitHub repository.

The packages were uploaded by the same user and lingered on the AUR for roughly two days. Arch acted quickly once the issue came to light. As of today, the bad packages have been fully removed from the AUR. But if you installed any of them, the damage might already be done.

Comment Format (Score 3, Insightful) 78

So you have a file format going back almost 20 years, that supports embedding almost any kind of content anywhere, that has had new features bolted on almost constantly, and also is backwards compatible so that anything not using a new feature is readable by older applications, and is also forward-compatible so newer versions of the application can render these documents accurately. And people complain that said file format is too complex?

For a comparison, go read up on how complex the TIFF standard is, and that is, basically, a bunch of numbers corresponding to color values in a bitmap. The ancient base-standard document is 120 pages long.

Comment Trickle-Down (Score 1) 101

I appreciate the post. This is what is happening in my friend's department.

He works in IT support. There used to be around 30 full time staff to support all major university functions. Email, blackboard, access to 3rd party sites, directory and security, stuff like that. As time went on, 20% of the staff were doing 80% of the work. You had new hires with no experience nor any desire to do any work of any kind. They were experts at making excuses as to why they couldn't do the work, or were overworked, or getting other people to do their work for them. Long story short, a department that ran efficiently at 30 people now has over 80 people to do the same amount of work. And, to this day, the same 8 people who did most of the work originally are still doing most of the work.

Comment Needed to get at the Science (Score 3, Informative) 24

Why so many?

I can't speak to this paper but for the CERN papers the reason there are so many authors has far more to do with the fact that to get at the physics you need a 14-story tall incredibly complex detector that has its data collected and analyzed by software consisting millions of lines of code. You need a few thousand people to build and operate such detectors and to write and debug the code that analyzes the data to get at the physics. That's why there are so many authors.

Many of us would love to have our own table-top experiments but nobody knows how to make one that small which can get at the physics we are interested in.

Comment Re:A sad day (Score 1) 175

There is an astounding level of ignorance in your posts.

But let's start with this: hydrogen is dispensed and kept as a gas, not a liquid. That means that pressure is important. The dispenser must ensure that there is sufficient pressure in the car's tanks in order to fill it.

Have you heard of Boyle's law?

Fueling stations need their own compressors:
https://www.neuman-esser.com/e...

Fueling nozzles get stuck to cars:
https://www.facebook.com/group...

Your facepalm applies to yourself and your aggressive commitment to remain ignorant, since all of my points could be easily searched for and confirmed.

Comment The Big Rip (Score 1) 31

What happens when we look in the other direction?

All directions look back to the Big Bang because it happened at every point of the universe. The "Big Crunch" is pretty much ruled out by the accelerating expansion but this has introduced a new possible ending to the universe: the "Big Rip". In this scenario nothing stops the accelerating expansion driven by increasing dark energy.

As the expansion accelerates, the causally connected region of the universe shrinks and, if nothing stops this, at some point in the extremely distant future even atoms and then nucleons etc. will get ripped apart as the causally connected region shrinks below their size until it reaches the planck length at which point there will be a "big rip" as space-time itself is pulled apart. One intriguing, but complete guess, at what happens then is that the huge energy density triggers a new Big Bang at each and every point in the universe i.e. our universe will give birth to a new universe at every single point in it.

While that scenario is extremely hypothetical it seems a lot more optimistic end for us that just expanding forever until heat death stops everything...but it will be a while before we know whether it is right.

Submission + - Ukraine offers its front line as test bed for foreign weapons (reuters.com)

fahrbot-bot writes: Reuters is reporting that Ukraine will let foreign arms companies test out their latest weapons on the front line of its war against Russia's invasion, Kyiv's state-backed arms investment and procurement group Brave1 said on Thursday.

Under the "Test in Ukraine" scheme, companies would send their products to Ukraine, give some online training on how to use them, then wait for Ukrainian forces to try them out and send back reports, the group said in a statement.

"It gives us understanding of what technologies are available. It gives companies understanding of what is really working on the front line," Artem Moroz, Brave1's head of investor relations, told Reuters at a defence conference in Wiesbaden, Germany.

Ukraine is betting on a budding defence industry, fueled in part by foreign investment, to fend off Russia's bigger and better-armed war machine.

Submission + - First Electronic–Photonic Quantum Chip Created in Commercial Foundry (bu.edu)

fahrbot-bot writes: Scientists from Boston University, UC Berkeley, and Northwestern University have reported the world’s first electronic–photonic–quantum system on a chip, according to a study published in Nature Electronics.

The system combines quantum light sources and stabilizing electronics using a standard 45-nanometer semiconductor manufacturing process to produce reliable streams of correlated photon pairs (particles of light)—a key resource for emerging quantum technologies. The advance paves the way for mass-producible “quantum light factory” chips and large-scale quantum systems built from many such chips working together.

Generating quantum states of light on chip requires precisely engineered photonic devices—specifically, microring resonators (the same devices recently identified by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang as being integral to Nvidia’s future scaling of its AI compute hardware via optical interconnection). To generate streams of quantum light, in the form of correlated pairs of photons, the resonators must be tuned in sync with incoming laser light that powers each quantum light factory on the chip (and is used as fuel for the generation process). But those devices are extremely sensitive to temperature and fabrication variations which can push them out of sync and disrupt the steady generation of quantum light.

To address this challenge, the team built an integrated system that actively stabilizes quantum light sources on chip—specifically, the silicon microring resonators that generate the streams of correlated photons. Each chip contains twelve such sources operable in parallel, and each resonator must stay in sync with its incoming laser light even in the presence of temperature drift and interference from nearby devices—including the other eleven photon-pair sources on the chip.

Submission + - Fujitsu outage crashes Post Office Horizon system

An anonymous reader writes: Japanese IT giant’s time serving the Post Office is due to end next year, but problems persist

Post Office branches were unable to do business for hours today following a major outage at a Fujitsu datacentre.

The nationwide outage meant subpostmasters were unable to use the Horizon computer system on which they run their businesses.

Subpostmasters received a message from the Post Office which read: “There is a major outage within the Fujitsu datacentre causing branches to lose connectivity and the ability to trade.”

Submission + - Jeffrey Epstein Black Book Unredacted (archive.org)

An anonymous reader writes: The 64-page book contains names, addresses, & phone numbers of 349 people (221 UNREPORTED NAMES)

Comment Re: Economist's analysis is a bit trite (Score 1) 101

"Oh but electricians will be treated by doctors who studied at university" goes the tired argument

The argument for funding universities used to be that they were funded by the increased tax rate that higher earners pay because, with very few exceptions, higher earners have either benefited from a university education themselves or have benefitted from the works of others with university educations.

The great thing with that system was that those who needed a university education but who ended up in a lower paying job like teacher or nurse were not saddled with massive debts and instead had their education paid for by those going into business and earning far more employing an educated and healthy workforce. the great thing with that old social contract is that it justified higher taxes for the more wealthy and they, along with the rest of society, got to benefit from it. Instead now we have a system where it's hard to justify higher taxes on those earning more because they are almost entirely excluded from the benefits and jobs critical to society, like teachers, are becoming increasingly hard to fill.

Comment No Tenure (Score 1) 101

Is that where we find the naked campus “administrators” tenured by the dozen?

Not in the UK because UK universities no longer have tenure. Unless something has changed since I left the government forced universities to employ lecturers on fixed term contracts that do not have to be renewed when they expire.

Submission + - Meta Investors, Mark Zuckerberg Reach Settlement To End $8 Billion Trial (nbcnews.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Mark Zuckerberg and current and former directors and officers of Meta Platforms agreed on Thursday to settle claims seeking $8 billion for the damage they allegedly caused the company by allowing repeated violations of Facebook users’ privacy, a lawyer for the shareholders told a Delaware judge on Thursday. The parties did not disclose details of the settlement and defense lawyers did not address the judge, Kathaleen McCormick of the Delaware Court of Chancery. McCormick adjourned the trial just as it was to enter its second day and she congratulated the parties. The plaintiffs’ lawyer, Sam Closic, said the agreement just came together quickly.

Billionaire venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, who is a defendant in the trial and a Meta director, was scheduled to testify on Thursday. Shareholders of Meta sued Zuckerberg, Andreessen and other former company officials including former Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg in hopes of holding them liable for billions of dollars in fines and legal costs the company paid in recent years. The Federal Trade Commission fined Facebook $5 billion in 2019 after finding that it failed to comply with a 2012 agreement with the regulator to protect users’ data. The shareholders wanted the 11 defendants to use their personal wealth to reimburse the company. The defendants denied the allegations, which they called “extreme claims.”

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