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Recently, both .NET Upgrade Assistant and Azure Migrate application and code assessment for .NET have had updates improving privacy and security as well as adding some useful new features. Sadly, they don't modernize your privacy and security code
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Kahn had a communications perspective, Cerf came with a computing perspective, and together they worked on connecting diverse computing networks — up to 256 of them. But what have they done for us lately?
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A researcher has found a bug that allows anyone to impersonate Microsoft corporate email accounts, making phishing attempts look credible and more likely to trick their targets. Good thing they never email anyone
"The bug, according to Kokorin, only works when sending the email to Outlook accounts." <-- Oh, phew. Good thing no one uses those.
/sigh... Microsoft...
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The company has now confirmed an issue with the Photos app wherein the application would fail to start due to a conflict with a non-admin-based group policy or CSP (configuration service provider) policy. You don't own any software, Photos Edition
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A colleague told a story of how he once broke the entire Office division’s ability to check in code because he accidentally checked in a syntax error to the script that is used to verify that your proposed change has satisfied all the pre-submit requirements such as passing static analysis and unit testing. Hoist on your own Autocorrect
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Too bad they fixed it. We wouldn't have been subjected to "New Outlook" if they hadn't.
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
I’m begging you for the benefit of everyone, don’t be STUPID.
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1994’s Simon was the first rough draft of a device that would change the world. But it was also a dead end. It's just not like IBM to mess up and lose an early lead
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A little more than ten years later Microsoft completely bungles the handheld market.
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They did find two scenarios in which human-driven cars were safer: at dawn/dusk and when turning. Going forward and going in reverse?
But (more) seriously folks - hearing they're less safe when turning does not give me confidence in them.
I also would really like to see some numbers for autonomous driving when the road markings are not clearly visible (aka winter driving, or even spring with the sand on the side of the road)
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A free & open-source OpenTelemetry dashboard for deep insights into your apps on your local development machine. Big You is always watching
No idea why that quote came to mind today... ;S
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The proposal, which is aimed at preventing child sexual abuse material, would essentially break encryption. "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."
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Microsoft has confirmed that Windows 10 apps will mistakenly display an "How do you want to open this file?" dialog box when attempting to right-click on the program's icon and perform a registered task. And they said they weren't going to give that version new features
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Delegates are everywhere in modern code; a delegate is a type that represents references to methods with a particular parameter list and return type. Or delegate the debugging to AI
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Google's DeepMind artificial intelligence laboratory is working on a new technology that can generate soundtracks, even dialogue, to go along with videos. It just keeps using the 'Chariots of Fire' theme
Or maybe 'Fortunate Son'
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There's understandable fear that AI will lead to job losses. However, business leaders are hopeful that automation will also boost workplace opportunities. The other 14% are the AI
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Cadence shows off optical solution for next-generation PCIe 7.0 that is not yet finalized. That 'whoosh' you hear is all the data passing through your computer
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Since the rise of the internet, software developers have commanded big salaries and valuable perks. But something has shifted since the pandemic, and the U.S. now employs fewer software developers than it did in 2018. Time to start a charity to save the endangered developer
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here we go again... it's the end of the world. I think articles like this come out every couple of years.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Meta was going to start training AI on Facebook and Instagram posts on June 26. It's amazing what a little threat of a big fine does these days
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Docker's 2024 State of Application Development Report highlights industry shifts toward AI and microservices. I'm guessing they found that everyone is now using Docker?
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People find it difficult to distinguish between the GPT-4 model and a human agent when interacting with them as part of a 2-person conversation. Hint: ChatGPT is the one that seems reasonable
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I've definitely interacted with an LLM driven helper chat bot, maybe a few of them, just in the last month or two.
Amongst other stuff... I've had to talk to Amazon about subscriptions and refunds, ISPs about new service provision, and an insurer about benefits/coverage details and in/out of network providers.
The biggest indicators for me were near-perfect spelling and grammar along with not being able to help without transferring me to a person. I don't think 80% of people would have noticed. In one instance I'm pretty sure the service provider was aiding the subterfuge by giving the chatbot an Indian name. I found that a little bit humorous. "No you are not talking to a robot! You're talking to a support agent in another country to whom we've outsourced our support staff."
But all of them worked more or less flawlessly and were at most only 1/2 as frustrating as the phone systems where you have to repeatedly press buttons or keep saying agent, person, real person, live agent, etc to get a warm body.
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YouTube is introducing a new experimental feature that will allow viewers to add “Notes” to provide more context and information under videos, the company told TechCrunch exclusively. That's a cat. That's also a cat.
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Until people use them to mimic the downvote button....
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A long-term trend is happening across large and small companies, and that is the convergence of developers, those who code apps, and DevOps, those who maintain the systems on which apps run and developers code. Becoming DevDevOps?
Maybe someone brighter than I can explain his point to me - I thought DevOps was already the merger of developers and operations. It's kind of right there in the name.
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