Commentary: Microsoft had an aggressive monopoly on both the PC operating system and web browsers in the ’90s. Apple, while no bit player, owns only 13.7% of the global smartphone …read more Source:: Legal
Day: June 19, 2020
Accelerate digital transformation with the right strategic partner
by
•The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated digital transformation across industries. Selecting the right partners will not only help firms execute their transformation agenda — they’ll also help shape the right agenda …read more Source:: Open Source S
Maxthon releases version 6 beta of its Bitcoin SV-based browser
by
•The Maxthon 6 browser provides blockchain-based tools to change the way you use the internet. …read more Source:: Open Source S
Latin American companies to resume IT spend in Q1 2021
by
•Budgets will be mostly focused on technologies such as cloud while organizations are not fully adjusted to the “new normal”, according to new research. …read more Source:: Open Source S
Inside an encrypted external hard drive
by
•What’s inside a super-secure encrypted hard drive? Let’s get the screwdrivers out and take a look. …read more Source:: Open Source S
Blood pressure and the Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2: Regular monitoring is key to diagnosis
by
•Fitness trackers generally measure your heart rate, daily activity, and other basic metrics. The Apple Watch can serve as an ECG indicator, but now we see the Samsung Galaxy Watch …read more Source:: Open Source S
Microsoft Defender ATP now scans Windows 10 PC firmware for hardware rootkit attacks
by
•Microsoft brings malware scanning to firmware on Windows 10 PCs. …read more Source:: Open Source S
Microsoft’s GitHub: Now open-source developers get ‘one linter to rule them all’
by
•GitHub says it’s open-sourcing its in-house linting tool, the GitHub Super Linter, to clean up code. …read more Source:: Open Source
Google launches its own version of Pintrest called Keen
by
•Keen is the latest experiment from Google’s Area 120. …read more Source:: Open Source S
Despite brutal border clash between India and China, tech bonds will be very hard to break
by
•Almost every startup worth its salt has received investment by Chinese firms, making these bonds very tough to break despite chronic border hostilities. …read more Source:: Open Source S