The Brutalist Report - register
- CISA flags imminent threat as Akira ransomware starts hitting Nutanix AHV [36d]
- Retro Games opens pre-orders for THEA1200, a full-size working Amiga replica [36d]
- Shenzhou-20 crew rides Shenzhou-21 home after debris strike [36d]
- The Steam Machine rises again as Valve readies 2026 hardware trifecta [36d]
- Google pitches EU on adtech fixes to dodge breakup after €2.95B slap [36d]
- Europe's IT spend to surge 11% as cloud sovereignty fever takes hold [36d]
- Tales from the pit: AI and the software engineer [36d]
- Report blasts UK Ministry of Defence over Afghan data-handling failures [36d]
- Trillionaire fantasies, investor dreams, reality nightmares [36d]
- UK tribunal says reselling Microsoft licenses is A-OK [36d]
- Digital overhaul at UK's NS&I bank is £1.3B over budget and 4 years late [36d]
- Clop claims it hacked 'the NHS.' Which bit? Your guess is as good as theirs [36d]
- Execs make rules that control AI usage, then break them for their own work [36d]
- Developer battled to write his own documentation, but lost the boss fight [36d]
- Chinese web giant Tencent can't buy all the GPUs it wants [37d]
- Kubernetes overlords decide Ingress NGINX isn’t worth saving [37d]
- Chinese spies told Claude to break into about 30 critical orgs. Some attacks succeeded [37d]
- Happy holidays: AI-enabled toys teach kids how to play with fire, sharp objects [37d]
- Firefox adds AI Window, users want AI wall to keep it out [37d]
- Ransomed CTO falls on sword, refuses to pay extortion demand [37d]
- Baidu answers China's call for home-grown silicon with custom AI accelerators [37d]
- States that aren't nice to ICE still sharing key database full of personal info [37d]
- AI pilots keep crashing, mostly because firms skip the prep, survey finds [37d]
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