The Brutalist Report - register
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- openSUSE finds an elegant solution to x86-64 version support [1135d]
- Adidas grapples with $1.3B in unsold Yeezy sneakers after breaking up with Kanye West [1135d]
- 60% of Germany's 5G network is Huawei, says Chinese embassy [1135d]
- WANdisco suspends shares pending fraud investigation [1135d]
- UK Prime Minister wants £800M to spend on big British iron [1135d]
- The Great DB debate: SQL extensions won't solve the graph problem [1135d]
- £2B in UK taxpayer cash later, and still no Emergency Services Network [1135d]
- Microsoft wants you to build quantum apps in Azure, the cloud that's both up and down [1135d]
- Sony won't budge on Microsoft-Activision merger objection [1135d]
- China's semiconductor and IC imports have slumped. Why on Earth could that be? [1135d]
- The Moon or bust, says NASA, after successful SLS/Orion test flight [1135d]
- South Korea warns US: the CHIPS Act leaves a sour taste [1135d]
- Singapore admits it should have explained COVID app data could be used by cops [1135d]
- Suspected Chinese cyber spies target unpatched SonicWall devices [1136d]
- Dems, Repubs eye up ban on chat apps they don't like [1136d]
- Inaugural flight of first (mostly) 3D-printed rocket aborted [1136d]
- Cop warrant orders Ring to cough up footage from inside this guy's home [1136d]
- Four charged with swiping $1m+ of gear from Microsoft cargo trucks [1136d]
- Microsoft's scythe hovers over RPS for Exchange Online [1136d]
- Europe, America fear Twitter job cuts mean it can't protect users [1136d]
- A new version of APT is coming to Debian 12 [1136d]
- Humanoid robot takes a retail job, but not one any store clerk wants to do [1136d]
- Swedish datacenter operator wants to go nuclear [1136d]
- Leave your data where it is, we'll look at it there, says SAP [1136d]
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