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+1 +1A User and Entity Behavior Analytics Scoring System Explained ·
How risk assessment for UEBA (user entity behavior analytics) works is not unlike how humans assess risk in our surrounding environment. When in an unfamiliar setting, our brain constantly takes in data regarding objects, sound, temperature, etc. and weighs different sensory evidence against past learned patterns to determine if and what present risk is before us. A UEBA system works in a similar manner. Data from different log sources, such as Windows AD, VPN, database,[...]
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+37 +1How a computer sees history after "reading" 35 million news stories
So far, humans have relied on the written word to record what we know as history. When artificial intelligence researchers ran billions of those words from decades of news coverage through an automated analysis, however, even more patterns and insights were revealed.
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+7 +1Consumer Reports just changed its mind and now recommends the new MacBook Pro
Apple fixed the bug that caused terrible battery life on the MacBook Pro, and that was good enough for Consumer Reports to change its recommendation.
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+9 +1Nvidia’s GeForce Now puts a gaming PC in the cloud
Nvidia today announced the launch of its GeForce Now platform for PCs during its CES keynote tonight. As the company’s CEO Jen-Hsun Huang noted during today’s keynote, the majority of PCs in use today aren’t able to play modern games simply because they can’t support modern graphics cards. GeForce Now for PCs will simply these potential gamers to access a cloud-based gaming service.
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+23 +1Maybe this time, it will be Mac to be “Switched”
I stood up from my chair, a new wooden office chair in the library discussion room with the smell of young Swiss pine, and walked toward the whiteboard on the wall to host the meeting for our marketing project. I made my way behind my teammates’ chairs in the tiny meeting room, and when I walked behind Eddie, a brilliant guy who talked really fast, I tripped the charger cable of his white MacBook.
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+1 +1Are Computers Draining The Beauty Out Of Chess?
The sixth game of the World Chess Championship was over before the sun set. This was new. The intricately fought contests had thus far lasted until night fell, and sometimes well beyond. The darkness heightened the strategic drama, leaving an eerie purple glow shining out from behind the thick glass of the players’ room.
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+46 +1The MacBook Pro is a lie
Many of us have been talking our way around this issue for the past week without directly confronting it, so I feel like now’s as good a time to address it as any: Apple’s new MacBook Pro laptops...
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+7 +1The 'Apple of gaming world' just launched a laptop to 'eradicate' all other laptops
The laptop features a "vapor chamber" to dissipate heat, as well as a custom fan design. It costs €4,199 if ordered in Europe, £3,499 in the UK, and $3,699 in the US. "What we are trying to do is a suite of products focused on the gamer. Previously we had laptops that were designed for better portability, somewhere there is a fine balance between performance and portability, and one that had an intense amount of performance," said Min-Liang Tan, CEO and cofounder of Razer told Business Insider.
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+9 +1Meet ORWL. The first open source, physically secure computer
If someone has physical access to your computer with secure documents present, it’s game over! ORWL is designed to solve this as the first open source physically secure computer. ORWL (pronounced or-well) is the combination of the physical security from the banking industry (used in ATMs and Point of Sale terminals) and a modern Intel-based personal computer. We’ve designed a stylish glass case which contains the latest processor from Intel – exactly the same processor as you would find in the latest ultrabooks and we added WiFi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity for your accessories.
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+22 +1Dell Closes $60 Billion Merger with EMC
Dell said it completed its $60 billion deal to acquire EMC, the largest technology merger in history.
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+34 +1A Hacker From South Africa Just Rescued The First NASA Computer In Space
The Guidance and Navigation Control computer launched on 1966's Apollo-Saturn 202 mission, was the first of its kind. It successfully led a rocket in and out of suborbit, paving the way for the mission to the moon. After that kind of pioneering adventure, you might expect this metal explorer to be safely ensconced in a museum somewhere. But until very recently, it wasn't. Instead, it was languishing in obscurity—first in a scrap heap, then in storage in Houston, Texas.
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-1 +1Load Balancing: How to Quickly Boost the Performance of Your Apps
Load balancing can help boost the performance of your website and applications, as it allows more people to use your systems at the same time. Instead of all of the traffic going to a single destination, you can direct traffic to various machine
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+28 +1Moore’s Law Is Dead. Now What?
Mobile apps, video games, spreadsheets, and accurate weather forecasts: that’s just a sampling of the life-changing things made possible by the reliable, exponential growth in the power of computer chips over the past five decades. But in a few years technology companies may have to work harder to bring us advanced new use cases for computers.
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+21 +1Should You Still Be Buying Toshiba Laptops?
Is it safe to buy Toshiba laptops and tablets now that the company has reportedly reached a deal to sell a controlling stake in its consumer electronics unit?
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Crossmatch offers Biometric Fingerprint Scanner
Mobile Wireless Biometric Fingerprint Scanner are durable, handheld wireless fingerprint data capture system, which is optimized for single-handed operation to maximize officer safety. Request a Quote today and visit the website.
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+27 +1Western Digital makes a $46, 314GB hard drive just for the Raspberry Pi
The Raspberry Pi 3 was released earlier this month with some significantly improved hardware, including a quad-core 64-bit ARM CPU, an upgraded GPU, and embedded wireless—updates that will let people use it for a wider variety of tasks than before. For people whose use cases require a decent amount of storage, Western Digital has just announced a specialized low-profile hard drive called the PiDrive.
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+38 +1Cryptography Pioneers Win Turing Award
n 1970, a Stanford artificial intelligence researcher named John McCarthy returned from a conference in Bordeaux, France, where he had presented a paper on the possibility of a “Home Information Terminal.” He predicted the terminal would be connected via the telephone network to a shared computer, which in turn would store files that would contain all books, magazines, newspapers, catalogs, airline schedules, public information and personal files.
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+18 +1Are Computers Still Getting Faster?
In a recent episode I explored a 10-year-old MacBook to see if it could still keep up in today's world, and surprisingly it could. So in this episode I explore why that is.
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+22 +1Java plug-in malware alert to be issued by Oracle
The firm behind the Java plug-in is to warn users of a malware risk as part of a settlement with a US watchdog.
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+34 +1How Google Inspired Raspberry Pi’s $5 Computer
A chance encounter with Alphabet Inc.’s Google chairman Eric Schmidt in January 2013 led the head of a British nonprofit that makes bare-necessities computers to ditch his plans for a more expensive version of its popular $35 computer, the Raspberry Pi. The Cambridge, U.K.-based Raspberry Pi Foundation had received a $1 million grant from Google to distribute 15,000 units of the build-it-yourself, programmable Raspberry Pi computers to schoolchildren.
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