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Apple releases eight small AI language models aimed at on-device use

posted onApril 26, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Arstechnica

In the world of AI, what might be called "small language models" have been growing in popularity recently because they can be run on a local device instead of requiring data center-grade computers in the cloud. On Wednesday, Apple introduced a set of tiny source-available AI language models called OpenELM that are small enough to run directly on a smartphone. They're mostly proof-of-concept research models for now, but they could form the basis of future on-device AI offerings from Apple.

Tech brands are forcing AI into your gadgets—whether you asked for it or not

posted onApril 26, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Arstechnica

Logitech announced a new mouse last week. A company rep reached out to inform Ars of Logitech’s “newest wireless mouse.” The gadget’s product page reads the same as of this writing.

I’ve had good experience with Logitech mice, especially wireless ones, one of which I'm using now. So I was keen to learn what Logitech might have done to improve on its previous wireless mouse designs. A quieter click? A new shape to better accommodate my overworked right hand? Multiple onboard profiles in a business-ready design?

My 30-Day Journey on a Dark Web Marketplace That Belonged to a Cyber Gang

posted onApril 25, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: HackerNoon

As I sat in my chair, I began to ponder the locations for adequate cybersecurity intelligence sites related to dark web activity. There are numerous articles published all the time, and they are good sources, but I wanted something that was going to be real-time and push the boundaries of my comfort zone. My mind began to race with ideas, but nothing surfaced that satisfied the concept I had.

How NASA Repaired Voyager 1 From 15 Billion Miles Away

posted onApril 25, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Wired

Engineers have partially restored a 1970s-era computer on NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft after five months of long-distance troubleshooting, building confidence that humanity's first interstellar probe can eventually resume normal operations.

Is the Arm version of Windows ready for its close-up?

posted onApril 25, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Arstechnica

Signs point to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite processors showing up in actual, real-world, human-purchasable computers in the next couple of months after years of speculation and another year or so of hype.

Change Healthcare Finally Admits It Paid Ransomware Hackers—and Still Faces a Patient Data Leak

posted onApril 24, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Wired

More than two months after the start of a ransomware debacle whose impact ranks among the worst in the history of cybersecurity, the medical firm Change Healthcare finally confirmed what cybercriminals, security researchers, and Bitcoin's blockchain had already made all too clear: that it did indeed pay a ransom to the hackers who targeted the company in February. And yet, it still faces the risk of losing vast amounts of customers' sensitive medical data.

Noncompetes Are Dead—and Tech Workers Are Free to Roam

posted onApril 24, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: Wired

More US workers will soon be free to leave their employers to work for rivals, thanks to a new federal rule that will block the long-standing practice of locking in workers with noncompete agreements.

The US Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday issued a final rule that bans most noncompetes nationwide. The agency estimated that by allowing people more freedom, the change would lead to the creation of 8,500 new businesses annually, an average annual pay increase of $524 for workers, lower health care costs, and as many as 29,000 more patents each year for the next decade.

Russia accused of jamming GPS signal on flights from UK causing route chaos

posted onApril 23, 2024
by l33tdawg
Credit: iNews (UK)

Thousands of holidaymakers flying to and from the UK have been hit by suspected Russian jamming of GPS signals, with aviation experts branding the cyber attack another front in Vladimir Putin’s “Cold War” with the West.

An increasing number of planes carrying passengers from the UK to countries near the Russian border have reported the outages, leaving “scope for errors” for pilots having to navigate flights without GPS.