Beyond Bouncing Back: How Antifragile Cybersecurity Turns Attacks into Advantages
The Evolution from Resilience to Antifragility In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, traditional cybersecurity resilience—the ability to recover systems to…
The Evolution from Resilience to Antifragility In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, traditional cybersecurity resilience—the ability to recover systems to…
Amazon Web Services has detailed the technical cascade that caused a widespread cloud outage affecting major platforms. The disruption reportedly stemmed from DNS issues impacting critical database services, creating a domino effect across dependent systems. Analysts suggest the hours-long incident may have cost streaming services and business platforms millions in lost revenue.
Amazon Web Services has revealed additional technical details about the major outage that disrupted numerous websites and applications for nearly a full day, according to reports from the cloud provider. The incident reportedly originated in AWS’ US-East-1 region where a DNS failure prevented services from accessing the DynamoDB API – a critical component for low-latency, high-throughput applications spanning gaming, IoT and ecommerce sectors.
New industry analysis indicates that low-code and no-code payment integrations are revolutionizing how specialized sectors handle transactions. Sources suggest these embedded solutions are delivering significant operational improvements and enhanced user experiences across multiple high-trust industries.
Industry analysts are reporting a significant shift toward embedded payment solutions across specialized sectors, with low-code and no-code tools enabling faster implementation and improved user experiences. According to recent reports, software platforms serving education, healthcare and field services are increasingly adopting these flexible integrations to streamline operations and accelerate growth.
The Accessibility Gap in Artificial Intelligence While headlines celebrate billion-dollar AI breakthroughs and record-breaking funding rounds, a quiet revolution is…
The End of an Era for On-Premises Office Solutions Microsoft has officially announced the retirement of Office Online Server, setting…
The AlmaLinux community distribution has reached a significant milestone with its 10.1 beta release. Meanwhile, TrueNAS 25.10-RC1 introduces substantial storage management improvements and ZFS filesystem enhancements that promise better performance and reliability.
The AlmaLinux community has reached a significant development milestone with the beta release of version 10.1, according to reports from the open-source community. This release represents the latest evolution of the popular Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL)-compatible distribution that has gained substantial traction among enterprise users and developers seeking stable, community-driven alternatives.
OpenAI has unveiled ChatGPT Atlas, a free AI-integrated web browser designed to compete with Google Chrome. The browser features built-in ChatGPT functionality that operates alongside web browsing without requiring page switching. Initial rollout targets macOS users with Windows and mobile versions reportedly in development.
OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Atlas, an artificial intelligence-powered web browser that represents the company’s first direct competition with established browsers like Google Chrome, according to reports from the company’s recent livestream event. Sources indicate the browser integrates ChatGPT directly into the browsing experience, allowing users to interact with the AI assistant without leaving their current webpage.
A New Challenger Enters the Browser Arena OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Atlas, a groundbreaking web browser that integrates artificial intelligence…
OpenAI Expands Its Ecosystem with ChatGPT Atlas Browser In a strategic move to deepen its integration into users’ daily digital…
OpenAI has introduced the Atlas browser, designed to seamlessly integrate ChatGPT into everyday web navigation. The new browser allows users to “chat with a page” and aims to transform how people interact with the internet, according to company announcements. Initial availability is for MacOS, with Windows and mobile versions reportedly in development.
OpenAI has launched the Atlas web browser, positioning it as what sources indicate could be the company’s equivalent of Google’s Chrome browser moment from 2008. According to reports, the browser aims to deeply integrate ChatGPT into the web browsing experience, answering what the OpenAI team described as the question “What if I could chat with a browser?”