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Taiwan's iPass Releases Floppy Disk Pre-Paid Cash Card

Par : msmash
27 décembre 2025 à 10:01
Taiwan's iPass has released a limited-edition prepaid payment card shaped exactly like a 3.5-inch floppy disk. The company, perhaps rightly so, felt the need to include a warning on the product listing: "This product only has a card function and does not have a 3.5mm [sic] disk function, please note before purchasing." The NFC-enabled novelty card went on sale starting Christmas Eve and comes in black or yellow finishes at 1:1 scale. It works across Taiwan's public transport network -- buses, trains, subways, taxis, and bike rentals -- as well as convenience stores like 7-Eleven and FamilyMart, supermarkets, pharmacies, and fast-food chains including McDonald's and Burger King. The floppy disk joins an increasingly absurd lineup of iPass form factors. Previous releases have included, Tom's Hardware reports, a Motorola DynaTAC replica, model trains, a flip-flop, an LED-lit Godzilla snow globe, and a blood bag. Taiwan's PCHome24 online store currently lists 838 different iPass card designs. A standard card costs NT$100 (about $3.20) and comes without stored value.

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FFmpeg Developer Files DMCA Against Rockchip After Two-Year Wait for License Fix

Par : msmash
26 décembre 2025 à 20:00
GitHub has disabled Rockchip's Media Process Platform repository after an FFmpeg developer filed a DMCA takedown notice, nearly two years after the open-source project first publicly accused the Chinese chipmaker of license violations. The notice, filed December 18, claims Rockchip copied thousands of lines of code from FFmpeg's libavcodec library -- including decoders for H.265, AV1, and VP9 formats -- stripped the original copyright notices, falsely claimed authorship and redistributed the code under Apache's permissive license rather than the original LGPL. FFmpeg first called out Rockchip in February 2024 for "blatantly copy and pasting FFmpeg code" into its driver, but the chipmaker's last response suggested no intention to resolve the matter. The DMCA notice requests either removal of the infringing files or restoration of proper attribution and an LGPL-compatible license.

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AI's Hunger For Memory Chips Could Shrink Smartphone and PC Sales in 2026, IDC Says

Par : msmash
26 décembre 2025 à 14:05
The global smartphone and PC markets face potential contractions of up to 5.2% and 8.9% respectively in 2026, according to downside risk scenarios from IDC that trace the problem to memory chip manufacturers shifting production capacity away from consumer electronics toward AI data centers. Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron Technology have pivoted their limited cleanroom space toward high-bandwidth memory for AI servers, restricting supply of the conventional DRAM and NAND used in phones and laptops. IDC expects 2026 DRAM supply growth to hit 16% year-on-year, below historical norms. The smartphone industry's decade-long trend of bringing flagship features to affordable devices is reversing. Memory represents 15-20% of the bill of materials for mid-range phones, and thin-margin vendors like Xiaomi, Realme and Transsion will bear the brunt. Apple and Samsung have long-term supply agreements securing components up to 24 months ahead. PC vendors including Lenovo, Dell, HP, Acer and ASUS have warned clients of 15-20% price increases heading into the second half of 2026.

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Gmail Users May Soon Be Able To Change Their Email Address and Keep the Old One

Par : msmash
26 décembre 2025 à 01:55
Google appears to be testing a feature that would let users change their @gmail.com address for the first time, according to an official support document. The support page exists only in Hindi, suggesting an India-first rollout, and Google notes that users will "gradually begin to see this option." The feature would let users switch to a new @gmail address while retaining full access to their old one, effectively giving a single account two working email addresses. Emails sent to either address would arrive in the same inbox, and existing data in Drive and Photos would remain unaffected. Users who switch cannot register another new address for 12 months. Google has not officially announced the feature.

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Framework Raises Memory Prices Again, Suggests Customers Bring Their Own RAM

Par : msmash
25 décembre 2025 à 17:01
Framework has announced yet another price increase for memory modules, the second in roughly a month, and the company is now actively encouraging customers to source their own RAM elsewhere if they can find better deals. The laptop maker cited "extreme memory shortages and price volatility" as the reason for the hike, noting that 32GB modules and smaller currently cost around $10 per gigabyte while 48GB modules run approximately $13 per gigabyte. Framework said it expects to raise prices again by January as its suppliers continue increasing costs, a trend analysts predict will persist through 2026. Framework plans to add a direct link to PCPartPicker in its configurators so DIY Edition buyers can compare prices and find cheaper alternatives. The company said its pricing still compares favorably to Apple's roughly $25 per gigabyte and pledged to stay as close as possible to acquisition costs. Storage price increases are also on the horizon, Framework warned.

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L’intelligence artificielle va « détruire complètement » le droit, alerte un avocat britannique

22 décembre 2025 à 14:45

Interrogé par le magazine britannique The Spectator, un avocat senior livre une analyse sans concession de l’avenir des professions juridiques. Entre honoraires élevés, culture du prestige et gains économiques offerts par l’IA, le droit pourrait être bouleversé plus rapidement que prévu.

Will Work Change Over the Next 20 Years?

21 décembre 2025 à 17:34
What is the future of work? The Wall Street Journal asked five workplace experts and practitioners. So while AI "is already doing tasks once relegated to newly minted college graduates in many professions," the Journal predicts that in the next 20 years AI "will have an impact on the role of managers, how organizations measure business outcomes and accelerate tasks that once took months." A senior partner at the consulting firm Mercer predicts AI (plus advances in quantum computing) will enable entrepreneurs to reshape industries with a fraction of the resources traditionally required. Some other predictions: Alan Guarino, vice chairman and CEO of board services at the global consulting firm Korn Ferry: In 25 years, the workplace will likely be unrecognizable, with employees and AI operating as one. Yes, there will be tasks and entire jobs taken over by AI, but we will all be elevated to a whole new superpower to make critical and creative decisions. The idea that work was once done strictly by people will seem quaint to some. Tasks that took entire teams, and months to complete, will be crunched down to a few minutes, with success measured on metrics we can't imagine today. The middle layers of management — so central to today's corporate structure — could be a vestige of the past. The role of the leader too will change, as they directly oversee a collaboration of people and intelligent systems. The attitude toward in-person collaboration is growing and 25 years from now, counterintuitively, I believe face-to-face connection won't just be indispensable, but invaluable. Emotional intelligence will still set leaders apart. Those who blend empathy with tech savvy will be the ones shaping the future. Peter Fasolo, a former executive vice president and chief human resources officer at Johnson & Johnson, and director of the Human Resource Policy Institute at Boston University's Questrom School of Business: There will be fewer available workers in Europe, Japan and the U.S. over this time frame and the demographic shift will be profound. In addition, there will be even fewer young adults available for colleges in the U.S., even if they decide the investment is worth it. The implications of this shift will be the need for more investments in vocational and trade schools, and the need to invest in skill-based, not pedigree-based training. There will also be more on-the-job specific training. Companies will become classrooms. Companies that want a more sustainable relationship with employees will need an investment model versus a transactional one: We will invest in your skills so you can be a competitive professional in your domain.

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Is America's Tech Industry Already Facing a Recession?

21 décembre 2025 à 08:34
America's unemployment rate for tech jobs rose to 4% in November, and "has been steadily rising since May," reports the Washington Post (citing data from the IT training/certifications company CompTIA). Between October and November, the number of technology workers across different industries fell 134,000, while the number of people working in the tech industry declined by more than 6,800. Tech job postings were also down by more than 31,800, the report found, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and California-based market intelligence firm Lightcast. "The data is pretty definitive that the tech industry is struggling," said Mark Zandi, Moody's chief economist. "There's a jobs recession in the industry, and it feels like that's going to continue given the slide in postings...." The unemployment rate in the tech industry still sits below the national rate, which in November hit 4.6 percent, the highest since 2021. However, that gap has been narrowing, with tech unemployment rising faster in recent months than is the case nationally.... Employers are largely in "wait and see" mode when it comes to hiring given the current uncertainties surrounding the economy and impact of AI, so they're likely to delay backfilling, Herbert said, citing CompTIA's surveys of chief information officers. But Justin Wolfers, professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan, said uncertainty is likely to continue in the foreseeable future. "I'm feeling substantially more pessimistic," Wolfers said, recalling that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell recently suggested that federal job numbers may be overstated. "That's pretty grim." Technology companies have announced more than 141,000 job cuts so far this year, representing a 17 percent increase from the same period last year, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. At the same time Big Tech companies like Google, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon have announced plans to invest up to $375 billion in AI infrastructure this year. "AI is quickly becoming a requirement, with 41 percent of all active job postings representing AI roles or requiring AI skills, according to CompTIA's analysis," the article points out. Economist Zandi tells the Post that "If you have AI skills, there seems to be jobs. But if you don't, I think it's going to feel like you've been hit by a dump truck."

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North Korean Infiltrator Caught Working In Amazon IT Department Thanks To Lag

Par : BeauHD
18 décembre 2025 à 23:20
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Tom's Hardware: A North Korean imposter was uncovered, working as a sysadmin at Amazon U.S., after their keystroke input lag raised suspicions with security specialists at the online retail giant. Normally, a U.S.-based remote worker's computer would send keystroke data within tens of milliseconds. This suspicious individual's keyboard lag was "more than 110 milliseconds," reports Bloomberg. Amazon is commendably proactive in its pursuit of impostors, according to the source report. The news site talked with Amazon's Chief Security Officer, Stephen Schmidt, about this fascinating new case of North Koreans trying to infiltrate U.S. organizations to raise hard currency for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), and sometimes indulge in espionage and/or sabotage. Schmidt says that Amazon has foiled more than 1,800 DPRK infiltration attempts since April 2024. Moreover, the rate of attempts continues apace, with Amazon reckoning it is seeing a 27% QoQ uplift in North Koreans trying to get into the Amazon corporation. However, Amazon's success can be almost entirely credited to the fact that it is actively looking for DPRK impostors, warns its Chief Security Officer. "If we hadn't been looking for the DPRK workers," Schmidt said, "we would not have found them."

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Micron Says Memory Shortage Will 'Persist' Beyond 2026

Par : msmash
18 décembre 2025 à 15:29
Micron, one of the world's three largest memory suppliers, expects the global shortage of DRAM and NAND flash memory to "persist through and beyond" 2026 as AI-driven demand continues to outstrip supply. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra made the forecast during the company's latest earnings call on Wednesday, saying that "supply will remain substantially short of the demand for the foreseeable future." The company posted record quarterly revenue of $13.64 billion, up from $8.71 billion in the same period last year. Micron recently shuttered Crucial, its consumer-facing brand, to focus on high-bandwidth memory for AI data centers. HBM technology requires three times the silicon wafers of standard DRAM, leaving fewer resources for the chips that go into PCs, smartphones and cars. Micron plans to boost DRAM and NAND shipments by 20 percent next year but acknowledged this won't meet demand. New facilities in Idaho and New York are slated for 2027 and 2030 respectively.

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Browser Extensions With 8 Million Users Collect Extended AI Conversations

Par : msmash
17 décembre 2025 à 19:40
An anonymous reader shares a report: Browser extensions with more than 8 million installs are harvesting complete and extended conversations from users' AI conversations and selling them for marketing purposes, according to data collected from the Google and Microsoft pages hosting them. Security firm Koi discovered the eight extensions, which as of late Tuesday night remained available in both Google's and Microsoft's extension stores. Seven of them carry "Featured" badges, which are endorsements meant to signal that the companies have determined the extensions meet their quality standards. The free extensions provide functions such as VPN routing to safeguard online privacy and ad blocking for ad-free browsing. All provide assurances that user data remains anonymous and isnâ(TM)t shared for purposes other than their described use.

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Decrepit : encore un First Person Souls-like dark fantasy, mais un peu trop propre

Par : Estyaah
17 décembre 2025 à 12:51

Il faut croire que c’est la mode, puisque lors des Game Awards 2025, on a découvert un nouveau Souls-like dark fantasy en vue subjective : Decrepit. Mais passer après Valor Mortis, qui nous avait laissé une très bonne impression en pré-alpha, ne sera pas une mince affaire. La grosse différence est ici le nombre de personnes à travailler sur le projet, parce qu’apparemment, il n’y a qu’un développeur solo derrière le studio Jämmerdal Games. Même si ça n’atteindra certainement pas la qualité du titre de One More Level, le trailer d’annonce est tout de même assez impressionnant. Certes, les environnements semblent très restreints, puisqu’on se trouve dans une sorte de donjon, mais le bestiaire est original, les animations ont l’air correctes et les graphismes ne sont pas dégueu. Cependant, tout paraît trop propre, très aseptisé, presque clinique. Peut-être qu’un petit filtre post-process pour salir l’image suffirait à donner un rendu un peu plus dark fantasy ?

Si l’on jette un œil sur la chaîne YouTube du studio, on peut voir que le développeur travaillait déjà sur le projet début 2023. Ce n’est donc pas un jeu développé à la va-vite pour surfer sur les annonces des copains. Au niveau des mécaniques de gameplay, pas de surprises : on nous promet des morts définitives, de l’équipement à looter, des zones interconnectées, etc. Il y aura aussi quelques éléments de méta-progression comme dans tout bon roguelite, avec des améliorations à trouver dans les niveaux. Mais d’après le développeur, c’est surtout la connaissance du château qui permettra au joueur de s’améliorer, notamment en découvrant des raccourcis, donnait plus rapidement accès au boss qui vous a éclaté au run précédent. Rien de bien original, mais si c’est bien exécuté, ça pourrait être chouette.

Pour l’instant, il est difficile de savoir si le feeling sera bon en se fiant uniquement aux bribes de gameplay du teaser. Mais le projet donne tout de même un peu envie. Decrepit est prévu pour 2026, sans plus de précision. En attendant d’en savoir plus, si vous êtes intéressés, n’hésitez pas à l’ajouter à votre liste de souhaits depuis sa page Steam.

High-Speed Traders Are Feuding Over a Way To Save 3.2 Billionths of a Second

Par : msmash
16 décembre 2025 à 16:40
A millisecond used to be a big deal for the world's quickest traders. A dispute over huge trading profits at one of the world's largest futures exchanges shows they now think a million times faster [non-paywalled source]. From a report: The controversy is about an arcane technical maneuver in which high-speed traders bombard Frankfurt-based Eurex with useless data. The idea is to keep their connections to the exchange warm so they can react fractionally faster to market-moving information. The battle is the latest chapter in a decadeslong contest among secretive ultrafast trading firms, which have pursued a relentless quest for minuscule speed advantages. A group of high-frequency trading firms has exploited the practice to rake in hundreds of millions of dollars, says Mosaic Finance, a French firm that has complained to Eurex and European regulators. "An arms race is OK, but you must use legal weapons," said Hugues Morin, founder of Mosaic. Eurex says Mosaic's claims are baseless. [...] High-speed traders often seek to capture fleeting differences between prices of related assets, making quick response times critical. If benchmark Euro Stoxx 50 index futures rise, for example, contracts tied to Germany's DAX will usually follow. A first mover will be able to buy DAX futures before they tick higher, then sell out at a higher price -- a strategy that can add up to big profits over time. The maneuver that prompted Mosaic's spat with Eurex can improve reaction times by about 3.2 nanoseconds, according to the French firm, which calls it "corrupted speculative triggering," or CST for short.

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Qui sont Lisa Su et Fei-Fei Li, les deux femmes en une du Time « Person of the Year » ?

12 décembre 2025 à 09:39

Révélée le 11 décembre 2025, la « Person of the Year » du célèbre TIME Magazine distingue « les architectes de l’IA ». Parmi les huit personnalités en image de Une, figurent deux femmes : Lisa Su et Fei-Fei Li.

Hogwarts Legacy : L’Héritage de Poudlard est gratuit sur l’Epic Games Store

12 décembre 2025 à 09:08

À l’occasion des Game Awards, Epic Games a dévoilé son prochain jeu gratuit : Hogwarts Legacy : L’Héritage de Poudlard, le titre se déroulant dans l’univers de Harry Potter. Un RPG offert et un RPG sacré GOTY 2025, c'est une belle fin d'année pour le genre.

HDMI Forum Continues To Block HDMI 2.1 For Linux, Valve Says

Par : msmash
10 décembre 2025 à 16:51
New submitter emangwiro shares a report: The HDMI Forum, responsible for the HDMI specification, continues to stonewall open source. Valve's Steam Machine theoretically supports HDMI 2.1, but the mini-PC is software-limited to HDMI 2.0. As a result, more than 60 frames per second at 4K resolution are only possible with limitations. In a statement to Ars Technica, a Valve spokesperson confirmed that HDMI 2.1 support is "still a work-in-progress on the software side." "We've been working on trying to unblock things there." The Steam Machine uses an AMD Ryzen APU with a Radeon graphics unit. Valve strictly adheres to open-source drivers, but the HDMI Forum is unwilling to disclose the 2.1 specification. According to Valve, they have validated the HDMI 2.1 hardware under Windows to ensure basic functionality.

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Si vous n’avez toujours pas la fibre optique, c’est le moment d’apprendre la patience

10 décembre 2025 à 13:19

mème Pablo Escobar

Le régulateur des télécoms a publié ce 9 décembre 2025 son observatoire du troisième trimestre. Le verdict est rude pour celles et ceux qui attendent encore la fibre optique. Si cette solution est désormais la norme absolue en matière de très haut débit, le rythme des raccordements chute brutalement.

Lenovo's Next Gaming Laptop May Have a Rollable OLED Screen That Stretches Ultrawide

Par : msmash
8 décembre 2025 à 21:50
Lenovo may be preparing to unveil a gaming laptop that uses rollable OLED technology to expand horizontally into an ultrawide 21:9 display, according to a Windows Latest report suggesting the device could appear at CES 2026 in January. The Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable would differ from the company's existing ThinkBook Plus Gen 6, which expands its screen vertically. The new gaming-focused design would see the left and right edges of the display extend beyond the laptop's base chassis when unrolled. Specific details remain scarce. Windows Latest doesn't know the display resolution, refresh rate, screen dimensions in either state, pricing, or release timing -- though it does mention an Intel Core Ultra processor. The ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 currently sells for $3,500.

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Why Meetings Can Harm Employee Well-Being

8 décembre 2025 à 01:35
Phys.org republishes this article from The Conversation: On average, managers spend 23 hours a week in meetings. Much of what happens in them is considered to be of low value, or even entirely counterproductive. The paradox is that bad meetings generate even more meetings... in an attempt to repair the damage caused by previous ones... A 2015 handbook laid the groundwork for the nascent field of "Meeting Science". Among other things, the research revealed that the real issue may not be the number of meetings, but rather how they are designed, the lack of clarity about their purpose, and the inequalities they (often unconsciously) reinforce... Faced with what we call meeting madness, the solution is not to eliminate meetings altogether, but to design them better. It begins with a simple but often forgotten question: why are we meeting...? The goal should not be to have fewer meetings, but better ones. Meetings that respect everyone's time and energy. Meetings that give a voice to all. Meetings that build connection. Slashdot reader ShimoNoSeki shares an obligatory XKCD comic...

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Une rare interview/video de Linus Torvalds : Building the PERFECT Linux PC with Linus Torvalds

Linus Torvalds est invité dans cette toute récente vidéo sur la chaîne Linus Tech Tips. La vidéo dure presque une heure, ce qui est inhabituellement long pour cette chaîne, et permet de laisser s'exprimer un Linus Torvalds invité. Torvalds s'exprime sur de nombreux sujets tout en regardant un PC « idéal » être monté pour lui et ses travaux sur le noyau Linux.

Il discute du Libre, Gaming, Linux, Git, A.I., de son travail, dans une atmosphère bon enfant et avec un humour mordant.

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