OpenAI's agent chained decade-old DoS attacks to crash web servers in seconds
Codex drops an HTTP/2 Bomb
๐ฌ๐ง ์๊ตญ ยท IT/๊ธฐ์ ยท "DECADE" ยท ์ด 8๊ฑด
ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
์ต๊ทผ 7์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค 3,842๊ฑด์ ๋ถ์ํ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ด์ค ์ฌ๋ฆฌ์ง์๋ 50.0(๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค. ๊ธ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)ยท์ค๋ฆฝ 3,840๊ฑด(99.9%)ยท๋ถ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ค๋ฆฝ ๋น์ค์ด ๋๋ ทํ๊ฒ ๋์ต๋๋ค. ์ฑํฅ ์ง์๋ ์ข ํฉ 1.2(์ค๋ ๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค.
Codex drops an HTTP/2 Bomb
Pips Accenture and NEC to bag decade-long deal for cops across England, Wales, and beyond
The race to build data centres in Australia could force household electricity prices up by as much as 26 per cent within a decade, a study has found.
The tech giant predicts it will have a quantum computer that can solve commercially useful problems by the end of the decade.
The companyโs data editor trawls through billions of queries to deliver a portrait of the worldโs preoccupations As anyone who has procreated this century knows, childrearing involves daily rounds of online searching. The most common parenting-related queries feature in What We Ask Google, a valiant attempt by the search giantโs data editor Simon Rogers to create a โsurprisingly hopeful picture of humankindโ (thatโs the subtitle) from searches performed over the past two decades. โWhy do babies get hiccups?โ we ask. โWhen do babies teethe?โ โWhy do toddlers bite?โ โHow do you know if your child has ADHD?โ โHow to tell kids about divorce?โ Since 2006, engineers have used Google Trends to make sense of common (and anonymised) queries like these, going back as far as 2004, when phones were dumb and less than half of UK households had internet access. Rogers, a British former Guardian journalist based in California, views the results as a kind of social mirror. Continue reading...
Release of spectrogram of cockpit recorder audio allows conversation recovery with 'emerging' decades-old tech
Service tries to move on from troubled decades of Fujitsu relationship with ยฃ410 million in deals for system that hurt so many
At annual I/O conference, company debuts a product for everyday consumers to create autonomous AI agents Google announced Tuesday that it would expand its search bar, the centerpiece of the most-visited website in the world, with a heavy dose of artificial intelligence. The tech giant is also trying its hand at hi-tech glasses again, more than a decade after wearers of its first eyewear were dubbed โglassholesโ and laughed out of San Francisco. Google executives announced at the companyโs annual conference for software developers, Google I/O, that its search box would accommodate longer and more specific queries than before โ questions more like those people would ask one another than Searchโs idiosyncratic syntax. The changes will direct users to engage directly with Googleโs chatbot. The change to search is underpinned by the companyโs new artificial intelligence model, Gemini 3.5, announced the same day. Continue reading...