Ah, 2010. The year when Apple launched the iPad, but the limelight was stolen by something else entirely: Antennagate.
A software engineer has deciphered how Apple solved the iPhone 4 antenna problem in 2010: a tiny change in a table made all the difference.
These threads matter, because they reveal the siege of Apple is part of a larger story about platform power itself, not just ...
The attack, per ETH Zürich researchers Benedict Schlüter and Shweta Shinde, exploits AMD's incomplete protections that make it possible to perform a single memory write to the Reverse Map Paging (RMP) ...
Byte makes clear plastic aligners to help customers straighten their teeth with no office visits. Certified dentists and orthodontists design treatment plans and monitor progress remotely. Byte offers ...
The vulnerability, per security researcher McCaulay Hudson, is rooted in the function "ike2_ProcessPayload_CERT" present in ...
(Speech delivered by Professor Seun Kolade of Sheffield Business School, United Kingdom, and Project Director, the DEFINED ...
It’s time to shatter the illusion. China’s path was a one-off, gifted by geopolitics we can’t summon. Services are the future ...
One exception to the industry-wide lethargy is the engineering team that designs the Signal Protocol, the open source engine ...
Macworld If you’ve been an Apple user for a long time, you probably remember Antennagate – the drama surrounding cellular reception on the iPhone 4. As many users complained about the signal dropping ...