Aktienkurs fällt weiter: Intel wird mehr als 15.000 Menschen entlassen
15 Prozent aller Intel-Angestellten sollen noch im Jahr 2024 das Unternehmen verlassen. Umsätze sind laut dem Konzern weiter enttäuschend. (Intel, Prozessor)
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15 Prozent aller Intel-Angestellten sollen noch im Jahr 2024 das Unternehmen verlassen. Umsätze sind laut dem Konzern weiter enttäuschend. (Intel, Prozessor)
Kate Mulgrew hat sieben Jahre lang Captain Janeway in Star Trek: Voyager gespielt. Was braucht es, damit sie wieder vor der Kamera steht? (Star Trek, Streaming)
Der ROG NUC 14 ist kaum größer als ein WLAN-Router. Das zwingt den Hersteller, auf Notebook-Technik zu setzen. Die ist zwar gut, aber sehr teuer. Ein Test von Martin Böckmann (Intel NUC, Computer)
Die Freenet-Marke ist mit einer Aktion gestartet. Die Allnet-Flats im O2-Netz bieten für kurze Zeit mehr Inklusivvolumen ohne Aufpreis. (Freenet, Mobilfunk)
React und TypeScript sind leistungsstarke Werkzeuge für die moderne Webentwicklung. Ein intensiver Online-Workshop vermittelt die Grundlagen und Best Practices zur Erstellung von Single-Page-Anwendungen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Programmiersprachen)
Scientists performed a “virtual autopsy” but could not determine exact cause of death.
There have been a handful of ancient Egyptian mummies discovered with their mouths wide open, as if mid-scream. This has puzzled archaeologists because Egyptian mummification typically involved bandaging the mandible to the skull to keep the mouth closed. Scientists have "virtually dissected" one such "Screaming Woman" mummy and concluded that the wide-open mouth is not the result of poor mummification, according to a new paper published in the journal Frontiers in Medicine. There was no clear cause of death, but the authors suggest the mummy's expression could indicate she died in excruciating pain.
"The Screaming Woman is a true ‘time capsule’ of the way that she died and was mummified,” said co-author Sahar Saleem, a professor of radiology at Cairo University in Egypt. "Here we show that she was embalmed with costly, imported embalming material. This, and the mummy's well-preserved appearance, contradicts the traditional belief that a failure to remove her inner organs implied poor mummification."
Saleem has long been involved in paleoradiology and archaeometry of "screaming" Egyptian mummies. For instance, she co-authored a 2020 paper applying similar techniques to the study of another "Screaming Woman" mummy, dubbed Unknown Woman A by the then-head of the Egyptian Antiquities Service, Gaston Maspero, and one of two such mummies discovered in the Royal Cache at Deir el Bahari near Luxor in 1881. This was where 21st and 22nd Dynasty priests would hide the remains of royal members from earlier dynasties to thwart grave robbers.
Both men committed major financial crimes—and had powerful friends.
As part of today’s blockbuster prisoner swap between the US and Russia, which freed the journalist Evan Gershkovich and several Russian opposition figures, Russia received in return a motley collection of serious criminals, including an assassin who had executed an enemy of the Russian state in the middle of Berlin.
But the Russians also got two hackers, Vladislav Klyushin and Roman Seleznev, each of whom had been convicted of major financial crimes in the US. The US government said that Klyushin “stands convicted of the most significant hacking and trading scheme in American history, and one of the largest insider trading schemes ever prosecuted.” As for Seleznev, federal prosecutors said that he has “harmed more victims and caused more financial loss than perhaps any other defendant that has appeared before the court.”
What sort of hacker do you have to be to attract the interest of the Russian state in prisoner swaps like these? Clearly, it helps to have hacked widely and caused major damage to Russia’s enemies. By bringing these two men home, Russian leadership is sending a clear message to domestic hackers: We’ve got your back.
A small sample of farm workers is enough to confirm fears about H5N1 outbreak.
A small study in Texas suggests that human bird flu cases are being missed on dairy farms where the H5N1 virus has taken off in cows, sparking an unprecedented nationwide outbreak.
The finding adds some data to what many experts have suspected amid the outbreak. But the authors of the study, led by researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, went further, stating bluntly why the US is failing to fully surveil, let alone contain, a virus with pandemic potential.
"Due to fears that research might damage dairy businesses, studies like this one have been few," the authors write in the topline summary of their study, which was posted online as a pre-print and had not been peer-reviewed.
SpaceX is actively working on a plan to fly Starliner’s crew home.
It has now been eight weeks since Boeing's Starliner spacecraft launched into orbit on an Atlas V rocket, bound for the International Space Station. At the time NASA officials said the two crew members, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, could return to Earth as soon as June 14, just eight days later.
Yes, there had been some problems on Starliner's ride to the space station that involved helium leaks and failing thrusters. But officials said they were relatively minor and sought to downplay them. "Those are pretty small, really, issues to deal with," Mark Nappi, vice president and manager of Boeing's Commercial Crew Program, said during a post-docking news conference. "We’ll figure them out for the next mission. I don’t see these as significant at all."
But days turned to weeks, and weeks turned to months as NASA and Boeing continued to study the two technical problems. Of these issues, the more pressing concern was the failure of multiple reaction control system thrusters that are essential to steering Starliner during its departure from the space station and setting up a critical engine burn to enter Earth's atmosphere.
A Japanese company becomes the first to approach a piece of space junk in low-Earth orbit.
There are more than 2,000 mostly intact dead rockets circling the Earth, but until this year, no one ever launched a satellite to go see what one looked like after many years of tumbling around the planet.
In February, a Japanese company named Astroscale sent a small satellite into low-Earth orbit on top of a Rocket Lab launcher. A couple of months later, Astroscale's ADRAS-J (Active Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan) spacecraft completed its pursuit of a Japanese rocket stuck in orbit for more than 15 years.
ADRAS-J photographed the upper stage of an H-IIA rocket from a range of several hundred meters and then backed away. This was the first publicly released image of space debris captured from another spacecraft using rendezvous and proximity operations.