TheRegister
HPC Advisory Council unveils Cloud HPC initiative
Webcast Our pals at the HPC Advisory Council have been busy in the past few months and it seemed time to tap them for an update, in our September HPC Community webcast.…
Mafia II
Review A few hours into Mafia II and it finally happens. It's the summer of 1951 and you've just been released from an eight-year stretch in Sing Sing. You're cruising around the wide, pristine streets of Empire Bay - the game's fictional amalgam of New York, Chicago and San Fransico – when all of a sudden you hear the unmistakable pow of saxophones and horns in the intro for Ain't That a Kick in the Head.…
A series of disorderly events
Sysadmin Blog On Doomsday Weekend we completely replaced our Windows domain. It was a miserable experience. It’s hard to describe how much work is involved in replacing a mature domain; certainly more than I had anticipated. It's even harder to explain the hell to non-sysadmins.…
DVLA says council snoopers are free to take the WEE
Government officials hit back at accusations last week that they were encouraging councils to break the law and snoop on local residents, claiming instead that not only are they entitled to do so, but that they are required to by law.…
European CIOs get consolidation
More than three-quarters of businesses in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) are looking to consolidate their existing IT infrastructure in the next 12 months, according to Brocade-commissioned research.…
DWP spent £1m on search engine 'biasing' in single year
The Department for Work and Pensions has spent more than £1.1m on search engine biasing over the last four years.…
'Larry and Sergey's HTML5 balls drained my resources'
Google's latest animated logo on its search homepage has caused a kerfuffle among many surfers whose CPU has been besieged by the ballsy doodle.…
Godly Aussie MP accused of being online 'smut' junkie
Another day, another God-fearing Australian politician is accused of surfing hardcore adult websites.…
Northamber musters 'cautious optimism'
Veteran distributor Northamber allowed itself a glimmer of optimism today as it unveiled its preliminary full year results.…
Panasonic adds iPlayer, Twitter to tellies
Panasonic has quietly rolled out a software update for its 2009 series of internet-connectable HD TVs. The patch usefully adds BBC iPlayer and - perhaps less so - a Twitter client.…
UK jobs growth grinds to a halt
The UK jobs market is unlikely to get any better this year - public sector jobs are falling and private sector posts are barely growing.…
Sony updates PS3 system software
Sony UK has posted PlayStation 3 firmware version 3.42. The update incorporates a "patch... added to address security vulnerability in the system software".…
Greenland ice loss rates 'one-third' of what was thought
The rate at which ice is disappearing from Greenland and Western Antarctica has been seriously overestimated, according to new research.…
Google rejigs privacy policy after ice-cream van man slam
Google announced that it tweaked its privacy policy last Friday, just hours after a satirical video ad appeared on a huge screen in New York's Times Square that poked fun at the firm's boss.…
TechCrunch purges Zeus malware attack
TechCrunch Europe has cleaned up its website following the discovery of malicious code that left visiting surfers exposed to infection by a variant of the infamous Zeus banking Trojan.…
Dell Streak causes user fury
Dell's Streak might now be running Android 2.1, but those who've upgraded are finding the newer OS takes away more than it adds to the tablet/phone crossbreed.…
LG smartphones to get Tegra 2
LG is to power a series of smartphones with Nvidia's tablet-oriented dual-core Tegra 2 system-on-a-chip.…
Would you pay for a cooler, less creepy Facebook?
Sick of creepy, unaccountable social networks that are little more than hoarders and traders of personal information? Pete Lawrence, founder of the Big Chill Festival is too, and will today unveil his plans a member-supported service.…
Druva delivers deduping laptop backup
Three-year-old start-up Druva is opening an office in the UK and delivering global deduplicating backup software for laptops. It's Outlook and Office-aware to reduce network transmission loads, and it provides user self-service restores, which Druva says Avamar cannot.…
Think tank calls for gov IT commoditisation
The Network for the Post Bureaucratic Age has published a paper urging the government to break down its IT projects into smaller chunks.…

