Dell Reportedly Laying Off 12,500 Employees
Rumors of layoffs were swirling today on TheLayoff.com website. “Despite whatever person from corporate put in here earlier about this being a 1% layoff, it is in fact larger than that and is hitting services, sales, marketing & engineers,” one person said. “Half of my team is gone in marketing and still no coms.” Dell has been cutting staff for at least the past year. It laid off a total of 13,000 last year, according to CRN, including the 6,000 in February 2023 and another round in August whose numbers the company didn’t specify. The layoffs follow a 15% reduction announced by Intel last week, affecting over 16,000 workers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Cyberattack Knocks Mobile Guardian MDM Offline, Wipes Thousands of Student Devices
Mobile device management (MDM) software allows businesses and schools to remotely monitor and manage entire fleets of devices used by employees or students. Singapore’s Ministry of Education, touted as a significant customer of Mobile Guardian on the company’s website since 2020, said in a statement overnight that thousands of its students had devices remotely wiped during the cyberattack. “Based on preliminary checks, about 13,000 students in Singapore from 26 secondary schools had their devices wiped remotely by the perpetrator,” the Singaporean education ministry said in a statement. The ministry said it was removing the Mobile Guardian software from its fleet of student devices, including affected iPads and Chromebooks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
NVMe 2.1 Specifications Published With New Capabilities
– Enabling live migration of PCIe NVMe controllers between NVM subsystems.
– New host-directed data placement for SSDs that simplifies ecosystem integration and is backwards compatible with previous NVMe specifications.
– Support for offloading some host processing to NVMe storage devices.
– A network boot mechanism for NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF).
– Support for NVMe over Fabrics zoning.
– Ability to provide host management of encryption keys and highly granular encryption with Key Per I/O.
– Security enhancements such as support for TLS 1.3, a centralized authentication verification entity for DH-HMAC-CHAP, and post sanitization media verification.
– Management enhancements including support for high availability out-of-band management, management over I3C, out-of-band management asynchronous events and dynamic creation of exported NVM subsystems from underlying NVM subsystem physical resources. You can learn more about these updates at NVMExpress.org.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Techdirt’s Mike Masnick Joins the Bluesky Board To Support a ‘More Open, Decentralized Internet’
There are, of course, understandable reasons why those centralized systems have been successful, such as by providing a more user-friendly experience on the front-end. But there was a price to pay: losing user autonomy, privacy and the benefits of decentralization (not to mention losing a highly dynamic, competitive internet). The internet need not be so limited, and over the years I’ve tried to encourage people and companies to make different choices to return to the original promise and benefits of openness. With Bluesky, we now have one company who is trying. “Mike’s work has been an inspiration to us from the start,” says Jay Graber, CEO of Bluesky. “Having him join our board feels like a natural progression of our shared vision for a more open internet. His perspective will help ensure we’re building something that truly serves users as we continue to evolve Bluesky and the AT Protocol.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.