New Zealand City
| all links | finance | computing | entertainment | general | internet | sport | weather Return to NZCity
All Links
 
31 Oct 2024   
  
NZCity NewsLinks
Search 
IBM expands Apptio software availability on Azure Marketplace
IBM is integrating its Apptio portfolio into Microsoft Azure, expanding software availability on the Azure Marketplace to 14 more countries. 
© 2024 ITBrief 8:25am 

Capgemini unveils generative AI solutions for engineering
Capgemini has unveiled an expanded generative AI portfolio, launching solutions to enhance engineering and R&D processes across various industries. 
© 2024 ITBrief 8:05am 

'Blindsided': Speedway NZ says it was left out of decision to move out of Western Springs
Speedway New Zealand's president says they were left in the dark about the council's vote to move the speedway away from Auckland's Western Springs. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 8:05am 

Palo Alto Networks unveils AI-driven OT security solutions
Palo Alto Networks has unveiled advanced security solutions aimed at protecting operational technology environments from escalating cyber threats. 
© 2024 ITBrief 7:55am 

Housing initiative launched for Pasifika families in Porirua
The project, Our Whare Our Fale, will deliver up to 300 fit-for-purpose, affordable, and multigenerational homes in eastern Porirua. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:45am 

Masked robbers burgled Ben Stokes’ house while family were inside
Cricketer appeals for return of “irreplaceable” items after house burgled with his family at home. 
© 2024 Stuff.co.nz 7:35am 

Meal worm lavae on the menu at Sustainable Backyard Trail
A Taranaki garden festival that highlights working with nature - rather than against it - is celebrating its 10th anniversary. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:25am 

Weather deaths: Hearing to decide on what issues coroner will consider
A two-day hearing will decide what issues will be considered by the coroner looking into the deaths of people in last year's Auckland weather events. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:25am 

Higher traffic fines still stuck in the slow lane
Higher traffic fines are still being considered by the government, three years after work began on raising the penalties. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:25am 

Hollywood stars grow Wrexham empire with brewery
The football club's star co-owners grow their Wrexham by buying half of the Wrexham Lager brewery. 
© 2024 BBCWorld 6:55am 

web advertising from webads, http://www.webads.co.nz

New owners for International Antarctic Centre in Christchurch
The International Antarctic Centre at Christchurch Airport has been bought by the family that owns the local Willowbank wildlife reserve. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 6:55am 


web advertising from webads, http://www.webads.co.nz


Fujitsu unveils AI computing broker to boost GPU efficiency
Fujitsu has unveiled new AI computing broker middleware to enhance GPU utilisation and tackle global shortages, promising boosts in computational efficiency. 
© 2024 ITBrief 8:15am 

Tongans silently confident of a win on Kiwi land
There is a silent breeze of confidence flowing through the Tonga XIII rugby league team camp. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 8:05am 

web advertising from webads, http://www.webads.co.nz

Ben Stokes' home burgled by masked gang while wife and children inside
The New Zealand-born player was in Pakistan at the time with the England team. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:45am 

Australian police find more than 40,000 missing Bluey coins as woman charged
A woman has become the third person charged over the theft of the coins from a warehouse in Western Sydney. 
© 2024 RadioNZ 7:45am 

Mozilla celebrates 20 years with Firefox 132, blocks third-party cookies
Firefox launched long ago on November 9, 2004, which means we’re just over one week out from the browser’s 20th anniversary. Who knew that a spiritual successor to Netscape Navigator would last this long? With Firefox 132 being released yesterday, it’s close enough to count as a celebration — and the update fittingly brings some good news with it, including improved privacy with blocked third-party cookies, plus some other cool features worth updating for. Mozilla plans to release Firefox 133 on November 26, 2024. What’s new in Firefox 132? Firefox 132 is now ready for 4K video playback from major streaming services, but this feature is currently in a rollout phase. Through support for Microsoft PlayReady, Firefox will be able to play encrypted media at a baseline of 1080p with 4K support on top. Initially only on selected websites, this feature should spread to more sites over time — and another big benefit of it is that you’ll experience less battery drain and better performance while streaming video. This update also sees improvements to data protection. If you’ve enabled “strict mode” in Firefox’s Settings > Privacy & security > Improved protection against activity tracking, then Firefox 132 will now block all third-party cookies. The maximum lifetime of cookies is now limited to 400 days. If you use the “Copy link without website tracking” feature, Firefox can now filter out more tracking parameters, too. If you use Firefox on more than one device, you can now synchronize bookmarks, open tabs, and passwords between devices. If the new sidebar for synchronized tabs is activated, you can close tabs on other devices via the context menu. However, if required, you must first activate this new sidebar via about:config. There, change the flag labeled sidebar.revamp to true by double-clicking on it. A brief history of Mozilla Firefox Marc Andreessen, one of the developers of the NCSA Mosaic browser, founded Netscape in 1994. With Netscape Navigator, the company supplied the world’s most widely used browser in the mid-1990s (market share over 80 percent). But after Microsoft ended the so-called browser war with widespread adoption of Internet Explorer, AOL took over the losing browser company. In 1998, Netscape published the source code of its browser and allowed the newly founded Mozilla Foundation to manage further development. Mozilla eventually released Firefox 1.0 on November 9, 2004, and we’re about to hit that 20-year mark in about 10 days as of this writing. Security flaws fixed in Firefox 132 Mozilla’s security report for Firefox 132 shows 11 vulnerabilities have been fixed in the update, with two of them classified as “high” risk. One of those high-risk flaws is CVE-2024-10459, a use-after-free vulnerability in the layout component when accessibility is enabled. With it, an attacker can provoke a crash and possibly execute injected code. The other high-risk flaw is CVE-2024-10458, which allows authorizations to be transferred from a secure site to an insecure site. Other internally discovered vulnerabilities can potentially be exploited to execute arbitrary code, but they’re only categorized as moderate risk. Firefox ESR, Tor Browser, and Thunderbird In addition to releasing Firefox 132, Mozilla has also updated its long-term versions, with 10 security vulnerabilities patched in Firefox ESR 128.4.0 and three patched in Firefox ESR 115.17.0. (Firefox ESR 115 will continue to be supported until March 2025.) The updated Tor Browser 14.0.1 is based on Firefox ESR 128.4.0, but Tor’s developers state that they have also ported the security improvements from Firefox 132. An update for Tor Browser 13.5 to 13.5.9 is also available if you’re on Windows 7 or 8.1 or macOS 10.13 or 10.14. Thunderbird 128.4.0esr fixes 10 vulnerabilities and a few bugs. In contrast to Firefox, Thunderbird no longer supports older operating system versions, as version 115.16.2 is the end of the line for Thunderbird 115. Thunderbird 132 (without “esr”) is only available for testing purposes. Further reading: Thunderbird gets new release channel for updates 
© 2024 PC World 7:45am 

web advertising from webads, http://www.webads.co.nz

©2024 New Zealand City, portions © 2024 BBCWorld, ITBrief, PC World, RadioNZ, Stuff.co.nz,
©2024 New Zealand City Ltd