Kategorie
Nearly 300 GitHub repos pose as legit software to push malware
Microsoft releases Windows 10 KB5099539 extended security update
Microsoft July 2026 Patch Tuesday fixes massive 570 flaws, 3 zero-days
Windows 11 KB5101650 & KB5099414 cumulative updates released
LabubaRAT Masquerades as NVIDIA Software to Control Windows Hosts
Progress confirms ShareFile zero-day flaw behind Storage Zone shutdown
Siri AI steals the show as the iOS 27 public beta lands
Apple has released the first public betas of its “27” series of operating systems, and feedback so far suggests they’re already very stable builds, even at this early end of the release cycle.
For most intrepid public beta testers, the big attractions here are Siri AI and the heavily improved Apple Intelligence tools – though Siri AI is not yet available in Europe due to regulatory problems there. Overnight social media commentary has been highly positive, with Siri widely seen as delivering on what we always thought it should be rather than the limited product it became.
Caveat emptorOnce installed, the new operating system is fast and better performing on the iPhone, though there are some limitations anyone considering the beta should consider first:
- This is beta software; things can and sometimes do go wrong. So don’t install it on your primary device unless you know how to restore your device and its data.
- Some critical apps such as banking tools, VPNs and some smart home management software are reported to be unstable at times.
- Once the public beta is first installed, there’s a lengthy period during which your device will rebuild its database; this can take many hours and performance will be affected.
- As the OS beds in, users might experience sudden battery drain or the device might seem warmer than usual.
- You’ll need to join a lengthy Siri waitlist before you can install the updated Siri AI.
- Siri AI requires significant hardware capabilities and only runs on iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 16 and iPhone 17 models. Alternatively, you must have an M1 or later Mac or an iPad running an M1 chip or later, or A17 Pro (iPad mini).
Siri AI is the big reward here. Joanna Stern called it “significantly better.” It will provide you with much better responses than its predecessor, and its contextual understanding is sophisticated and advanced.
That’s because Siri can search across your messages, emails, photos and more to help you find what you’re looking for and has some understanding of where you are and what you are doing to help it make even more accurate decisions. It is faster than it’s ever been with a dedicated app (which includes logs of your interactions) and a new glowing design when activated.
The assistant can now hold an ongoing conversation with you, understands what’s on screen, and take some actions in apps. One way that might be useful is if you are looking at a recipe online, you can ask Siri to write up a shopping list for the recipe ingredients and paste it in a Note. Siri has become much more knowledgeable than in the past thanks to its expanded and updated world knowledge database.
Apple Intelligence has been beefed up, too, with keyboard tools much improved on the last version. Siri can even reflect your personal tone and style based on the person you’re communicating with when sending a Mail or Messages post.
Apple and the imageThe Camera app now has a new Siri mode; it can do things like identify objects and people, or import event details from a leaflet. You can easily search or ask questions about what’s around you, and there are useful new actions you can take, such as getting nutritional insights about a plate of food.
Image Playground wasn’t terribly impressive when it first appeared, and a lot of people did little with it. It seems much better now, capable of generating photo-realistic images in virtually any style from natural language prompts or editing existing images. It’s a useful step up.
Another impressive feature is Spatial Reframing. This lets you shift the composition of a photo after you’ve taken it, using AI to create accurate renditions of what is outside the frame. A new Extend tool lets you expand images, which is useful for adjusting aspect ratios or creating Lock Screen wallpapers.
The future on your wristIf you use an Apple Watch, you’ll be impressed, as the contextual AI extends to that device. So, you can have context-savvy conversations with your watch and ask it to do tasks on your behalf. It makes it feel like a bona fide computer on your wrist and bodes well for other future wearable products from the company.
There are lots of other interesting features in the beta. Call Context can automatically surface the information you need, like a confirmation code or reservation number, when calling up a business. And a new Notify Me feature in Safari lets you know when a web page changes, so you can watch for stock availability or ticket sales.
How to install the betaIf you’re interested in installing the new OSes, Apple’s Beta Software Program website should be your first port of call. You’ll need to sign in to access the betas using your Apple Account. Once you’ve done that, open Settings and go to Software Update; there you can select Beta Updates and choose the 27 series Public beta. Tap Update Now and the installation will begin.
You can follow me on social media! Join me on BlueSky, LinkedIn, Mastodon, and subscribe to The Core.
LastPass, Bitwarden users targeted with fake security alerts
GhostLock Exposes an Uncomfortable Truth About Open Source Security
You Don't Have to Run an Exploit to Know If You're Vulnerable
RabbitMQ Flaws Could Leak OAuth Secrets and Expose Cross-Tenant Queue Metadata
How Linux Security Teams Spot Vulnerabilities Before CVEs Are Published
Microsoft Entra ID gets passkeys default authentication starting September
New phishing kits target Microsoft 365 accounts, evade MFA
11 Old Microsoft-Signed Linux UEFI Shims Could Let Attackers Bypass Secure Boot
Study of 85 Crypto Wallet Extensions Finds Address Leaks and Cross-Site Tracking Risks
SAP warns of critical flaws in NetWeaver and Commerce Cloud
How Pentera Turns AI Security Workflows into Validation Engines
OAuth Client ID Spoofing Lets Attackers Validate Stolen Microsoft Entra Credentials
With its latest layoffs, Microsoft goes all in on AI
Microsoft’s big lead over AI competitors like Google and others has vanished, and the company is now playing catch-up. As a result, Microsoft’s stock has tanked in the last year — down roughly 23% compared to a year ago, due mainly to its massive AI spending and an inability to monetize Copilot.
The company clearly needs to do something. And last week it did, though not what you might expect. It laid off 4,800 people, a little more than 2% of its worldwide workforce, with its Xbox division hit hardest. And it’s not reducing its massive spending on AI data centers or other AI-related costs.
The New York Times explained the cuts this way: “It is Microsoft’s latest employee culling as it plows tens of billions of dollars into the infrastructure for building artificial intelligence.”
Was cutting back on gaming (while still going all-in on AI) the right move for Microsoft? To answer that, let’s take a look at the details of the company’s July layoffs.
A year of layoffsThe recent cuts come in the wake of larger Microsoft workforce reductions over the last year or so. In May 2025, the company laid off 6,000 employees, about 3% of its workforce. Then a few months later, it laid off 9,000 more, about 4% of its workers. In both rounds of cuts, the company’s gaming division was hit — though it wasn’t the primary target.
This year, in April and May, the company rolled out its first voluntary retirement program for US employees. Approximately 3,000 people took the money and ran.
Then came last week, when Microsoft primarily targeted gaming. When the cuts take full effect over the next year, 2,850 gaming employees will be let go. In addition, Microsoft is cutting loose several of its gaming studio brands, which will become independent companies or be sold to buyers.
The layoffs hit the two remaining gaming studios, Activision Blizzard, which makes the big-selling games Call of Duty and Candy Crush, and ZeniMax Media, which publishes series including Fallout and The Elder Scrolls. Three years ago, in 2023, Microsoft bought Activision Blizzard for $69 billion. That followed its purchase of ZeniMax Media in 2020 for $7.5 billion. Both seemed like sizable acquisitions at the time.
Compared to Microsoft’s AI spending now, they’re chump change.
Follow the moneyA memo sent to employees about the July layoffs by Amy Coleman, Microsoft executive vice president and chief people officer, made clear the layoffs were more about AI than they were about gaming.
Of the cuts, she wrote: “The “why” is this: our business is changing because the world around it is changing. The way technology is built, deployed, and used is transforming faster than at any point in my time here. Our customers’ needs are shifting, the business models that serve them are shifting, and that means the work itself — what we do, where we focus, and how we’re organized — has to transform, too.
“Our customers are navigating this same shift, and they’re counting on us to help them through it.”
That last sentence is an oblique reference to the early July launch of the Microsoft Frontier Company, which will embed 6,000 engineers inside customers’ businesses to help them more effectively deploy AI. The cost: $2.5 billion.
That sounds like a substantial amount of money. But it’s only a drop in the bucket of how much money the company plans to spend on AI. In April, Microsoft told investors it would spend $190 billion on data centers and other AI infrastructure this year, a 60% increase over what it spent last year. At the same time, Microsoft said it would shrink its workforce.
Its latest layoffs are clear-cut evidence of that. It’s also evidence that the company recognizes how badly Xbox has performed, and that it needed to do something about it.
In early June, Microsoft sent a memo to everyone in its Xbox division entitled “Next 100 Days: XBOX Reset.” The memo laid out the problems with its ailing game business and pulled no punches. It noted that beyond the $69 billion the company spent three years ago to buy Activision, “Over the past five years, we have spent over $20 billion on ongoing investments in our content, platform, and hardware subsidy, but our annual revenue has declined nearly half a billion during that time. Going forward, this cannot continue.”
The layoffs and spinoffs were the first steps. They won’t be the last.
There’s no doubt this is just the beginning of Microsoft’s disinvestment in gaming. The issue isn’t just that the company’s investments haven’t paid off. It’s that Microsoft’s AI ambitions are so large and expensive that it can no longer afford to seriously fund gaming.
Ultimately, it was the right thing to do, at least from a business perspective. The future is AI. It’s not in gaming.
So, for the foreseeable future at Microsoft, when it comes to AI — the sky’s the limit. But when it comes to gaming, things look much less rosy.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- …
- následující ›
- poslední »



