Tag: slow

  • Elon Musk Announces Organizations on Twitter Will Be Able To Identify Associated Accounts, Apologizes for App ‘Being Super Slow’

    Elon Musk Announces Organizations on Twitter Will Be Able To Identify Associated Accounts, Apologizes for App ‘Being Super Slow’

    Washington [US], November 14 : Twitter CEO Elon Musk, in a bid to tackle the rise of fake accounts, has announced that organizations on the micro-blogging platform will soon be able to find out the Twitter accounts associated with them. He also apologized for the app “being super slow in many countries.” Twitter Engineering Manager Vomits After Elon Musk Ordered Him To Fire Employees: Report.

    Musk took to Twitter on Sunday and without elaborating much posted, “Rolling out soon, Twitter will enable organizations to identify which other Twitter accounts are actually associated with them.” Twitter Layoffs: Elon Musk Now Sacks 4,400 Contractual Workers Without Notifying, Says Report.

    Elon Musk Makes New Announcement About Twitter :

    In the next tweet, the wealthiest man on the planet apologized for Twitter being slow in many countries by writing, “Btw, I’d like to apologize for Twitter being super slow in many countries. App is doing >1000 poorly batched RPCs just to render a home timeline!”

    Elon Musk Apologizes for Twitter Being Slow :

    Since completing the Twitter deal, Musk has made a flurry of decisions that have been aimed at tackling fake accounts on Twitter that has millions of daily active users.

    Recently, after rolling out the USD 7.99 Twitter Blue subscription service for iOS users that allowed them to get the blue verification tick on their profiles, Twitter made it unavailable as several users bought the verification to impersonate brands, celebrities and even fictional characters like Mario.

    As per The Verge, Twitter even launched a new verification badge, a grey tick designating accounts as “official,” in an effort to counteract the rise in fake accounts. Within a few days, the company introduced this feature and then withdrew it before reintroducing it again.

    Also, Musk’s decision to implement the blue tick fee did not go well with many people. Even some advertisers pulled back their leg from the site and celebrities including Whoopi Goldberg and Gigi Hadid quit Twitter in the days following its acquisition.

  • Google To Release Software Update for Nest WiFi Pro Routers To Fix Slow Internet Speeds

    Google To Release Software Update for Nest WiFi Pro Routers To Fix Slow Internet Speeds

    San Francisco, Nov 13: Google will release a software update for the new Nest Wifi Pro early next week to address the slow Internet speeds being experienced by some users.

    Sanjay Noronha, Google Nest Wifi’s product lead said that “the company is currently investigating reports of a small number of users experiencing reduced Internet speeds on Nest Wifi Pro routers, and that its teams are working to roll out a fix,” as reported by The Verge. Twitter $8 Blue Subscription Service To Return by End of Next Week, Elon Musk Confirms.

    Google launched the Nest Wifi Pro mesh router last month, touting support for faster Wi-Fi 6E, which is capable of speeds of up to 5.4Gbps.

    It also adds a 6GHz band to help reduce network congestion and automatically adjusts “network performance to minimise disruptions.”

    However, many users reported on the Google Nest community forum about an issue causing capped download and upload speeds ranging anywhere from 40Mbps to 90Mbps.

    Users said their old Nest Wifi Pro, which only supports Wi-Fi 5, outperformed the new device, according to a media report. Mass Layoffs: Sacked Tech Employees Find It Difficult To Get Jobs As Companies Freeze Hiring Amid Global Slowdown.

    These issues do not affect everyone who purchased the new router, though.

    As confirmed by Google, it primarily affected the users in the UK who used point-to-point protocol over ethernet (PPPoE) networks.

    Many digital subscriber lines (DSL) providers use this system, which requires users to configure their router with a username and password before they can connect to the Internet, according to the report.

    Based on the reports on the forum, the issue has also been reported to be affecting users in the US and other parts of Europe, as well as those with fiber, the report added.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on Nov 13, 2022 12:32 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Suniel Shetty Advises Start-Up Founders and Investors on Recent Layoffs – Think Long Term, Think Rahul Dravid; Stable & Slow Is Just As Great

    Bollywood actor and entrepreneur Suniel Shetty recently shared some advice to startup founders and investors amid layoffs. The actor shared that companies should look towards building a solid business rather than running towards valuations. He advised Startups to rely on cash flow to fund growth and find ways to optimise cash flow. Further he asked them to focus on profitability. Long term growth can come from reinvesting profits. His most important advice is to prioritise customers. He said “Imagine the delight of a customer when the team of a startup he decided to buy from, is genuinely interested in taking & adapting the feedback he might have to offer?” He concluded “Think long term. Think sprint vs marathon. Think Rahul Dravid. Stable & slow is just as great.”

    Suniel Shetty Advises Startups:

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  • Netflix Lays Off 150 US-Based Employees Amid Slow Revenue Growth: Report

    San Francisco: Streaming giant Netflix has laid off nearly 150 employees, primarily in the US, as it suffers from slow user growth amid stalled paid subscription. Several top-notch creative professionals from its original series vertical, such as Sebastian Gibbs and Negin Salmasi, have been asked to go, reports TechCrunch. Netflix Asks Its Employees To Quit if They Don’t Like Its Content: Report.

    “As we explained on earnings, our slowing revenue growth means we are also having to slow our cost growth as a company. So sadly, we are letting around 150 employees go today, mostly US-based,” a Netflix spokesperson was quoted as saying in the report late on Tuesday. “These changes are primarily driven by business needs rather than individual performance, which makes them especially tough as none of us want to say goodbye to such great colleagues,” the spokesperson added.

    Netflix saw its stock tumbling by 20 per cent after it reported a loss of 2 lakh paid subscribers in the first quarter of 2022, its first subscriber loss in over a decade. Moreover, it now forecasts a global paid subscriber loss of 20 lakh for the April-June quarter (Q2).

    “Depending on your role, you may need to work on titles you perceive to be harmful. If you’d find it hard to support our content breadth, Netflix may not be the best place for you,” the company said.

    Netflix last month laid off several experienced journalists and writers working for its entertainment site Tudum which it launched only in December last year. Netflix had hired experienced entertainment journalists from publications including Vice, Bustle and others. According to reports, most of the Tudum culture and trends team was fired.

    The company has also told its employees that if they do not agree with its content, they can leave the streaming giant, a move that received a thumbs up from Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on May 18, 2022 10:56 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Netflix To Stream Ads This Year Amid Slow User Growth: Report

    San Francisco: Battered by slow growth and diminishing global user base, Netflix has fast forwarded its plans to bring ads right into its TV shows and movies. According to The New York Times, the streaming platform has shifted its plans to infuse advertisements into its content by the end of this year. Netflix Slashes Subscription Rates in India, Now Starts at Rs 149 per Month.

    “Netflix has told employees that ads may come by the end of 2022,” the report said late on Tuesday.

    Executives were earlier planning to introduce ad-supported, lower-priced subscription tier in the “next year or two” but have now shifted the plans to an earlier launch date.

    According to the report, a recent note to employees said that Netflix executives are now aiming to introduce the ad tier at some point in the last three months of 2022. The company will also announce new measures to crack down on password sharing by the end of the year. The streaming giant Netflix saw its stock tumbling by 20 per cent after it reported a loss of 2 lakh paid subscribers in the first quarter of 2022 — its first subscriber loss in over a decade.

    Moreover, Netflix now forecasts a global paid subscriber loss of 20 lakh for the second quarter (Q2) this year. After posting disastrous results for its March quarter, Netflix also laid off several experienced journalists and writers working for its entertainment site Tudum which it launched only in December last year. Earlier this month, a shareholder lawsuit in the US alleged that Netflix misled investors about declining subscriber growth over the course of six months leading to a massive drop in its stock price.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on May 11, 2022 01:32 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Ransomware Persists Even as High-profile Attacks Slow Down

    Washington, December 18: In the months since President Joe Biden warned Russia’s Vladimir Putin that he needed to crack down on ransomware gangs in his country, there hasn’t been a massive attack like the one last May that resulted in gasoline shortages. But that’s small comfort to Ken Trzaska.

    Trzaska is president of Lewis & Clark Community College, a small Illinois school that cancelled classes for days after a ransomware attack last month that knocked critical computer systems offline. Also Read | Omicron Spread: WHO Says ‘New Variant of COVID-19 Spread to 89 Countries After Cases Double in Past 3 Days’.

    “That first day,” Trzaska said, “I think all of us were probably up 20-plus hours, just moving through the process, trying to get our arms around what happened.” Also Read | New Year 2022 Celebrations: Paris Cancels Fireworks at Champs-Elysees on December 31 To Limit Spread of COVID-19.

    Even if the United States isn’t currently enduring large-scale, front-page ransomware attacks on par with ones earlier this year that targeted the global meat supply or kept millions of Americans from filling their gas tanks, the problem hasn’t disappeared.

    In fact, the attack on Trzaska’s college was part of a barrage of lower-profile episodes that have upended the businesses, governments, schools and hospitals that were hit.

    The college’s ordeal reflects the challenges the Biden administration faces in stamping out the threat — and its uneven progress in doing so since ransomware became an urgent national security problem last spring.

    US officials have recaptured some ransom payments, cracked down on abuses of cryptocurrency, and made some arrests. Spy agencies have launched attacks against ransomware groups and the US has pushed federal, state and local governments, as well as private industries, to boost protections.

    Yet six months after Biden’s admonitions to Putin, it’s hard to tell whether hackers have eased up because of US pressure. Smaller-scale attacks continue, with ransomware criminals continuing to operate from Russia with seeming impunity.

    Administration officials have given conflicting assessments about whether Russia’s behaviour has changed since last summer. Further complicating matters, ransomware is no longer at the top of the US-Russia agenda, with Washington focused on dissuading Putin from invading Ukraine.

    The White House said it was determined to “fight all ransomware” through its various tools but that the government’s response depends on the severity of the attack.

    “There are some that are law enforcement matters and others that are high impact, disruptive ransomware activity posing a direct national security threat that require other measures,” the White House statement said.

    Ransomware attacks — in which hackers lock up victims’ data and demand exorbitant sums to return it — surfaced as a national security emergency for the administration after a May attack on Colonial Pipeline, which supplies nearly half the fuel consumed on the East Coast.

    The attack prompted the company to halt operations, causing gas shortages for days, though it resumed service after paying more than $4 million in ransom. Soon after came an attack on meat processor JBS, which paid an $11 million ransom.

    Biden met with Putin in June in Geneva, where he suggested critical infrastructure sectors should be “off limits” for ransomware and said the US should know in six months to a year “whether we have a cybersecurity arrangement that begins to bring some order.”

    He reiterated the message in July, days after a major attack on a software company, Kaseya, that affected hundreds of businesses, and said he expected Russia to take action on cybercriminals when the US provides enough information to do so.

    Since then, there have been some notable attacks from groups believed to be based in Russia, including against Sinclair Broadcast Group and the National Rifle Association, but none of the same consequence or impact of those from last spring or summer.

    One reason may be increased US government scrutiny, or fear of it. The Biden administration in September sanctioned a Russia-based virtual currency exchange that officials say helped ransomware gangs launder funds.

    Last month, the Justice Department unsealed charges against a suspected Ukrainian ransomware operator who was arrested in Poland, and has recovered millions of dollars in ransom payments.

    Gen. Paul Nakasone, the head of US Cyber Command, told The New York Times his agency has begun offensive operations against ransomware groups. The White House says that “whole-of-government” effort will continue.

    “I think the ransomware folks, the ones conducting them, are stepping back like, Hey, if we do that, that’s going to get the United States government coming after us offensively,’” Kevin Powers, security strategy adviser for cyber risk firm CyberSaint, said of attacks against critical infrastructure.

    US officials, meanwhile, have shared a small number of names of suspected ransomware operators with Russian officials, who have said they have started investigating, according to two people familiar with the matter who were not authorized to speak publicly.

    It’s unclear what Russia will do with those names, though Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted the countries have been having a useful dialogue and said “a working mechanism has been established and is actually functioning.”

    It’s also hard to measure the impact of individual arrests on the overall threat. Even as the suspected ransomware hacker awaits extradition to the US following his arrest in Poland, another who was indicted by federal prosecutors was later reported by a British tabloid to be living comfortably in Russia and driving luxury cars.

    Some are sceptical about attributing any drop-off in high-profile attacks to US efforts. “It could have just been a fluke,” said Dmitri Alperovitch, former chief technology officer of the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike.

    He said asking Russia to crack down on large-scale attacks won’t work because “it’s way too granular of a request to calibrate criminal activity they don’t even fully control.”

    Top American officials have given conflicting answers about ransomware trends since Biden’s discussions with Putin. Some FBI and Justice Department officials say they’ve seen no change in Russian behaviour. National Cyber Director Chris Inglis said there’s been a discernible decrease in attacks but that it was too soon to say why.

    It’s hard to quantify the number of attacks given the lack of baseline information and uneven reporting from victims, though the absence of disruptive incidents is an important marker for a White House trying to focus its attention on the most significant national security risks and catastrophic breaches.

    Victims of ransomware attacks in the past few months have included hospitals, small businesses, colleges like Howard University — which briefly took many of its systems offline after discovering a September attack — and Virginia’s legislature.

    The attack at Lewis & Clark, in Godfrey, Illinois, was discovered two days before Thanksgiving when the school’s IT director detected suspicious activity and proactively took systems offline, said Trzaska, the president.

    A ransom note from hackers demanded a payment, though Trzaska declined to reveal the sum or identify the culprits. Though many attacks come from hackers in Russia or Eastern Europe, some originate elsewhere.

    With vital education systems affected, including e-mail and the school’s online learning platform, administrators cancelled classes for days after the Thanksgiving break and communicated updates to students via social media and through a public alert system.

    The college, which had backups on the majority of its servers, resumed operations this month. The ordeal was daunting enough to inspire Trzaska and another college president who he says endured a similar experience to plan a cybersecurity panel.

    “The stock quote from everyone,” Trzaska said, “is not if it’s going to happen but when it’s going to happen.”

    (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, Morning Tidings Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

  • Luxury cars in India slow down

    Luxury cars in India slow down

    India needs to review the overall taxation of premium luxury vehicles, which is slowing the growth of such vehicles in the country, Martin Schwenek, MD and CEO, Mercedes-Benz India.

    “Duties, plans, taxation is a heavy burden … which is slowing down growth. Therefore, we will have growth, but not exponential growth,” said Mr. Schwank. He said, “For really strong growth , We will need more measures than a manufacturer …. We can only do so much in terms of cost, “he said.

    He said the company on Tuesday, unveiled the new E-Class starting at Rs 63.6 lakh, which is currently not an ‘active thinking’ of using India as a production hub due to lack of domestic production.

    Mr. Schwenek said the company is currently producing 11 models locally and may see another increase in the next few months, but that will not change the way they operate in India.

    “Deeper localization will require higher volumes from many models. We have seen the PLI plan… complication for us, any production to be set up in India will also require a strong domestic market, “he said.” And that means we have thousands of one model. Which we will make here. Now, you see our numbers, we are far from there.

    “And without a strong domestic footprint, it is very difficult to invest here and then basically export to other countries because then a necessary link is missing,” said the MD. “Therefore, in terms of domestic consumption, we first need to have a strong footprint and with that we can move forward,” he said.

    Talking about the E-Class, he said that it remained one of the most successful products in the company’s portfolio and about 30% of his volume came from the E-Class.

    “It is about 15% of the entire luxury car market. The new car looks, quite an improvement over the previous model in terms of technology… This year our sedan segment is one of our key focus areas and we are confident that the E-Class will continue to be the most successful luxury sedan in India. ”

    When asked about the outlook for the upcoming year, he said that while the company would not reach the 2018 versions – which was a record sales year for the company, it had expected a 40% increase on the epidemic hit last year.

    “Overall the situation has improved, more than we thought … and now has seen in the last four-five months … in very good numbers every month, I believe we are on a real recovery in the market. So I I am very optimistic and will also move forward.

    He said the company was also seeing strong demand from the e-commerce channel. Mercedes-Benz introduced its e-commerce platform in April last year, contributing about 15% of the company’s annual sales. “We sold about 1200 cars, including used cars, and this was about 15% of our sales last year, originally from an online channel,” he said.

    On supply side issues, Mr Schwenek said, “Clearly, semiconductor is not our biggest issue … we can maneuver around it. For us, it’s more about direct supply, constraints on containers. And the whole shipment situation is a bit more complicated, but we also had barriers to travel restrictions and support from Germany to ramp us up. So it’s a mix of many elements. But more or less we are hopeful about that situation Huh. “

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  • GVMC Election |  Polling starts slow

    GVMC Election | Polling starts slow

    Polling for the Greater Visakhapatnam Municipal Corporation (GVMC) began at a slow pace. On March 10, at Visakhapatnam, by about 9 pm, about 1.53 lakh votes were cast out of a total of 17.26 lakh votes, which was recorded to be 8.89 percent.

    The polling process intensified around 7 am and senior citizens arrived first at some polling stations. “I came in the first hour, because the crowd would be less and I could exercise my franchise without any trouble,” Chau. Srinivasa Rao, a retired government employee in Madhavadhara.

    Though the turnout was generally low, some areas such as Appughar and Peda Jalaripeta had long queues till 8 am.

    Steel plant workers

    With the issue of privatization of the Visakhapatnam steel plant, all polling stations around Gajuwaka and VSP were notified as sensitive and hyper-sensitive.

    In defiance of Centre’s proposal for 100% strategic sales of VSPs, plant employees dropped an extra slip of paper with the ballot, with the slogan ‘Save VSP’.

    Peaceful

    In general, voting has been peaceful in all the 98 wards in GVMC and in 22 wards in Yalamanchali and 28 wards in Narasipatnam municipalities.

    Make elaborate arrangements

    Not only adequate security personnel were deployed at all polling stations for smooth conduct of polling, district officials took all COVID-19 precautions as per protocol.

    Scavengers and hand-held thermal scanners were installed by ASHA workers at about two to three counters in each polling booths. “All voters entering the booth have to pass through our counters,” said an ASHA worker at a polling station in Murlinagar.

    Videographers were seen at several polling stations and policemen and volunteers were seen helping senior citizens and different voters at polling stations.

    Although people were usually seen wearing masks, people were seen walking without them at some polling stations. Both police and health workers appeared to insist on wearing it. However, the social distinction criterion was not practiced at most polling stations.

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