The share of internal network
Posted: Sun Feb 09, 2025 2:59 am
According to the plans, the country should develop a system of incentives for the acquisition of Russian software, hardware and service products. By 2020, traffic of the Russian segment of the Internet routed through foreign servers should not exceed 35%; the share of purchased and rented foreign software in government agencies and structures with state participation should decrease to 30% (versus the current 90%); the share of information interaction entities using secure information interaction standards in the field of IoT should be at least 20%.
The IT world needs an open alternative to x86 architecture
Sergey Stelmakh | 01/24/2018
IncreaseThe new system-forming processor jamaica mobile database must be an open system without the baggage of past vulnerabilities
The new system-forming processor architecture must be an open system without the baggage of past vulnerabilities
The recent events with the Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities have shown how fragile the foundation on which the modern IT world is built is. The widely publicized flaws in the architecture of processors have caused panic among not only ordinary consumers, but also corporations that would seem to pay much more attention to security issues. The reason for this situation is that not only x86 processors from Intel and AMD were at risk, but also chips licensed using ARM technology. As Jason Perlow from ZDNet writes, because Spectre and Meltdown are not just software vulnerabilities, but hardware ones, they can be called some of the worst, if not the worst, in the history of computing.
What makes Spectre and Meltdown unique is that they are believed to have been around since Windows 3.1 came out in 1995, and are fundamental flaws in processor architecture. In other words, they are present in billions of processors around the world, in everything from consumer machines to high-performance systems and supercomputers that run nuclear reactors and intercontinental missiles.
The IT world needs an open alternative to x86 architecture
Sergey Stelmakh | 01/24/2018
IncreaseThe new system-forming processor jamaica mobile database must be an open system without the baggage of past vulnerabilities
The new system-forming processor architecture must be an open system without the baggage of past vulnerabilities
The recent events with the Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities have shown how fragile the foundation on which the modern IT world is built is. The widely publicized flaws in the architecture of processors have caused panic among not only ordinary consumers, but also corporations that would seem to pay much more attention to security issues. The reason for this situation is that not only x86 processors from Intel and AMD were at risk, but also chips licensed using ARM technology. As Jason Perlow from ZDNet writes, because Spectre and Meltdown are not just software vulnerabilities, but hardware ones, they can be called some of the worst, if not the worst, in the history of computing.
What makes Spectre and Meltdown unique is that they are believed to have been around since Windows 3.1 came out in 1995, and are fundamental flaws in processor architecture. In other words, they are present in billions of processors around the world, in everything from consumer machines to high-performance systems and supercomputers that run nuclear reactors and intercontinental missiles.