- Scattered Spider: Three things the news doesn’t tell you
So here’s three things that you might have missed — some you probably know already, and others that you might not be aware of if you haven’t been tracking Scattered Spider beyond the recent
- Qualcomm fixes three Adreno GPU zero-days exploited in attacks
Qualcomm has released security patches for three zero-day vulnerabilities in the Adreno Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) driver that impact dozens of chipsets and are actively exploited in targeted
- Word for three times a year. Is tri-quarterly a real word?
Is "tri-quarterly" a real English word meaning 3 times a year? Are there any other words that mean 3 times a year?
- Broadcom fixes three VMware zero-days exploited in attacks
Broadcom warned customers today about three VMware zero-days, tagged as exploited in attacks and reported by the Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center
- SK Telecom says malware breach lasted 3 years . . . - BleepingComputer
SK Telecom says that a recently disclosed cybersecurity incident in April, first occurred all the way back in 2022, ultimately exposing the USIM data of 27 million subscribers
- etymology - What is the origin of the counting prefixes: uni-, bi- di . . .
22 Many English words use the prefixes uni-, bi- di-, tri-, quad- and so on to mean one, two, three, and four For example: A unicycle has one wheel, a bicycle two, and a tricycle three I presume these prefixes are either of Greek or Latin origin, but from what little I know of these two languages, neither uses these prefixes as their numbers
- If annual means one year, is there any word for two,three, four. . year
From WordWeb: Annual: Occurring or payable every year What is the corresponding single word for occurring every two year, three year, four year etc I understand that it's surely not exhaustively
- word choice - Three quarters vs. three fourths - English Language . . .
To express a fraction of 3 out of 4, how and when would you use three quarters, and when would you use three fourths? To me, three quarters is what I would have used all the time — but I'm not a n
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