A key climate disaster database is back after the Climate Central non-profit resurrected the tool following its shuttering by the Trump administration. CBS News New York's Scott Padgett has more.
Breaches are an unfortunate reality of the digital era. Chances are, some of the companies you trust your data to are going to get hacked, and sensitive information stored on those servers is going to ...
The National Database and Registration Authority (NIRA) of Uganda is pledging to strengthen privacy and security measures around the country’s biometric national ID database after recent reports of a ...
To the untrained eye, the restored prairie lands of Illinois look exactly how you would imagine they looked hundreds of years ago. But many plant species are still missing, and recent efforts — ...
Naloxone can be used to reduce an opioid overdose. It's a valuable tool to help people, said Opioid Policy Institute Director Jonathan Stoltman, but some communities spend opioid settlement money on ...
Zach began writing for CNET in November, 2021 after writing for a broadcast news station in his hometown, Cincinnati, for five years. You can usually find him reading and drinking coffee or watching a ...
Databases will soon be capable of monitoring their own health, identifying bottlenecks, adjusting configurations, and even rerouting traffic in real time. Generative AI has already had a profound ...
Abstract: Selecting a database implementation fit for specific data analytic purposes is often challenging due to manufacturers' bias in database performance reporting. This paper aims to compare disk ...
Abstract: In contemporary software development, database performance significantly influences the stability, scalability, and responsiveness of applications. With the growing complexity of application ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is retiring its public database meant to keep track of the cost of losses from climate change-fueled weather disasters including floods, heat waves, ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will no longer track the cost of climate change-fueled weather disasters, including floods, heat waves, wildfires and more. It is the latest example ...