Weekly Tech News Drop - June 28, 202

David DraperCommunity Manager
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I'm the Community Manager at EE. I live and work in Savannah, GA. I absolutely love working with communities and learning from people!
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In this week's WTND - NASA canceled a spacewalk due to a spacesuit leak. TeamViewer had a security breach. Datadog launched a low-code tool. And a UK boy is world first recipient of skull fitted epilepsy device.
Let's get into this week's headlines!


NASA's ISS Spacesuit Situation Turns Grim

NASA was forced to cancel Monday’s spacewalk due to a water leak in the service and cooling unit on Tracy Dyson’s spacesuit. The growing need of new spacesuits for NASA’s astronauts is compounded by the company contracted to design them pulling out of the agreement.

Read more about the situation here.

TeamViewer Security Breach in Corporate IT Environment

On Thursday TeamViewer disclosed it detected an ‘irregularity’ in its internal corporate IT environment on June 26, 2024. ‘We immediately activated our response team and procedures, started investigations together with a team of globally renowned cyber security experts and implemented necessary remediation measures,” TeamViewer said in a statement.

Read more about the breach and the company's response here.

Datadog App Builder Launched for DevSecOps Teams

Datadog launched a new low-code development tool to allow teams to quickly create and integrate self-service applications into their monitoring systems. The custom apps are meant to expedite large-scale issue resolution and empower technical and business users to address incidents directly within Datadog.

Read more about this new tool here.

World First Epilepsy Device Fitted in UK Boy's Skull

In a groundbreaking medical advancement, a UK boy has received the world’s first epilepsy device fitted directly into his skull. This device aims to significantly improve the management of epilepsy and the quality of life for those affected by the condition.

Read the whole story here.

Our Entire Approach to AI Is Flawed

An in-depth analysis suggests that the current approach to AI development is fundamentally flawed. The article argues for a paradigm shift in how we think about and implement AI technologies.

Explore the full analysis here.

More Interesting Stories

Google says its Latest Gemini AI is 20% Faster Than ChatGPT
DJI commercial drones raise global security concerns
Cyberattack hits major car dealership system

That's it for this week! Drop a comment and let me know what you think about the big news this week, or share articles I missed that you think are noteworthy.

See you next week!

David
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David DraperCommunity Manager
CERTIFIED EXPERT
I'm the Community Manager at EE. I live and work in Savannah, GA. I absolutely love working with communities and learning from people!

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