- 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
- Scattered Spider: Three things the news doesn’t tell you
Scattered Spider isn't one group — it's an identity-first threat model evolving fast From vishing to AiTM phishing, they're exploiting MFA gaps to hijack the cloud Watch the Push Security
- 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
- meaning - What does three by and five by mean? - English Language . . .
I am studying a foreign language, but few good textbooks are available I was able to find a public domain language training manual for air force pilots published on-line It teaches the target language using English On a page of vocabulary and phrases, it lists the English terms "three by" and "five by"
- 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 The vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-22224, CVE-2025
- Word for three times a year. Is tri-quarterly a real word?
It is possible that whoever used the term wanted to convey the idea that the three issues are published in three-month intervals, i e quarterly (say, in March, June,and September), and that one quarter is then skipped (in this example, there is no issue in December) Tri-quarterly would, however, still be a very bad term to use for that purpose
- word choice - Three quarters vs. three fourths - English Language . . .
the cast and crew returned to Los Angeles with three-fourths of the film finished; an aggregate area of more than three-fourths inch in diameter; the ratio of 3:4 is the diatessaron or fourth, producing an octave lute that is three-fourths the length of the descant, which in turn is three-fourths the length of the tenor
- What do we call the “rd” in “3ʳᵈ” and the “th” in “9ᵗʰ”?
301 st: (three-hundred-) fir st (shouldn't that be 301 th?, I'm not going there) Of course, in general, we call all these superscripts 'ordinal indicators,' and "suffixes," 'ordinal suffixes ' (We can see that there's no suffix as such until we come to 4, as we have ordinal names
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