Nabow is a One-Stop Destination for All the Latest and Greatest in the World of Technology News and Innovations.
⎯ 《 Nabow • Com 》
Get MS Office and Windows 11 Pro for life — just $60
Get MS Office and Windows 11 Pro for life — just $60
TL;DR: As of September 16, you can get a bundle of Microsoft Office Pro 2021
2023-09-16 17:51
Call of Duty launch sparks record traffic on broadband networks
Call of Duty launch sparks record traffic on broadband networks
UK broadband providers have reported record levels of broadband network traffic sparked by the release of the latest Call of Duty video game. BT and EE, as well as Virgin Media O2, confirmed they saw major spikes on their networks after the game became available to download on Wednesday, ahead of its release on Friday. Virgin Media O2 said that Wednesday saw a new record for traffic on its broadband network, 22% higher than the previous record, which was set only a week ago with the return of the original map to popular battle royale game Fortnite. The internet provider said the large size of the new Call of Duty’s game file played a part of driving the traffic spike. Paul Kells, the provider’s network strategy and engineering director, said: “It has been an exciting couple of weeks for gamers, with the return of Fortnite’s original map and the much-anticipated arrival of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III. “Both of these events have seen gamers getting online in their droves, with our customers setting two network records in less than a week. We are proud to make these moments possible with our gigabit network, backed up by our market leading wifi guarantee.” EE and BT also reported a similar spike, saying the video game launch led to the second highest overall peak in EE and BT home broadband history – behind only a night in February this year when multiple high-profile football matches were being streamed online and an update to Call of Duty’s popular battle royale spin-off Warzone was also being rolled out. The firm said the spike was the biggest single game contribution to a broadband peak it had ever seen. Sam Kemp, EE’s director of gaming, said: “As part of our mission to be the UK’s number one destination for gaming, we offer a full fibre network experience that features in-home wifi management services including Game Mode, that are built for gamers and which come into their own during AAA gaming calendar moments. “They don’t come much bigger than the latest Call of Duty drop, and as the official partner of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III, we’ve seen unprecedented traffic across our network, however EE customers can be rest assured that they will be supported by the fastest speeds and most reliable network to get the best possible COD experience.” Read More Crypto investment fraud warning issued by major bank Council investigating extent of cyber attack that affected website and systems Setback for Ireland as EU legal adviser recommends revisit of Apple tax case
2023-11-11 00:18
Rimini Street Advises that Oracle Database Licensees Using Releases Less Than 19c Not Receiving Oracle Premier Support, Despite Paying Full, Expensive Oracle Maintenance Fees
Rimini Street Advises that Oracle Database Licensees Using Releases Less Than 19c Not Receiving Oracle Premier Support, Despite Paying Full, Expensive Oracle Maintenance Fees
LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 22, 2023--
2023-06-23 01:22
FIFA 23 LaLiga TOTS Upgrade SBC: How to Complete
FIFA 23 LaLiga TOTS Upgrade SBC: How to Complete
FIFA 23 LaLiga TOTS Upgrade SBC is now live rewarding players with a guaranteed item from the LaLiga Team of the Season squad. Here's how to complete the SBC.
2023-05-25 01:26
Odd ‘demon’ particle found inside superconductor may help demystify ‘holy grail’ of physics
Odd ‘demon’ particle found inside superconductor may help demystify ‘holy grail’ of physics
Scientists have finally found a “demon” subatomic particle that was predicted to exist nearly seven decades ago and speculated to play an important role in the behaviours of a range of metals and alloys, including superconductors. Physcist David Pines in 1956 theorised that electrons, which normally have a mass and negative electric charge, can under some conditions combine to form a composite “demon” particle that is massless, neutral and does not interact with light. These theorised interesting properties, however, made these particles elude detection – until now. After a nearly 70-year search for these subatomic entities, researchers, including those from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, have finally found signatures of Dr Pines’ “demon” particles in the metal strontium ruthenate. “Demons have been theoretically conjectured for a long time, but experimentalists never studied them. In fact, we weren’t even looking for it. But it turned out we were doing exactly the right thing, and we found it,” study co-author Peter Abbamonte said. Electrons – which are distributed in different energy bands within atoms – are known to lose their individuality in solids with electric interactions making the particles combine to form collective units. With some threshold energy, studies have also shown electrons can form composite particles called plasmons with a new charge and mass. However, the mass is so large that these plasmon particles cannot form with the kind of energies available at room temperature. Revelations on room-temperature semiconductors are considered to be one of the “holy grails” of physics. But Dr Pines theorised that if a solid has electrons in more than one energy band, as many metals do, their respective plasmons may combine in an out-of-phase pattern to form a new plasmon that is massless and neutral – a demon. Since these special particles are massless, he argued they can form with any energy and may exist at all temperatures – leading to speculation that the demons have important effects on the behaviour of some metals with multiple energy bands. “The vast majority of experiments are done with light and measure optical properties, but being electrically neutral means that demons don’t interact with light,” Dr Abbamonte explained. So a completely new experiment was needed to detect them. In the research, scientists were studying the compound strontium ruthenate as it is similar to high-temperature superconductors – a special kind of material where electrical resistance vanishes. For a survey of the metal’s electronic properties, they synthesised high-quality samples of the metal. They then applied a technique to study the metal that uses energy from electrons shot into the metal to directly observe the metal’s features, including plasmons that form. During their observation of the electron interactions, scientists found something unusual – an electronic mode with no mass. “At first, we had no idea what it was. Demons are not in the mainstream. The possibility came up early on, and we basically laughed it off. But, as we started ruling things out, we started to suspect that we had really found the demon,” Ali Husain, another author of the study, said. Researchers then sought to calculate how electrons are distributed across bands inside strontium ruthenate. Predictions by Dr Pines indicate there are specific conditions when “demons” are likely to form, and it remained unknown whether strontium ruthenate would have the particle. “We had to perform a microscopic calculation to clarify what was going on. When we did this, we found a particle consisting of two electron bands oscillating out-of-phase with nearly equal magnitude, just like Pines described,” found Edwin Huang, another author of the study. “Our study confirms a 67-year-old prediction and indicates that demons may be a pervasive feature of multiband metals,” scientists wrote in the study. Read More Superconductor breakthrough could represent ‘biggest physics discovery of a lifetime’ – but scientists urge caution LK-99: Excitement rises over possibly revolutionary ‘miracle material’ – but there is still no good reason to believe it exists Superconductivity: The technology that could change everything if we just knew how it worked ‘Vampire child’ with padlocked ankle unearthed in Polish ‘necropolis’ Two new kinds of mole discovered in mountains of Turkey Scientific discovery casts doubt on our understanding of human evolution
2023-08-11 16:27
Nanotronics Appoints Peter Hopkins as President
Nanotronics Appoints Peter Hopkins as President
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 7, 2023--
2023-09-07 19:52
Huawei’s Sales Grow Again as New Arenas Mitigate Sanctions Hit
Huawei’s Sales Grow Again as New Arenas Mitigate Sanctions Hit
Huawei Technologies Co. grew sales for a third straight quarter, after new businesses like cloud services and a
2023-08-11 16:25
How to unblock and watch French Netflix for free
How to unblock and watch French Netflix for free
SAVE 49%: Unblock French Netflix from anywhere in the world with a VPN. A one-year
2023-06-28 12:17
Treehouse Review
Treehouse Review
Learning to code can be intimidating, and finding the right instructor is vital to having
2023-08-02 03:49
Bitcoin Discount Emerges on Binance Australia Ahead of Payment Cutoff
Bitcoin Discount Emerges on Binance Australia Ahead of Payment Cutoff
Bitcoin and other digital tokens were trading at a discount on Binance Australia versus rival exchanges in the
2023-05-30 14:47
To Delete a Threads Account, You'll Need to Nuke Your Instagram Account Too
To Delete a Threads Account, You'll Need to Nuke Your Instagram Account Too
Mark Zuckerberg is making it hard to delete a Threads account once you sign up
2023-07-06 22:27
Australian telco Optus tells lawmakers it had no plan to address total outage
Australian telco Optus tells lawmakers it had no plan to address total outage
By Byron Kaye SYDNEY Australia's second-largest telco, Optus, had no crisis plan when a network-wide outage left nearly
2023-11-17 10:24