An unlucky Skyrim player only discovers an unfortunate glitch in-game that appears to be shrinking their Dragonborn indefinitely.
The word alchemy derives from the old name for ancient Egypt. A 19th-century illustration of the Muslim alchemist Geber (Jabir Ibn Hayyan) teaching chemistry at the school of Edessa, Greece.
I never quite got Skyrim. I'm a Morrowind nerd, yeah, sure, we're all very certain of that, but it's not my pining for the old days that meant the game never sat right with me. What was it?
What are the best Skyrim mods? They can be tough to find because there’s a lot of them. They’re the work of a thriving and diverse scene; an army of fans and bedroom coders determined to make ...
The Axis Unseen is one such game. From a former Bethesda developer who worked on Skyrim and Fallout, it’s out now, and if you act fast you can grab it at a discount. Developed by Nate Purkeypile ...
Proof-of-concept exploit code is now public for a vulnerability in Microsoft's Remote Registry client that could be used to take control of a Windows domain by downgrading the security of the ...
RET2 Systems' Jack Dates followed with a successful out-of-bounds (OOB) write exploit on the Sonos Era 300 smart speaker, securing $60,000 and 6 points. His exploit allowed full control over the ...
In an interview with VideoGamer, Skyrim lead designer Bruce Nesmith explained that Larian’s success is an “exception” to the last decade of gaming trends, but one that shows a shift in ...
The findings, published on Google Cloud’s blog, reveals that vendors are increasingly being targeted by attackers, who are continually reducing the average time to exploit both zero-day and N ...
Delta Sues CrowdStrike Over ‘Catastrophic’ Software Glitch Airline claims at least $500 million in losses from July snafu Cybersecurity firm calls suit ‘desperate’ bid to shift blame ...
Pakistan offspinner Sajid Khan has found a number of ways of getting under England's skin, from the moustache twirling to the thigh thumping that accompany borderline invasion of personal space.
We have reached out for comment. Most airlines expressly prohibit skiplagging—effectively an exploit of the airline business model—and use technology to try and detect when customers are doing it.