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ScadaICSSchneider

What I Learned: 6 Lessons from a 10-Year Career Break

Credit to Author: Employee Voices| Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2023 14:39:39 +0000

Ten years ago, I left a successful high-tech career to take care of my mother, who was battling breast cancer. Today, I completed my first year back in corporate America and now drive communications for a highly profitable business unit here at Schneider Electric. While…

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ScadaICSSchneider

My Journey as a Woman in Technology: Dedication and Perseverance

Credit to Author: Employee Voices| Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2023 14:22:24 +0000

As a woman in technology, I have had the opportunity to work on various exciting projects and experiences that have shaped my professional career. Born in Greenland and raised in Denmark, I spent the first 10 years of my life in Greenland, then Madrid, and…

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ScadaICSSchneider

The Latest Research on Consumer Electrification Trends is Here. What Does It Mean for Your Business?

Credit to Author: Pape Ndaw| Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2023 13:52:09 +0000

Not since homes were first electrified 100 years ago has residential energy witnessed such a transformative moment. The best way to make sense of all this change is to look at the data: from our customers, from the industry, and from Schneider Electric’s own research….

The post The Latest Research on Consumer Electrification Trends is Here. What Does It Mean for Your Business? appeared first on Schneider Electric Blog.

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ComputerWorldIndependent

Researchers warn of Wi-Fi security flaw affecting iOS, Android, Linux

Apple’s decision to support MAC Address Randomization across its platforms may provide some degree of protection against a newly-identified Wi-Fi flaw researchers say could let attackers hijack network traffic. iOS, Linux, and Android devices may be vulnerable.

The problem is how the standard handles power-saving

The researchers have identified a fundamental flaw in the design of the IEEE 802.11 Wi-Fi standard attackers could exploit to trick access points (Wi-Fi base stations) into leaking information. The researchers do not claim the vulnerability is being actively exploited, but warn that it might enable the interception of network traffic.

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