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    • Ar chevron_right

      GM announces a new Ultium-based Chevrolet Bolt during Q2 report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Close-up view of the Chevrolet Bolt nameplate.

    Enlarge (credit: Jeffrey Sauger for Chevrole)

    One of the first modern mass-market electric vehicles we tested remains one of our favorites. It's the Chevrolet Bolt, which we first sampled at CES in 2016 , then drove for real when it went on sale the following year . A fun-to-drive hatchback that could feel a little spartan—some people hate the seats in early models—it was also quite affordable, with prices dropping well below $30,000 for a car with a range of 259 miles (417 km).

    Understandably we were pretty upset to learn that General Motors was calling time on this solid little EV; in April this year it announced it was ending the product line. But today, during GM's Q2 results call, CEO Mary Barra revealed the Bolt will be back.

    "Our customers love today's Bolt. It has been delivering record sales and some of the highest customer satisfaction and loyalty scores in the industry," said Barra. "It's also an important source of conquest sales for the company and for Chevrolet. We will keep the momentum going by delivering a new Bolt… and we will execute it more quickly compared to an all-new program with significantly lower engineering expense and capital investment by updating the vehicle with Ultium and Ultifi technologies and by applying our 'winning with simplicity' discipline," Barra said.

    Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium

    • Ar chevron_right

      GM announces a new Ultium-based Chevrolet Bolt during Q2 report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Close-up view of the Chevrolet Bolt nameplate.

    Enlarge (credit: Jeffrey Sauger for Chevrole)

    One of the first modern mass-market electric vehicles we tested remains one of our favorites. It's the Chevrolet Bolt, which we first sampled at CES in 2016 , then drove for real when it went on sale the following year . A fun-to-drive hatchback that could feel a little spartan—some people hate the seats in early models—it was also quite affordable, with prices dropping well below $30,000 for a car with a range of 259 miles (417 km).

    Understandably we were pretty upset to learn that General Motors was calling time on this solid little EV; in April this year it announced it was ending the product line. But today, during GM's Q2 results call, CEO Mary Barra revealed the Bolt will be back.

    "Our customers love today's Bolt. It has been delivering record sales and some of the highest customer satisfaction and loyalty scores in the industry," said Barra. "It's also an important source of conquest sales for the company and for Chevrolet. We will keep the momentum going by delivering a new Bolt… and we will execute it more quickly compared to an all-new program with significantly lower engineering expense and capital investment by updating the vehicle with Ultium and Ultifi technologies and by applying our 'winning with simplicity' discipline," Barra said.

    Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium

    • Ar chevron_right

      GM announces a new Ultium-based Chevrolet Bolt during Q2 report

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Close-up view of the Chevrolet Bolt nameplate.

    Enlarge (credit: Jeffrey Sauger for Chevrole)

    One of the first modern mass-market electric vehicles we tested remains one of our favorites. It's the Chevrolet Bolt, which we first sampled at CES in 2016 , then drove for real when it went on sale the following year . A fun-to-drive hatchback that could feel a little spartan—some people hate the seats in early models—it was also quite affordable, with prices dropping well below $30,000 for a car with a range of 259 miles (417 km).

    Understandably we were pretty upset to learn that General Motors was calling time on this solid little EV; in April this year it announced it was ending the product line. But today, during GM's Q2 results call, CEO Mary Barra revealed the Bolt will be back.

    "Our customers love today's Bolt. It has been delivering record sales and some of the highest customer satisfaction and loyalty scores in the industry," said Barra. "It's also an important source of conquest sales for the company and for Chevrolet. We will keep the momentum going by delivering a new Bolt… and we will execute it more quickly compared to an all-new program with significantly lower engineering expense and capital investment by updating the vehicle with Ultium and Ultifi technologies and by applying our 'winning with simplicity' discipline," Barra said.

    Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium tagcars tagcars tagcars tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagbolt ev tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevrolet bolt ev tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy bolt tagchevy ev tagchevy ev tagchevy ev taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggeneral motors taggm taggm taggm taggm earnings taggm earnings taggm earnings taglg taglg taglg tagmary barra tagmary barra tagmary barra tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagnew bolt ev tagultium tagultium tagultium

    • Ar chevron_right

      Researchers find deliberate backdoor in police radio encryption algorithm

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023

    police radio in car

    Enlarge (credit: Evgen_Prozhyrko via Getty )

    For more than 25 years, a technology used for critical data and voice radio communications around the world has been shrouded in secrecy to prevent anyone from closely scrutinizing its security properties for vulnerabilities. But now it’s finally getting a public airing thanks to a small group of researchers in the Netherlands who got their hands on its viscera and found serious flaws, including a deliberate backdoor.

    The backdoor, known for years by vendors that sold the technology but not necessarily by customers, exists in an encryption algorithm baked into radios sold for commercial use in critical infrastructure. It’s used to transmit encrypted data and commands in pipelines, railways, the electric grid, mass transit, and freight trains. It would allow someone to snoop on communications to learn how a system works, then potentially send commands to the radios that could trigger blackouts, halt gas pipeline flows, or reroute trains.

    Read 40 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra

    • Ar chevron_right

      Researchers find deliberate backdoor in police radio encryption algorithm

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023

    police radio in car

    Enlarge (credit: Evgen_Prozhyrko via Getty )

    For more than 25 years, a technology used for critical data and voice radio communications around the world has been shrouded in secrecy to prevent anyone from closely scrutinizing its security properties for vulnerabilities. But now it’s finally getting a public airing thanks to a small group of researchers in the Netherlands who got their hands on its viscera and found serious flaws, including a deliberate backdoor.

    The backdoor, known for years by vendors that sold the technology but not necessarily by customers, exists in an encryption algorithm baked into radios sold for commercial use in critical infrastructure. It’s used to transmit encrypted data and commands in pipelines, railways, the electric grid, mass transit, and freight trains. It would allow someone to snoop on communications to learn how a system works, then potentially send commands to the radios that could trigger blackouts, halt gas pipeline flows, or reroute trains.

    Read 40 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra

    • Ar chevron_right

      Researchers find deliberate backdoor in police radio encryption algorithm

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023

    police radio in car

    Enlarge (credit: Evgen_Prozhyrko via Getty )

    For more than 25 years, a technology used for critical data and voice radio communications around the world has been shrouded in secrecy to prevent anyone from closely scrutinizing its security properties for vulnerabilities. But now it’s finally getting a public airing thanks to a small group of researchers in the Netherlands who got their hands on its viscera and found serious flaws, including a deliberate backdoor.

    The backdoor, known for years by vendors that sold the technology but not necessarily by customers, exists in an encryption algorithm baked into radios sold for commercial use in critical infrastructure. It’s used to transmit encrypted data and commands in pipelines, railways, the electric grid, mass transit, and freight trains. It would allow someone to snoop on communications to learn how a system works, then potentially send commands to the radios that could trigger blackouts, halt gas pipeline flows, or reroute trains.

    Read 40 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagencryption tagencryption tagencryption tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagpolice radios tagtetra tagtetra tagtetra

    • Ar chevron_right

      Catching up with Foundation S2 as the Second Crisis unfolds

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Lee Pace in long blue rob wth plunging vee neck

    Enlarge / Lee Pace as the latest incarnation of Brother Day, one of a trio of ruling Cleons in Apple TV's Foundation . (credit: Apple TV+)

    We're now two episodes into the second season of Foundation , Apple TV's epic sci-fi series adapted— or remixed , per showrunner David Goyer—from the seminal series of stories by Isaac Asimov, and it's shaping up to be even better than its first. Goyer took great pains in S1 to carefully set up his expansive fictional world, and the scope has only broadened in the second season.

    Goyer describes the new season as more emotional and romantic, with a bit more humor—or at least moments of levity—and faster paced now that the main characters and their key relationships have been well established. "Now it's a bit like jazz," he said. "We can riff on our creation and start to move the chess pieces around and create alliances or unusual pairings that didn't exist last season. Audiences have a certain expectation of how things are going to unfold, and part of the fun is subverting those expectations." The narrative is also more linear, with fewer time jumps forward and back—just the occasional traditional flashback.

    (Major spoilers for S1 below. Some minor spoilers for S2 but no major reveals.)

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television

    • Ar chevron_right

      Catching up with Foundation S2 as the Second Crisis unfolds

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Lee Pace in long blue rob wth plunging vee neck

    Enlarge / Lee Pace as the latest incarnation of Brother Day, one of a trio of ruling Cleons in Apple TV's Foundation . (credit: Apple TV+)

    We're now two episodes into the second season of Foundation , Apple TV's epic sci-fi series adapted— or remixed , per showrunner David Goyer—from the seminal series of stories by Isaac Asimov, and it's shaping up to be even better than its first. Goyer took great pains in S1 to carefully set up his expansive fictional world, and the scope has only broadened in the second season.

    Goyer describes the new season as more emotional and romantic, with a bit more humor—or at least moments of levity—and faster paced now that the main characters and their key relationships have been well established. "Now it's a bit like jazz," he said. "We can riff on our creation and start to move the chess pieces around and create alliances or unusual pairings that didn't exist last season. Audiences have a certain expectation of how things are going to unfold, and part of the fun is subverting those expectations." The narrative is also more linear, with fewer time jumps forward and back—just the occasional traditional flashback.

    (Major spoilers for S1 below. Some minor spoilers for S2 but no major reveals.)

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television

    • Ar chevron_right

      Catching up with Foundation S2 as the Second Crisis unfolds

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Lee Pace in long blue rob wth plunging vee neck

    Enlarge / Lee Pace as the latest incarnation of Brother Day, one of a trio of ruling Cleons in Apple TV's Foundation . (credit: Apple TV+)

    We're now two episodes into the second season of Foundation , Apple TV's epic sci-fi series adapted— or remixed , per showrunner David Goyer—from the seminal series of stories by Isaac Asimov, and it's shaping up to be even better than its first. Goyer took great pains in S1 to carefully set up his expansive fictional world, and the scope has only broadened in the second season.

    Goyer describes the new season as more emotional and romantic, with a bit more humor—or at least moments of levity—and faster paced now that the main characters and their key relationships have been well established. "Now it's a bit like jazz," he said. "We can riff on our creation and start to move the chess pieces around and create alliances or unusual pairings that didn't exist last season. Audiences have a certain expectation of how things are going to unfold, and part of the fun is subverting those expectations." The narrative is also more linear, with fewer time jumps forward and back—just the occasional traditional flashback.

    (Major spoilers for S1 below. Some minor spoilers for S2 but no major reveals.)

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagculture tagculture tagculture tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagapple tv plus tagentertainment tagentertainment tagentertainment tagfoundation tagfoundation tagfoundation tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagisaac asimov tagstreaming television tagstreaming television tagstreaming television

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