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Before joining Microsoft and becoming one of its most important software engineers, Mark Russinovich was in the business of pissing the company off. This was the late 1990s, when Microsoft ...
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel, have surprisingly never met before. That ...
Azure CTO Mark Russinovich touts security during deep dive into the tech behind Microsoft’s cloud. by Tom Krazit on May 9, 2018 at 1:30 pm May 9, 2018 at 1:30 pm. Share 28 Tweet Share Reddit Email.
REDMOND, Wash. — Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich cautioned that “vibe coding” and AI-driven software development tools aren’t capable of replacing human programmers for complex ...
Mark Russinovich looks like an average corporate computer whiz, even though he’s a technical fellow for Microsoft. The tall, thin, dark-haired software guru helps co-workers maintain successful ...
Mark Russinovich is a legendary figure in the computer industry. A former teenage hacker who went on to earn a PhD in computer engineering from Carnegie Mellon, Russinovich cofounded Winternals ...
Windows IT people everywhere owe thanks to Dr. Mark Russinovich, now a technical fellow at Microsoft and his less-famous partner Bryce Cogswell. Russinovich is famous both as an author, ...
Mark Russinovich, the chief technologist for Microsoft's Azure, reflects on bringing AI from cloud to edge, a process that in over time may look like a very big Visual Basic app.
Mark Russinovich: I think that's part of it. We see a headline almost everyday about a major company being hacked, Web sites being defaced, government organizations being infiltrated.
Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich says that serverless computing — which allows developers to build and run applications without having to manage the infrastructure behind it — is "the best ...
Generative AI-based threats operate over a huge landscape, and CISOs must look at it from a variety of perspectives, said Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich during Microsoft Build conference ...
Mark Russinovich: I think that's part of it. We see a headline almost everyday about a major company being hacked, Web sites being defaced, government organizations being infiltrated.