Year: 2017

Large scale Cyber-Attack Cripples United Kingdom Hospitals

An update to this story can be found here.

LONDON (CNN) - Hospitals in the UK were crippled by a "large-scale" cyber attack on Friday that forced operations to be canceled and ambulances to be diverted.

Health workers reported being locked out of their systems and seeing messages demanding ransom payment to regain access. NHS England described the incident as a "ransomware" attack.

At least 16 organizations connected to the National Health Service (NHS) in England reported being affected. "The investigation is at an early stage but we believe the malware variant is Wanna Decryptor," NHS Digital said in a statement.

"At this stage we do not have any evidence that patient data has been accessed. We will continue to work with affected organisations to confirm this."

NHS Digital said it was working with the government's National Cyber Security Centre, the Department of Health and NHS England to help the organizations affected "to manage the incident swiftly and decisively." It said the attack was not specifically targeted at the NHS.

Barts Health NHS Trust in London said on its website it was "experiencing a major IT disruption and there are delays at all of our hospitals."

It has had to cancel routine appointments and ambulances are being diverted to neighboring hospitals, Barts said.

The problem is also affecting the switchboard at Newham hospital, Barts said.

The East and North Hertfordshire Trust also said it was "experiencing significant problems with our telephone network," in an online statement.

Another NHS Trust in Derbyshire tweeted: "We are aware of a major IT secure system attack. All IT systems have been temporarily shut down. More information will be available shortly."

Microsoft announces “Windows Template Studio” for Developers

Today, we are pleased to announce the next evolution in your File → New Universal Windows Platform app in Visual Studio – Windows Template Studio. Windows Template Studio addresses a top community ask in our developer survey to make it easier and provide guidance to create new projects that target the Universal Windows Platform. In this post, we’d like to spend a few minutes introducing Windows Template Studio, and showing you how it works.

Windows Template Studio uses a dev-friendly wizard to get your UWP apps to F5 in no time, bringing together the pages, frameworks and features that you want. Our wizard walks developers through four steps to quickly scaffold a new UWP app:

  1. Project Type: Select between standard layouts and predefined controls.
  2. Framework selection: Select the structure of your UWP app with in-house and third-party support.
  3. App pages: Select which pages that make sense for the app, that you are trying to create.
  4. App features: Easily add features such as background tasks with one click.

Furthermore, we’re open-sourcing Windows Template Studio, welcoming UWP devs to take the generation engine further – adding additional capabilities and app pages, improving the implemented best practices and patterns – and encouraging UWP devs to make the engine their own – tailoring it to their company’s specific needs.

Windows Template Studio is the evolution of Windows App Studio. App Studio produced a lot of great apps, and we learned a lot from building it and what helps developers. Where App Studio focused on creating a full app, Windows Template Studio focuses on high quality code generation for a strong starting point where developers can start building their application.

A Lap Around Windows Template Studio

We kick off Windows Template Studio by creating a new UWP app project. In the Visual Studio 2017 ‘New Project’ dialog, select the Visual C# → Windows Universal node.

For more information, click here.

Apple Watch able to detect Abnormal Heart Rhythm With 97% Accuracy

The Apple Watch's built-in heart rate monitor is 97 percent accurate when detecting the most common form of an abnormal heart rhythm when paired with an algorithm to sort through the data, according to a new study conducted by the University of California, San Francisco and the team behind the Cardiogram app (via TechCrunch).

There were 6,158 participants in the study, all of whom used the Cardiogram app on the Apple Watch to monitor their heart rate. Most were known to have normal EKG readings, but 200 suffer from paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (an occasional irregular heartbeat).

To read the rest of the article (including usage charts) click here.

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