Editor’s note: Deadline’s It Starts on the Page features standout drama series scripts in 2026 Emmy contention. Season 4 of The Morning Show waded into several issues including AI deepfakes, freedom ...
Hackers are using WhatsApp messages to deliver malware to Windows PCs, exploiting user trust and attachments to trigger stealthy, multi-stage attacks. A new wave of attacks is turning trusted WhatsApp ...
Python still holds the top ranking in the monthly Tiobe index of programming language popularity, leading by more than 10 percentage points over second-place C. But Python’s popularity actually has ...
Here is a tutorial to convert CSV to XLS or XLSX using the command-line interface in Windows 11/10. There are multiple ways to convert a CSV file to Excel formats (XLS, XLSX). You can use Microsoft ...
I started programming in .NET back in the days of .NET 1.0 beta 1. Transitioning from Visual Basic was a big deal, and there was a lot of excitement around .NET! Things have gone a very long way since ...
How to use Google Sheets to create, work with, and collaborate on spreadsheets — and how Gemini, Google’s AI assistant, can give you a head start. Google Sheets is a powerful spreadsheet app that you ...
Python maintains its runaway top ranking in the Tiobe index of programming language popularity, while older languages continue to rise. Perl surprises. Python, the highest-ranking language ever in the ...
Ada, a programming language born in the late 70s, has managed to break into the top 10 of the TIOBE Index for July 2025. The sudden return of this old-timer has developers debating whether it’s a ...
Lazarus 4 is the latest version of the all-FOSS but Delphi-compatible IDE for the FreePascal compiler. It's a multi-platform IDE, and the Sourceforge page has packages for both 32-bit and 64-bit ...
This tutorial will walk you through PTV VISSIM, from setting up a basic model to advanced features like adaptive signal control, public transport integration, and performance evaluation. Each section ...
Sixty years ago, on May 1, 1964, at 4 am in the morning, a quiet revolution in computing began at Dartmouth College. That’s when mathematicians John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz successfully ran the ...