Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
While we may only be two months into 2023, amid growing pressure to justify high drug prices, address trial backlogs, manage staffing shortages, while continuing to develop lifesaving treatments for patients around the world, life sciences companies have certainly started the year off with a bang. But what does this mean for innovation in R&D Read on for key stories, including how organ-on-a-chip technology is changing the way that drugs can be evaluated, efforts to champion diversity in clinical trials, and an inside look at key R&D trends straight from the mouths of industry leaders.
At our Sustainability Deep Dive we invite you to explore different approaches we have developed with our clients around the world. We provide deeper insights from our ESG engine room and explain how we can support our clients on their path to net zero, through sustainable finance, transition expertise and our control framework.
We spent countless hours investigating Microsoft Defender telemetry and other signals from potential patient-zero machines running the backdoored version of SolarWinds DLL. Most of these machines communicated with the initial randomly generated DNS domain .avsvmcloud.com but without significant activity (step #1). However, we saw limited cases in May and June where the initial DNS network communication was closely followed by network activity on port 443 (HTTPS) to other legit-looking domains (step #7). On these handful of machines, we performed deep inspection of telemetry.
Some examples of [renamed-adfind] observed by Microsoft and other security researchers::SearchIndex.exesqlceip.exepostgres.exeIxNetwork.execsrss.exeT1482 Domain Trust Discovery, T1018 Remote System DiscoveryConclusionAs we continue to gain deeper understanding of the Solorigate attack, we get a clearer picture of the skill level of the attackers and the extent of planning they put into pulling off one of the most sophisticated attacks in recent history. The combination of a complex attack chain and a protracted operation means that defensive solutions need to have comprehensive cross-domain visibility into attacker activity and provide months of historical data with powerful hunting tools to investigate as far back as necessary.
Before we dive into specifics, please note that we are not discussing the PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X versions in this article, and more updates on those will follow later this year. However, all listed updates in this article will be present on both generations of consoles.
In Part 2 of this ultimate guide to Season 3 SailGP commentators Freddie Carr and Stevie Morrison dig a little deeper into the top half of the table; USA, Great Britain, Australia, Japan and newcomers Canada, who are taking away an F50 from Japan in a controversial decision made by SailGP.
For some recreational diving agencies, "Deep diving", or "Deep diver" may be a certification awarded to divers that have been trained to dive to a specified depth range, generally deeper than 30 metres (98 ft). However, the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) defines anything from 18 to 30 metres (60 to 100 ft) as a "deep dive" in the context of recreational diving (other diving organisations vary), and considers deep diving a form of technical diving.[1] In technical diving, a depth below about 60 metres (200 ft) where hypoxic breathing gas becomes necessary to avoid oxygen toxicity may be considered a deep dive. In professional diving, a depth that requires special equipment, procedures, or advanced training may be considered a deep dive.
Deep diving can mean something else in the commercial diving field. For instance early experiments carried out by Comex S.A. (Compagnie maritime d'expertises) using hydrox and trimix attained far greater depths than any recreational technical diving. One example being the Comex Janus IV open-sea dive to 501 metres (1,644 ft) in 1977.[2][3] The open-sea diving depth record was achieved in 198
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