Neural Networks Decode Complex System Behaviors Through Automated Formula Discovery
Revolutionizing Complex System Analysis with AI-Driven Symbolic Regression In the realm of industrial computing and complex system analysis, researchers have…
Revolutionizing Complex System Analysis with AI-Driven Symbolic Regression In the realm of industrial computing and complex system analysis, researchers have…
IBM shares dropped significantly in after-hours trading following Q3 2025 earnings, despite exceeding analyst expectations for both revenue and earnings per share. The decline reportedly reflects investor concerns about slowing growth in the company’s crucial software division and Red Hat business segment. Analysts are divided on whether the pullback represents a buying opportunity or signals deeper challenges for IBM’s AI-driven transformation strategy.
IBM shares reportedly declined approximately 7% in after-hours trading on October 22, 2025, despite the company delivering stronger-than-expected quarterly results, according to earnings analysis. The technology giant announced adjusted earnings per share of $2.65, significantly surpassing the $2.45 consensus estimate, while revenue totaled $16.33 billion compared to the anticipated $16.09 billion. Despite these positive results, sources indicate investor focus shifted to concerns about slowing growth in IBM’s crucial software segment.
The latest Linux 6.18 kernel release includes crucial security hardening against malicious EROFS images that could trigger system failures. Security improvements target specially-crafted filesystem images that previously caused kernel panics. Meanwhile, the update brings significant enhancements to FUSE functionality for improved user-space filesystem operations.
The Linux 6.18 kernel release includes important security hardening measures that protect systems against specially-crafted EROFS images capable of causing system crashes, according to reports from kernel development sources. The vulnerability, which has now been addressed, could previously allow malicious EROFS (Enhanced Read-Only File System) images to trigger kernel panics and system instability.