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Aujourd’hui — 9 mai 2026Flux principal

La Zone du Silence : quand un missile perdu de l’US Air Force créait un Roswell mexicain

9 mai 2026 à 18:09

zone du silence

Dans le désert de Chihuahua, une zone blanche alimente tous les fantasmes : ondes radio coupées, magnétisme fou et visites d’aliens. Mais derrière la légende de la « Zona del Silencio » se cache surtout un crash de missile radioactif mal géré par l'armée américaine en pleine Guerre froide.

Le secret des maisons hantées révélé

9 mai 2026 à 09:30

Roblox veut rendre ses jeux plus beaux grâce à l’IA, Vista 4D transforme une vidéo en scène manipulable, ChatGPT développe une étrange obsession pour les gobelins, Apple semble enterrer doucement le Vision Pro, Tesla lance enfin son Semi industriel, et les infrasons pourraient expliquer certaines maisons hantées.

❤️ Me soutenir sur Patreon
📺 Me retrouver sur YouTube
💬 On discute ensemble sur Discord

Modèles de la semaine

Matos Veloce

  • Couronne de Pline : un smartphone sous Linux c’est possible.
  • C’est enfin officiel : le Vision Pro est mort.
  • ACE et APX, le futur du langage x86.
  • La RAM, c’est aussi une industrie de chiottes.
  • Semi conducteur : Tesla va envoyer du lourd.
  • Comment transformer une maison en maison hantée ?
  • Jamais DOS sans trois, encore un ancien code source publié.
  • Tech Café : torréfaction et irruption, même combat.

Participants

  • Une émission préparée par Guillaume Poggiaspalla
  • Présenté par Guillaume Vendé

Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

💾

https://nascompares.com/?p=89386

Par : Rob Andrews
8 mai 2026 à 18:00

Synology Cameras Now Need a License for Surveillance Station

Synology has changed the licensing position for selected cameras in its 2026 surveillance camera range, with the newly listed BC510, TC510, and BC800Z now requiring a Surveillance Device License when used with Synology Surveillance Station. This marks a notable shift from the previous value proposition of Synology-branded cameras, which had been positioned as tightly integrated first-party devices that did not require an additional camera license. The new BC510 and TC510 have been introduced as AI-enabled bullet and turret cameras with 5MP resolution, 30 FPS recording, 110° horizontal field of view, IP66/IP67 protection, 30 m night vision, edge AI analytics, ONVIF support, and compatibility with Synology’s wider surveillance ecosystem, including its upcoming cloud-based surveillance platform. But why has Synology changed it’s stance on camera license requirements with this new series?

What Changed in Synology Cameras and the License Requirements?

Synology’s camera licensing policy has changed for part of its 2026 camera generation. The BC510, TC510, and BC800Z are now listed by Synology as requiring a Surveillance Device License, with Synology’s license documentation stating that these models require 1 license per camera. This means these Synology-branded cameras are now treated in the same basic licensing structure as regular IP cameras, where each camera consumes 1 available Surveillance Station camera license.

This is a significant change because Synology’s own cameras previously had a clear licensing advantage inside Surveillance Station. Earlier Synology camera models were positioned as first-party devices that worked directly with the platform without the need to buy an additional camera license. For users building a Synology-based surveillance setup, that made the cameras easier to justify even when comparable third-party ONVIF cameras were available at lower prices. The camera, platform integration, AI features, and license position were effectively part of the same value proposition.

With the 2026 generation, that arrangement has changed for the BC510, TC510, and BC800Z. Users will now need to account for the cost of a Surveillance Device License when deploying these cameras beyond the default licenses included with their Synology NAS, NVR, or DVA system. Synology NAS systems generally include 2 default licenses, Network Video Recorder systems include 4, and Deep Learning NVR systems include 8. Any deployment that exceeds the available default license count will require additional license packs, just as it would when adding third-party IP cameras or other supported surveillance devices.

Device Type License Units Example License required
Synology Cameras Per camera BC510, TC510, BC800Z 1
Per camera BC500, TC500 0
Synology LiveCam Per device Synology LiveCam app 1
Regular IP camera Per camera AXIS P1347 1
Panoramic (fisheye) Per camera AXIS M3007 1
Multi-lens Fixed lens Per camera ArecontVision AV8185DN 1
Fixed lenses with independent IP Per channel AXIS Q3709-PVE 3
Removable lens Per channel AXIS F44 5
Video server Per channel Vivotek VS8801 8
I/O module Per device AXIS A9188 1
Intercom Per device AXIS A8105-E 1
IP speaker Per device AXIS C3003-E 1
Access controller (door) Per device AXIS A1001 1
Transaction device (POS) Per device 2

According to Synology’s stated position around the new generation, the decision is connected to broader deployment flexibility. The BC510 and TC510 are being introduced not only as cameras for Surveillance Station, but also as devices designed to work across multiple surveillance environments. Synology states that these cameras support deployment within the native Synology ecosystem, third-party NVR and VMS infrastructures through ONVIF, and its upcoming cloud-based surveillance platform. In that context, Synology appears to be separating the camera hardware from the Surveillance Station license entitlement, rather than treating the license as implicitly bundled with the camera.

The advantage Synology presents is that this approach allows the cameras to be used more flexibly outside Synology-only deployments. In theory, a lower hardware price can reduce the entry cost for users who want to deploy the cameras in third-party systems, where a Synology Surveillance Station license would not be relevant. For mixed environments, installers, managed service providers, or businesses migrating between platforms, the cameras can be positioned as ONVIF-capable AI cameras rather than hardware tied primarily to a Synology NAS or NVR. Synology’s argument is therefore less about removing value from Surveillance Station users, and more about aligning the cameras with wider interoperability, third-party infrastructure support, and future cloud surveillance services.

Which Cameras are Affected, and What About Older Synology Cameras?

The affected 2026 Synology camera models listed as requiring a Surveillance Device License are the BC800Z, BC510, and TC510. The BC800Z is the higher-end 8MP model with PoE connectivity, optical zoom coverage, longer night vision range, IP66/IP67/IK10 protection, a 5-year warranty, and additional analytics such as License Plate Recognition and Smoke Detection. The BC510 and TC510 are 5MP PoE cameras, offered in bullet and turret designs respectively, with 2880×1620 resolution, 30 FPS video, a 110° horizontal field of view, 30 m night vision, people and vehicle detection, intrusion detection, audio detection, tampering detection, motion detection, people and vehicle counting, Instant Search, and people-based auto tracking. The CC400W is not listed as requiring a Surveillance Device License, and remains separate from the licensing change affecting the BC800Z, BC510, and TC510.

At this stage, the licensing change appears to apply to the newer 2026 generation models listed by Synology, rather than being presented as a wider retrospective change across all previous Synology cameras. Older Synology camera models are less prominent on Synology’s current product pages following the arrival of the refreshed range, so the long-term public positioning of those older models is less clear from the current camera comparison material. Based on the available details, there is no indication in the supplied information that previously released Synology cameras are being newly reclassified in the same way, but buyers and existing users should still check the official Synology Camera Support List and license documentation for their exact model before expanding or changing a deployment.

Why Has Synology Made This Decision?

Synology’s stated reasoning appears to centre on making its newer cameras more flexible across different deployment environments. The BC510 and TC510 are being positioned not only as Surveillance Station cameras, but also as cameras for third-party NVR and VMS systems through ONVIF, as well as Synology’s upcoming cloud-based surveillance platform. By separating the camera hardware from the Surveillance Station license entitlement, Synology can sell the cameras into environments where a bundled Surveillance Station license would not be useful, while also lowering the hardware entry price for users who are not deploying them directly with Synology’s own platform. There may also be a wider commercial consideration around Synology’s position as a Taiwanese camera manufacturer. In some government, education, public sector, and official institutional deployments, the country of origin of surveillance hardware can be a factor in procurement, security review, and long-term platform approval.

This may give Synology an advantage over some Chinese-made camera brands, particularly in environments where hardware from certain vendors is harder to approve or deploy. In that context, Synology may see an opportunity to position the BC510, TC510, and BC800Z as more broadly deployable surveillance cameras for institutions that want ONVIF-compatible hardware without relying on brands that may face additional scrutiny. For Synology-only users, however, the practical result is different: the license cost now needs to be considered separately when adding the BC510, TC510, or BC800Z to a deployment that has already used its default license allowance. This does not remove the cameras’ first-party integration benefits, edge AI features, or official support inside the Synology ecosystem, but it does change the overall value calculation compared with older Synology cameras that did not require a separate Surveillance Device License.

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New TeamViewer connector in Microsoft Intune: remote control for Windows, macOS, iOS, Android

Par : IT Experts
8 mai 2026 à 21:56
TeamViewer notification in Company Portal (image Microsoft)
TeamViewer is a remote assistance solution that lets you remotely connect to and control Intune-managed Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS/iPadOS devices directly from the Intune admin center to support your users. Microsoft Intune's April 2026 update (service release 2604) introduces a redesigned TeamViewer connector for remote assistance. The new connector replaces the existing one with a simplified setup process and adds SSO (single sign-on) support, device group synchronization, and granular role-based permissions. If you still use the old connector, you have 12 months to migrate before it stops working. This article explains what changed, what you need, and how to configure the new connector.

Source

On aurait pu avoir un Sonic façon Zelda et Ghilbi au début des années 2000

9 mai 2026 à 17:44

Ce n’est pas peu dire que Sonic, la mascotte de Sega, a connu des débuts difficiles dans les années 2000. Ballotté entre des jeux sans âme aux choix douteux, Sonic a depuis cherché son registre, sans grand succès. Mais il s’avère que l’on aurait pu avoir un Sonic bien plus intéressant lors de son passage à la 3D.

Après Le Diable s’habille en Prada 2, voici 5 films à voir pour rester dans l’ambiance

9 mai 2026 à 15:35

Vous n'êtes pas encore prêts à dire adieu aux bureaux de Runway ? Alors que Le Diable s’habille en Prada 2 affole les compteurs du box-office et que la performance de Meryl Streep prouve que le style est éternel, nous avons sélectionné pour vous cinq pépites cinématographiques à voir après (ou avant) avoir vu cette suite.

Le mythe de la forteresse nucléaire : l’IA Mythos fait vaciller nos certitudes

9 mai 2026 à 14:00

Claude bombe

L’apparition de l’IA Mythos, présentée comme capable de détecter rapidement des failles informatiques majeures, montre que les capacités offensives dans le cyberespace progressent très vite. Cette évolution pourrait rendre les systèmes nucléaires plus vulnérables et augmenter le risque d’erreurs, de sabotage ou d’escalade accidentelle.

Gérer des ailes n’est pas un problème pour notre cerveau, mais ça ne nous fait pas voler pour autant

Par : Julien Cadot
9 mai 2026 à 10:44

Une équipe chinoise a entraîné 25 volontaires à voler avec des ailes virtuelles. Au bout d'une semaine, leur cerveau a commencé à traiter ces ailes comme s'il s'agissait de bras.

OVNI « chandelier » : l’étoile à huit branches n’a probablement rien d’extraterrestre

Par : Julien Cadot
9 mai 2026 à 10:18

Une image d'OVNI en forme d'étoile à huit branches, captée par un capteur infrarouge militaire au Moyen-Orient, refait surface sur X après la publication de fichiers liés aux OVNI par la Maison-Blanche. La vidéo date en réalité de 2013, et l'explication la plus probable n'a rien d'extraterrestre.

Pourquoi l’IA Claude adorait faire du chantage (et comment Anthropic a mis fin à cette dérive)

Par : Julien Cadot
9 mai 2026 à 09:11

Anthropic a expliqué dans un long billet de recherche comment ses modèles Claude sont passés d'un taux de chantage de 96 % à zéro dans ses tests d'alignement. La recette : leur enseigner le raisonnement derrière les bons comportements, pas seulement les bons comportements.

Comme les Français, les Américains ne pourront plus tricher sur l’Apple Store

Par : Julien Cadot
9 mai 2026 à 08:49

Depuis le 8 mai 2026, Apple impose une vérification d'identité via UNiDAYS pour acheter sur son Apple Education Store aux États-Unis, au Canada et au Chili. La fin d'un système à la confiance qui laissait à peu près n'importe qui décrocher 10 % de remise.

Forensic Windows – Partie 3 : surveiller l’exécution des programmes avec Prefetch

9 mai 2026 à 17:00

Maîtrisez l’utilisation du Prefetch dans Windows pour identifier les programmes exécutés, en exploitant des outils comme WinPrefetchView et PECmd.

Le post Forensic Windows – Partie 3 : surveiller l’exécution des programmes avec Prefetch a été publié sur IT-Connect.

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