The two recent Call of Duty games need some work. Both Vanguard and Warzone Pacific have seen their fair share of stability issues, bugs, and more. Activision recently provided a statement promising fixes. Changes have now begun with Raven Software rolling out a patch. The latest Warzone Pacific update mainly focuses on some much needed bug fixed. Also, the Katana, of all weapons, has received a buff.
Over the life span of the battle royale, players have found ways to get under the map and inside of walls. Thankfully, the developers keep fixing these issues across Caldera. Another important fix has been deployed involving Big Game Bounty contracts. You will now earn UAV and Advanced UAV rewards when you are in a vehicle or an anti-air gun. Stability issues have been addressed, including menu flickering when joining friends, as well as private lobby hosts crashing. The final bug that has been squashed is an issue with reload animations, which allowed some weapons to continuously fire...
Recently, Epic Games launched the first major Fortnite update 19.10 of Chapter 3 Season 1. The update introduced Tilted Towers along with the big dinosaurs named Klombo. Even though Epic is good with updating Fortnite regularly, new updates come up with a few new bugs as well. The same happened with the 19.10 update. To […]
This article was published as a part of the Data Science Blogathon. Hey Guys, Hope you all are doing well. In this article, we will be learning how you can develop and deploy an image classifier using flask. Like my other articles, this article will give you hands-on experience with code and at the end of […]
Cisco on Tuesday announced patches for a critical vulnerability in the Redundancy Configuration Manager (RCM) for the StarOS software running on its ASR 5000 networking devices.
A Cisco proprietary node/network function, RCM delivers redundancy of StarOS-based user plane functions.
Drupal developers this week informed users about several vulnerabilities discovered in a third-party library that was recently resurrected after it had apparently been discontinued.
A prominent security researcher poking around at the Zoom video conferencing platform found worrying signs the company failed to enable a decades-old anti-exploit mitigation, a blunder that greatly increased exposure to malicious hacker attacks.
The next season of Call of Duty is going to begin a bit late, thanks to the ongoing issues plaguing Warzone, Vanguard, and Modern Warfare, Activision has announced. Season Two in the multiplayer games will now begin February 14, not on February 2 as originally scheduled. Call of Duty has had a rocky couple months since season one began in December. From weapon balancing to invisible skins in the shop, Warzone and Vanguard players have had plenty to complain about. The developers say "we feel your frustrations and hear you loud and clear," and add that while several patches have rolled out during season one, "more needs to be done." "We will use this additional development time to deliver updates, including optimisations to gameplay, game balancing (including weapon and equipment balancing), to fix game stability and bugs, and to ensure an overall level of polish to improve the experience for players across Vanguard, Warzone Pacific, Black Ops Cold War, and Modern Warfare," the Call of Duty staff writes in today's announcement.
Just turning the patch dial to "high" is not enough, and if your company is using the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) to prioritize software patching, you are doing it wrong.