
Why the Iran Cyberattack Everyone Warned About Hasn’t Really Happened Yet
The United States launched major combat operations against Iran in late February, sparking warnings of a massive Iranian cyber retaliation. Six weeks later, only low‑impact incidents—such as DDoS attacks, website defacements and a brief outage at medical‑device maker Stryker—have been confirmed. Iran‑linked groups have also targeted a few U.S. individuals, but nothing approaches the "digital Pearl Harbor" scenario anticipated by officials. Analysts attribute the muted response to physical strikes on Iran's cyber infrastructure, an internet blackout, and possible strategic restraint.
Global PC Shipments Rise in First Quarter on Inventory Build Ahead of Memory Price Increases
Global PC shipments rose between 2.5% and 4% year‑on‑year in Q1, reaching roughly 64 million units according to Gartner, IDC and Omdia. The increase stemmed mainly from distributors and vendors building inventory ahead of anticipated DRAM and NAND price hikes, rather...

Best of Show Winner BlytzPay Unveils New Intelligent Payments Platform
Utah‑based BlytzPay has launched Blytz, an evolved intelligent payments platform that merges payments, AI‑driven customer engagement, and automation into a single layer. The suite comprises BlytzPay (text‑first billpay), BlytzCollect (AI‑powered outreach via instant payment links), and BlytzCash (in‑person cash payments...
Advocacy Groups Warn Against Adding Facial Recognition to Meta AI Glasses
Meta is preparing to embed facial recognition into its AI‑powered smart glasses, prompting a coalition of more than 70 civil‑rights, domestic‑violence, reproductive‑rights, LGBTQ+, labor and immigrant advocacy groups to publicly demand the feature be scrapped. The groups argue the technology...

Click Therapeutics Cuts 27% of Workforce After $50M Raise
Click Therapeutics, a digital therapeutics company, announced a $50 million Series D round led by Boehringer Ingelheim. Within days of the funding, the startup slashed more than a quarter of its workforce, eliminating roughly 27% of employees. The cuts affect both engineering...

Product Spotlight: Cisco Webex Desk Pro Will Make You Look Forward to Meetings
Cisco unveiled the Webex Desk Pro, a premium videoconferencing device aimed at higher‑education campuses. In a month‑long test of 25 meetings, 95% of participants noted clearer audio and video, and productivity rose noticeably. The Desk Pro combines 4K 120‑degree camera,...

Microsoft Is Killing Outlook Lite
Microsoft announced that Outlook Lite for Android will be retired on May 25, 2026, after blocking new downloads since October 2023. The lightweight app, launched in 2022 to serve low‑end devices and slow networks, has become redundant as budget Android...

The Gooloo GT6000 Tested: Rapid Recharging, Reliability, and Safety Make It A Must-Have for Vehicle Owners
The Popular Mechanics review crowns the Gooloo GT6000 as the best overall portable jump starter, highlighting its 27,000 mAh capacity, 6,000 A peak output, and rapid 1.4‑hour recharge. Testers used the device on a range of older cars and RVs, noting its...

Researchers: AI-Driven Campaign Compromises Accounts More Effectively than Traditional Phishing Attacks
Microsoft researchers have identified a large‑scale AI‑driven phishing campaign that leverages the legitimate device‑code authentication flow to hijack accounts without stealing passwords. The attackers use generative AI to craft highly personalized emails and trigger real‑time code generation, bypassing the 15‑minute...

NZXT Agrees to Let Customers Keep Their Rental PCs in Class-Action Settlement
NZXT and its billing partner Fragile have agreed to a $3.45 million settlement to resolve a class‑action lawsuit over the Flex PC rental program. The deal covers 19,322 customers and includes a cash fund, a $923,117 debt‑forgiveness pool, and the option...

IRS Fraud Rings Move Beyond Tax Refund Theft
Cybercriminals are escalating tax fraud by converting stolen identities into bogus businesses, securing legitimate Employer Identification Numbers (EINs) and opening bank accounts. The scheme follows a four‑stage pipeline—identity theft, LLC registration, EIN acquisition, and credit line requests—causing credit applications to...

Office of Infectious Diseases Research Activities
The FDA’s Office of Infectious Diseases outlines its antimicrobial regulatory science agenda, referencing the 2020‑2025 National Action Plan that steers U.S. efforts against antibiotic‑resistant bacteria and fungi. It announces FY26 funding opportunities through a Broad Agency Announcement, with proposals due...
Reddit Expands Reminder Ads Globally
Reddit has rolled out its Reminder Ads feature to every advertiser on the platform, allowing brands worldwide to add a “Remind Me” button to their campaigns. When users tap the CTA, they receive two push notifications—one day before and one...

SE Qld Councils to Collaborate on Common Data, ID Foundations
South East Queensland’s 12 mayors released a collaborative digital plan that sets a roadmap for foundational digital infrastructure by 2035. The immediate focus is on building a common data environment, a regional digital identity system, and upgraded connectivity to enable...
Mark Zuckerberg Continues His Pursuit of AI Human Clones
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is training an AI replica of himself, using his speech patterns and daily decision‑making data, so the bot can interact with employees and possibly the public. The effort builds on Meta’s 2024 AI Studio, which already...
Generative AI Won’t Create Value on Its Own
Generative AI has rapidly become a general‑purpose technology, but its raw capabilities alone do not guarantee business value. Professor Rahul Kapoor outlines three faces of technology value creation—emerging, enabling, and embedding—to help executives navigate the shift from invention to profitable...

Tesla Launches Spring Update 2026 with ‘Hey Grok,’ New Self-Driving App, and More
Tesla’s Spring Update 2026 introduces a redesigned Self‑Driving subscription app with a $99.99‑per‑month one‑tap sign‑up, the voice‑activated “Hey Grok” assistant, and an auto‑install option for overnight software updates. The rollout also adds playful touches like a Cyberhog character in Pet Mode, custom...

EU’s Digital Border Revolution: Biometrics Replace Stamps But Queues Replace Convenience
The European Union is launching a biometric entry‑exit system that will replace traditional passport stamps across Schengen borders. The new platform, part of the European Entry/Exit System (EES), captures facial and fingerprint data to streamline security checks and curb illegal...
These Nanotweezers Grab Thousands of Tiny Cell Packets in Seconds and Expose Their Hidden Cargo
Vanderbilt researchers led by Justus Ndukaife have unveiled interferometric electrohydrodynamic tweezers (IET), a platform that can trap and analyze thousands of nanoscale extracellular vesicles (EVs) in seconds. The system combines electrohydrodynamic flow‑based capture with label‑free interferometric imaging and Raman spectroscopy,...

From Our Perspective: The Orange Book at 40: A Valued FDA Resource Continually Enhanced by User Input
The FDA celebrated the Orange Book’s 40th anniversary, highlighting its role as the sole official source for therapeutic equivalence evaluations and reference listed drug data. The database, updated daily for generic approvals and monthly for NDA changes, underpins generic substitution,...

Claude Is Getting Worse, According to Claude
Anthropic’s Claude, once a favorite among programmers, suffered a 48‑minute outage on April 13, 2026, affecting both Claude.ai and Claude Code. Simultaneously, developers report a sharp rise in quality complaints, with over 20 new issues logged in the first half of...

Unifying MMM & Last Touch for a Modern Marketer’s Edge
Kochava has integrated its Always‑On Incremental Measurement (AIM) marketing mix modeling solution with its core last‑touch and multi‑touch attribution platform, creating a single measurement suite. The migration opens to AIM customers on April 16, with the legacy AIM login available until...

OpenAI’s Mac Apps Need Updates Thanks to the Axios Hack
OpenAI updated its macOS security certificates and is requiring users to install the latest app versions after a supply‑chain attack on the popular Axios npm library compromised its signing workflow. The attack, linked to North Korean hacking group UNC1069, injected...
CommonSpirit Cuts 1st-Year RN Turnover 41%
Chicago-based CommonSpirit Health has rolled out a virtual nursing model across more than 1,000 beds, integrating remote nurses into bedside teams to handle non‑clinical tasks. The initiative has cut first‑year RN turnover by roughly 41%‑47% and lowered catheter‑associated urinary tract...

FedRAMP Couldn’t See Inside the Box. That’s the Point.
Federal auditors at FedRAMP spent five years trying to verify Microsoft’s Government Community Cloud (GCC) High encryption but never obtained a detailed data‑flow diagram, highlighting a systemic gap between compliance paperwork and actual security. The roadblock stemmed from the platform’s legacy‑laden...

University of Illinois Develops City Flood Forecasting System
The Discovery Partners Institute at the University of Illinois has built a GPU‑driven city‑scale flood forecasting system that can slash simulation time by up to 80%, delivering real‑time predictions for Chicago. By processing physics‑based models across intricate urban drainage networks,...

Get Your AI Terminology Straight: A Manufacturing Leader's Guide
Mike Blasdell’s guide clarifies that artificial intelligence in manufacturing is not a single technology but a suite of tools—including language models, pattern‑recognition algorithms, and decision‑support systems. He explains how many firms already reap benefits from machine learning in demand forecasting,...
Native Communities Need Healthcare Interoperability
Native communities across the United States face fragmented health‑IT systems that impede timely care. Brenda Hood, client experience analyst at HealtHIE Nevada, highlighted that disconnected electronic health records and limited data exchange create gaps in treatment for tribal patients. She...

Federal Agencies Are Using AI to Evaluate Proposals. Is Your Team Ready?
Federal agencies such as the GSA, IRS and the Army are deploying AI tools that automatically evaluate proposal compliance, flag missing forms, and draft contract language. These systems can eliminate non‑compliant bids before a human ever reviews them, raising the...
Employee Worries over AI Job Loss Clash Against Immature Adoption
CIOs are accelerating AI pilots, with global corporate spend reaching $582 billion in 2025, more than double the previous year. The 2026 AI Index Report finds a third of organizations expect workforce reductions within the next year, yet most AI adoption...

One Piece Fans Are Already Reselling Popeye’s Bento Boxes on eBay for Hundreds
Popeyes launched a One Piece themed meal on April 13, featuring a Luffy‑styled Bento Box available at select U.S. and Canadian locations until May 10. The limited‑edition boxes sparked massive lines and immediate resale activity, with eBay listings ranging from $150 to $499....

OpenAI Joins FIDO Alliance to Help AI Agent Authentication Push
OpenAI has become the newest member of the FIDO Alliance, a password‑less authentication consortium, and secured a seat on its board of directors. The partnership aims to develop secure, privacy‑preserving digital identity standards for AI agents, following OpenAI’s recent shutdown...

Aether Aerospace – Software Engineer
Aether Aerospace, a South Wales‑based developer of defence‑focused drones, is recruiting software engineers. The roles offer £30,000‑£50,000 (≈ $38,000‑$64,000) annually, a profit‑share incentive and flexible remote work with occasional field travel. Engineers will tackle the full technology stack—from user‑facing applications to...

How ServiceNow Gets Customers to Gorge at the AI Trough
ServiceNow unveiled an AI‑centric product suite, reorganizing pricing into three tiers—Assistive AI, Task Automation, and Full Role Automation—to match customer maturity. The company introduced a Build Agent SDK that lets developers work from any coding environment, and a Context Engine...

Lattice Materials Breaks Ground on Montana Silicon, Germanium Plant
Lattice Materials, a U.S. silicon and germanium producer, broke ground on an 80,000‑square‑foot plant in Bozeman, Montana. The project receives $18.5 million from the U.S. Department of Defense, aiming to double the company’s footprint and add the largest optical boule growth...
From Swarms to Product: Turning Customer Signals Into Scalable Features
Intercom leverages cross‑functional "swarms" to extract high‑touch insights for its Fin automation platform. Those insights are codified in the internal Cockpit tool, enabling customer‑success managers to apply them across many accounts. The most universally applicable patterns, such as the automation...

FDA Reminds More Than 2,200 Sponsors and Researchers to Disclose Trial Results
The FDA has sent reminders to more than 2,200 medical‑product companies and researchers, covering over 3,000 registered trials, to file required results on ClinicalTrials.gov. An internal analysis shows that 29.6% of studies likely subject to mandatory reporting still have no...
Will AI Finally Free Clinicians From the Keyboard?
Health‑system CIOs say AI will fundamentally reshape electronic health records by automating documentation and processing, allowing clinicians to work without keyboards or mouse clicks. Ambient AI, voice activation and smart‑room cameras are already being piloted, with Penn Medicine planning a...
Boost Your Spark Jobs: How Photon Accelerates Apache Spark Performance
Databricks introduced Photon, a native C++ engine that replaces Spark’s JVM‑based runtime. By using vectorized, columnar processing and zero‑copy memory management, Photon delivers 3–7× faster query execution and 30–50% lower memory consumption. The engine integrates as a shared library, letting...
Meta Is Warned That Facial Recognition Glasses Will Arm Sexual Predators
Meta plans to embed a facial‑recognition feature called “Name Tag” in its Ray‑Ban and Oakley smart glasses, allowing wearers to pull up information on anyone they see. The technology could identify people the wearer is connected to or any public...
From Competence to Judgment: How AI Compresses Litigation Work and Why That Makes Judgment More Important
Artificial intelligence is rapidly compressing litigation workflows, turning labor‑intensive tasks like document review, chronology building, and issue identification into algorithmic processes. This shift reduces the advantage of sheer scale, allowing small, disciplined teams to achieve analytical results that previously required...

Once More Into the Valley of Death: Navigating SBIR/STTR Funding for Tech Startups After 2025
The Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs were reauthorized through September 2031, adding a new Strategic Breakthrough Awards tier of up to $30 million for transformative technologies. Annual federal non‑dilutive capital now exceeds $4 billion, with cumulative...

IDenfy Integrates Reusable Digital IDs to Help Businesses Avoid Onboarding Fails
iDenfy has launched a reusable digital ID (eIDV) workflow that lets users complete KYC verification with electronic IDs instead of physical documents. The platform now supports more than 60 digital ID types, including Sweden’s BankID and the UK’s OneID. Since...

Your Tech Support Company Runs Scams. Stop—Or Disguise with More Fraud?
Michael Cotter’s tech‑support firm, Tech Live Connect, ran a massive fraud operation that used fake virus alerts to sell bogus repairs, generating high chargeback rates. To mask the fraud, Cotter bought virtual debit cards in 2016 and used them to...
Closing the Housing Gap in The Phillipines
The Philippines faces a 10‑million‑unit housing deficit across 26 million households, with annual construction lagging at roughly 130,000 units versus 478,000 new households. The government’s Expanded 4PH program has lifted its target to 1.1 million units, while the private sector is testing...
Sex-Related Differences in Immune System Aging May Impact Disease Susceptibility
Researchers at Barcelona Supercomputing Center used single‑cell RNA sequencing on nearly 1,000 blood samples to map how immune aging differs between men and women. The analysis revealed that women experience a pronounced increase in inflammatory immune cells with age, which...

Quarterly Inactive Ingredient Database (IID) Change Log
The FDA’s Inactive Ingredient Database (IID) is updated each quarter, and the Change Log records all corrected, deleted, and Maximum Daily Exposure (MDE) replacement entries. The log spans 2020‑2026, with file sizes ranging from 21 KB to 357 KB, reflecting the volume...

Raedbots Launches as Egypt’s First Industrial Robotics Manufacturer
Raedbots launched in Cairo as Egypt’s first locally designed and manufactured industrial robotics company. Founded in 2026 by Mohamed Ibrahim and Hamza El‑Sahiti, it builds AI‑powered robotic arms for welding, material handling and warehouse automation entirely in‑house. The startup is...

New AI Training for 40,000 Manufacturing Workers
Google.org is committing $10 million to the Manufacturing Institute to equip 40,000 current and future manufacturing workers with AI skills. The funding will create two new AI‑focused courses—AI 101 for Manufacturing and AI for Advanced Manufacturing Technicians—and provide Google’s AI Professional Certificate...
Salk to Lead $41.3M ARPA-H Effort to Advance Sonogenetics Therapies
The Salk Institute secured a $41.3 million ARPA‑H award to advance sonogenetics, a technique that uses low‑intensity ultrasound to control engineered cellular proteins. Over the next five years, Salk’s Dr. Sreekanth Chalasani and a multi‑institutional team will develop ultrasound‑responsive proteins, wearable...