Indux
A Chinese satellite network is becoming the hidden guide for Iran’s weapons, and the bigger warning is what happens when jamming stops working
The car-buying trap no one wants to discover after signing may now cost a dealership group $75 million, with customers finally set to get money back
What looks like one regional oil disaster is splitting the Middle East in two, with some governments losing billions and others cashing in fast
A Toyota Tacoma owner took the easy check and left thousands on the table, and the truck’s cult resale value is why people are calling it a ripoff
The underground project that looked like a power plant hidden in rock is now promising two prizes at once: an oil alternative and battery metal
The military upgrade meant to modernize GPS has become a long and expensive warning, and the deeper problem may be the system behind the system
North Korea is no longer just stealing crypto, it is pressuring the digital financial system in ways that expose a deeper security failure
A new wage fight is putting large retail footprints under pressure in Rhode Island, and the real risk is what happens if other states copy it
Google is loosening one of the strictest parts of Gmail in the U.S., and the shift points to a more flexible era for digital identity systems
A future-router ban is turning home internet into a longer-term security gamble, with support timelines suddenly mattering more than speed claims
The air-power shift no one saw coming is a B-52 flying over Iran, because the skies are now open enough for America’s oldest bomber to come in
Not just copper, but a strategic mountain-sized resource: the Andes may be hiding an energy jackpot with a brutal extraction problem
Not just ebooks anymore: Kindle is turning USB-loaded PDFs into something users can finally mark up, organize, and read without the usual pain
Airbus is no longer just answering drones with bigger systems, because Bird of Prey may be about to make cheap air defense scale fast
Not just a pill, but a drug-delivery machine: Japan’s new peptide system may be about to change how hard-to-absorb therapies enter the body
Used clothes are no longer just waste, because Europe is building a machine that can sort them, price them and turn textile leftovers into business
For the first time, Samsung is making Galaxy and iPhone feel less trapped in separate worlds, as Quick Share starts crossing Apple’s wall








