Technology
Not just ebooks anymore: Kindle is turning USB-loaded PDFs into something users can finally mark up, organize, and read without the usual pain
The screen upgrade no one saw coming from China is a pocket computer that can make an old TV feel smart again in minutes
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
Not just transit funding, but a $2 billion infrastructure standoff: Chicago’s Red Line is becoming a brutal test for big-city rail projects
Not cold enough, but trapped wrong: raw meat in a plastic bag may be turning your fridge into the place where freshness starts to fail
Not wallets, but foil: a cheap Faraday-style barrier is turning ordinary bank cards into a harder target for the radio signals thieves depend on
No one expected boarding to become the real border for U.K. travel, but airlines can now shut the trip down before it starts
The backyard lighting deal no one saw coming is a $9.99 solar set from Aldi that may disappear as fast as it arrives
No one expected the CEO of one of America’s biggest banks to frame remote work as a technology problem, but he says screens may be costing Gen Z dearly
No one expected America’s answer to Concorde to die on the ground, but this bigger, faster supersonic giant proved too wild even for Boeing
Amazon’s 90,000-square-foot delivery station is already outpacing job forecasts, showing how one logistics site can quickly turn into major regional infrastructure
OpenAI is scrapping Sora even after AI video went mainstream, exposing how fast a breakout product can be sacrificed when compute and strategy collide
What looks like a cheap trick to protect car keys is really a Faraday cage in your kitchen, and more drivers are turning to it as relay attacks make keyless cars easier to steal
Zoox wants to deploy robotaxis without steering wheels or pedals in the United States, and the request could push the country into a new era of autonomous transport
One appliance in the average kitchen can briefly consume as much electricity as 65 refrigerators, and that surprising spike is forcing a closer look at how homes waste power every single week








