Companies laying off staff this year include Meta, Amazon, and LinkedIn — see the list

The Great Reshaping: 30+ Companies Cutting Jobs in 2026 (And Why AI Is the Common Thread) The corporate workforce is undergoing a fundamental transformation in 2026, and it’s happening faster than many predicted. Over the past six months, more than 30 companies—from tech behemoths like Meta and Amazon to retail giants like Walmart and fintech … Read more

German EV Subsidies Begin And China Could Be A Big Winner

German EV Subsidies Are Live: Why China Stands to Gain the Most The launch of Germany’s electric vehicle subsidy program today is a pivotal moment for the global EV market—and the early signs point to a surprising beneficiary: China. As of this morning, German drivers can officially access government-backed incentives designed to accelerate the adoption … Read more

School Districts With Fast-Rising Test Scores Have 5 Things In Common

Why Some School Districts Are Surging Past the Post-Pandemic Slump: 5 Proven Strategies That Work (No AI Required) Picture this: eighth grade reading scores across the United States have hit their lowest point since 1990. We’re talking about a generation of students who were already navigating the chaos of remote learning, social isolation, and digital … Read more

AI Security Threats Coming From Outside And Inside, And Few Are Ready

AI Security Threats Are Everywhere—Inside and Out—And Most Companies Aren’t Ready H1: AI Security Threats Are Everywhere—Inside and Out—And Most Companies Aren’t Ready The conversation around AI security has shifted from theoretical risk to urgent operational reality. In 2024, businesses face a dual-front war: external attackers weaponizing AI at scale, and internal misuse—whether accidental or … Read more

The Hidden Players Powering The Future Of Quantum Computing

The Hidden Players Powering The Future Of Quantum Computing Why the Next Wave of Quantum Innovation Depends on Unseen Infrastructure If you’re tracking quantum computing headlines, you’ve seen the usual suspects: IBM, Google, Honeywell, and startups like IonQ. These names dominate the narrative with breakthrough qubit counts, error-correction milestones, and vague timelines for “quantum supremacy.” … Read more