The worse may be over for the U.S. warehouse market, according to research published today by the market intelligence firm Interact Analysis. Senior analyst Matthieu Kulezak writes that the market bottomed out in 2025 and is now slowly recovering, benefiting from easing economic uncertainty and...
Managing logistics operations in-house is often the easiest way to ensure that your supply chain feels like an extension of your brand. But that level of control and quality is hard to sustain as a company expands: More volume means more complexity, and many growing companies find themselves...
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a previously undocumented and feature-rich malware framework codenamed VoidLink that’s specifically designed for long-term, stealthy access to Linux-based cloud environments According to a new report from Check Point Research, the...
Old Playbook, New Scale: While defenders are chasing trends, attackers are optimizing the basics The security industry loves talking about “new” threats. AI-powered attacks. Quantum-resistant encryption. Zero-trust architectures. But looking around, it seems like the most effective...
AI agents are no longer just writing code. They are executing it. Tools like Copilot, Claude Code, and Codex can now build, test, and deploy software end-to-end in minutes. That speed is reshaping engineering—but it’s also creating a security gap most teams don’t see until something breaks....
Microscopy is an imaging technique that enables us to see a world that would otherwise be invisible to us. Once upon a time, visualizing cells, microbes and other entities not perceptible to the naked eye was impossible. Then came the advent of microscopy in the 16th century, which brought the...
Original story from the Simons Foundation (NY, USA). Scientists have uncovered a new explanation for how swimming bacteria change direction, providing fresh insight into one of biology’s most intensively studied molecular machines. Bacteria move through liquids using propellerlike tails called...
Original story from Shenyang Agricultural University (China). Earthworms could become unexpected allies in the global fight against antibiotic resistance by helping farmers turn manure into safer, high-value organic fertilizer through a process called vermicomposting. Researchers report that...
Four recent deals fueled more angst about China’s biotech progress, while Pfizer, Bristol Myers and Sarepta all worked to appease jittery investors.
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