Time to quit your pointless job, become morally ambitious and change the world
USB 2.0 is 25 years old today — the interface standard that changed the world | USB 2.0 was the game-changer we needed to revolutionize data transfer between devices.
World's largest zipper maker YKK shows off self-fastening zippers powered by motors and remote controls Motorized zippers can reach difficult heights, ideal for industrial and commercial use
California Becomes the World's Fourth-Largest Economy, Overtaking Japan
World's Biggest Zipper Maker Is Developing a Self-Propelled Zipper
The world’s biggest zipper maker is developing a self-propelled zipper. YKK’s tent-sized prototype can zip itself up at the push of a button.
California overtakes Japan to become the world's fourth largest economy
America's reputation drops across the world
More Than 80% of the World's Reefs Hit By Bleaching After Worst Global Event On Record
Finland Could Be the First Country in the World to Bury Nuclear Waste Permanently
Asia reaches 50 percent IPv6 capability and leads the world in user numbers
xAI’s Grok chatbot can now ‘see’ the world around it
Fairphone is doing its part to make the world a better place. Is it enough?
Investors Worry Trump’s Tariffs Could Cause a ‘World of Hurt’ for Startups
Fujitsu and RIKEN develop world-leading 256-qubit sup quantum computer
World's first "nonstop beating heart" transplant is a medical breakthrough
UAE set to use AI to write laws in world first | Gulf state expects move will speed up lawmaking by 70% but experts warn of ‘reliability’ issues with artificial intelligence
With ‘AI slop’ distorting our reality, the world is sleepwalking into disaster | A perverse information ecosystem is being mined by big tech for profit, fooling the unwary and sending algorithms crazy
China Just Powered Up the World’s First Thorium Reactor — and Reloaded It Mid-Run | They used declassified US documents to develop the technology.
The World’s Most Prolific Retro Handheld Maker Just Stopped U.S. Shipments | Customers based in the U.S. may have to spend boatloads on handhelds that once cost just $50.