
New App Blends Dining and Social
A new dining app is entering the crowded field with a simple pitch: make restaurant discovery feel like a social feed. The service, available nationwide this week, lets people share

A new dining app is entering the crowded field with a simple pitch: make restaurant discovery feel like a social feed. The service, available nationwide this week, lets people share

Architecture reviews are supposed to align teams. In practice, they often do the opposite. You walk in with a design that has already survived weeks of thought, tradeoff analysis, and

The first 100 users are where platform teams either earn credibility or quietly accumulate debt that will haunt them for years. This phase rarely looks like scale from the outside.

Most platform migrations do not fail loudly at first. They fail quietly, through slowed delivery, brittle workarounds, confused ownership, and a creeping loss of trust. By the time rollback becomes

You can usually tell when a team has never benchmarked an app properly. The API “feels fast” on a dev laptop, staging looks fine under a quick smoke test, then

Every engineering organization eventually asks the same dangerous question: how productive are our developers, really? It usually shows up during scale inflection points, missed delivery dates, or uncomfortable board conversations.

A research team announced a quantum computing protocol that could sharpen how scientists examine molecules across chemistry, biomedicine, and materials science. The approach, revealed this week, aims to work with

Amazon is developing an Autonomous Threat Analysis system that uses specialized AI agents to hunt for security weaknesses across its platforms and suggest fixes. Built during an internal hackathon and

In a rare reversal, a former chief medical examiner now says a man convicted of killing his infant son decades ago is innocent. Dr. Bruce Levy’s determination that baby Alex