EC

Jun 04 2026HEALTH

Balancing Blood Sugar: How Smart Tech Could Help Diabetics

Type 1 diabetes means the body can't control blood sugar on its own. People with this condition must constantly monitor how they eat, move, and feel to decide when to take insulin. But even with careful tracking, blood sugar can swing too high or too low. That’s where new tech steps in. Most insuli

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026BUSINESS

Small shops can score big with summer’s big games

Summer tourists keep flooding into Philadelphia. A major sports event brings crowds that many neighborhood shops rarely see. Owners don’t need to be official sponsors to get part of the wave. Local spots can still stand out by joining the excitement without breaking rules. Many visitors don’t care

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026POLITICS

City considers adding tech-savvy residents to guide local tech policies

The city is exploring the idea of forming a new advisory group focused on technology. This board would help elected officials understand complex topics like artificial intelligence, privacy rules, and surveillance tools. During a late-night meeting, council members reviewed an early draft of the pla

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026POLITICS

Europe bets big on making its own tech to keep up with global leaders

Across Europe, leaders have hammered out a bold new strategy: make more of the continent’s own gadgets and digital brains instead of relying so much on factories and firms from other parts of the world. The centerpiece is a push to build bigger chip plants on the continent so cars, phones and even f

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026TECHNOLOGY

Behind the scenes of Grok’s sudden hiring freeze

A tech firm working on AI isn’t expanding its training team right now. Instead, it’s putting new hires on hold. This surprising pause affects experts who teach chatbots how to handle everything from jokes to tax laws. The company has spent months bringing in accountants, scientists, and even comedia

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026EDUCATION

California schools dominate the toughest college admissions list

Many high school students searching for the hardest colleges to get into have another reason to focus on California. The state is home to some of the most selective schools in the nation, according to recent rankings. At the top sits Caltech in Pasadena with just 3 out of every 100 applicants accept

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026TECHNOLOGY

Ryzen 5000 X3D chips get a second life with new tech twist

When AMD brought back the Ryzen 7 5800X3D for a tenth birthday, they didn’t just dust off the old blueprints like a video game save file. The chip first launched in 2020 with a special trick: extra memory stacked right on top of the processor. That trick used the very first version of TSMC’s 3D stac

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026POLITICS

New Faces Join the UN Security Council in 2027

Every few years, the United Nations shakes up its most powerful decision-making body—the Security Council—by adding new temporary members. This time, four nations—Austria, Portugal, Trinidad and Tobago, and Zimbabwe—will step in starting January 2027. Their mission? To help shape global policies, th

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026HEALTH

Digital tools in home care: What helps nurses embrace them?

Healthcare systems worldwide are struggling with more patients and fewer workers. Many countries now rely on digital helpers to fill the gaps. One such tool is Remote Care Assist, a video-call system that lets home care staff ask experts for advice in real time. But the big question is: will the nur

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026SCIENCE

New Blood Test Method Could Help Uncover Hidden Links in Heart and Metabolism Health

Scientists have developed a quicker way to measure tiny molecules in our blood that might affect heart disease and metabolism. These molecules come from gut bacteria and our own cells, and they could reveal new clues about health issues like diabetes or heart problems. The old testing methods only c

reading time less than a minute