Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™

Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™

Precision Aquaculture Market The Global Precision Aquaculture Market is projected to grow from USD 0.85 Billion in 2025 to USD 1.43 Billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 11.1%. The report “Precision Aquaculture Market by Sensors, Camera Systems, Control Systems, Software (On Cloud, On Premises), Services, Smart Feeding Systems, Monitoring and Control Systems, Underwater ROV […]

Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™ Read More »

Technology
Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™

Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™

Precision Aquaculture Market The Global Precision Aquaculture Market is projected to grow from USD 0.85 Billion in 2025 to USD 1.43 Billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 11.1%. The report “Precision Aquaculture Market by Sensors, Camera Systems, Control Systems, Software (On Cloud, On Premises), Services, Smart Feeding Systems, Monitoring and Control Systems, Underwater ROV

Latest Research on System Type in the Precision Aquaculture Market by MarketsandMarkets™ Read More »

Technology
Radioligand Therapy (RLT) Market to Surpass .91 Billion by 2035

Radioligand Therapy (RLT) Market to Surpass $10.91 Billion by 2035

Radioligand Therapy (RLT) Market by Product (Lutetium-177 Vipivotide Tetraxetan, (Lu-177)- PNT2002, Radium-223 dichloride), Target (PSMA, SSTR, Bone Metastases), Indication (Prostate Cancer, Neuroendocrine Tumors (NETS), SCLC) – Global Forecast to 2035 According to MarketsandMarkets, the global Radioligand therapy market is projected to grow from USD 3.15 billion in 2025 to USD 10.91 billion by 2035, at

Radioligand Therapy (RLT) Market to Surpass $10.91 Billion by 2035 Read More »

Technology

Ford’s Sales Slump Collides With a Tariff Storm: Inside the Automaker’s Toughest Quarter in Years

Ford Motor Company sold fewer vehicles in the first quarter of 2025 than it did a year ago. That much is clear from the numbers. What’s less clear — and far more consequential — is whether the Dearborn automaker’s problems are cyclical or structural, and whether a looming wall of tariffs is about to make

Ford’s Sales Slump Collides With a Tariff Storm: Inside the Automaker’s Toughest Quarter in Years Read More »

Small Web Business

Tim Cook’s Quiet Echo of Steve Jobs Tells You Everything About Apple’s Smart Glasses Strategy

When Tim Cook was asked about Apple’s plans for smart glasses during a recent interview, he didn’t unveil a product roadmap. He didn’t tease a release date. Instead, he offered something far more telling — a carefully worded non-denial that longtime Apple watchers immediately recognized as a page from the Steve Jobs playbook. The moment,

Tim Cook’s Quiet Echo of Steve Jobs Tells You Everything About Apple’s Smart Glasses Strategy Read More »

Small Web Business

The £Billions Buried in Old Code: Why UK Banks Can’t Escape Their Mainframe Past

Britain’s biggest banks are spending billions of pounds a year keeping decades-old technology alive — and the bill is getting worse, not better. While artificial intelligence promises to reshape financial services, the uncomfortable truth is that most UK lenders are still running core operations on systems built before the internet existed. The gap between ambition

The £Billions Buried in Old Code: Why UK Banks Can’t Escape Their Mainframe Past Read More »

Small Web Business

The Cool Factor Is Gone: How American Brands Lost Their Grip on Chinese Consumers

For decades, American brands carried an almost magnetic allure in China. Nike sneakers, Apple iPhones, Starbucks lattes — they weren’t just products. They were status symbols, cultural currency, proof that you had arrived. That era is over. A sweeping shift in Chinese consumer sentiment is hammering U.S. companies that once treated the world’s second-largest economy

The Cool Factor Is Gone: How American Brands Lost Their Grip on Chinese Consumers Read More »

Small Web Business

Starbucks Is Rewriting the Barista Paycheck — Weekly Pay, Bonuses, and a $3 Billion Bet on Its Own Workforce

Starbucks is about to do something it hasn’t done in its 54-year history: pay its baristas every week. Starting in early 2026, the coffee giant will shift all U.S. employees from biweekly to weekly paychecks, part of a sweeping compensation overhaul that also includes new performance bonuses, expanded benefits, and a corporate acknowledgment that the

Starbucks Is Rewriting the Barista Paycheck — Weekly Pay, Bonuses, and a $3 Billion Bet on Its Own Workforce Read More »

Small Web Business

IBM’s Quiet Bet: Building Hardware That Runs x86 and Z Architecture Simultaneously

Somewhere inside IBM’s sprawling research apparatus, engineers are working on something that would have seemed improbable a decade ago: a single piece of hardware capable of executing both x86 and IBM Z (s390x) instruction sets natively. Not through emulation. Not through virtualization layers. Through actual dual-architecture silicon. A recently surfaced patent filing and associated Linux

IBM’s Quiet Bet: Building Hardware That Runs x86 and Z Architecture Simultaneously Read More »

Small Web Business

Sam Altman’s Pentagon Pivot: How OpenAI Went From AI Safety Champion to Defense Contractor

Sam Altman admitted he got it wrong. Not about artificial intelligence itself — he still believes that’s the most consequential technology humanity will ever build — but about the people he assumed would misuse it. Speaking at a recent event, the OpenAI CEO said he had “miscalibrated” his distrust, directing too much suspicion toward the

Sam Altman’s Pentagon Pivot: How OpenAI Went From AI Safety Champion to Defense Contractor Read More »

Small Web Business
Scroll to Top