New York became the first U.S. state on Tuesday to halt construction of large new data centers, with Governor Kathy Hochul imposing a one-year moratorium on facilities with peak energy demand of 20 megawatts …
Latest posts
-
The U.S. housing market is showing visible signs of relief. Mortgage rates have eased, price growth has stalled, and the …
-
As Apple approaches its 50th anniversary in 2026, the company finds itself confronting a problem it rarely faces in public: …
-
Intel has officially closed the transaction that turned its September announcement with Nvidia into hard capital. The private placement, finalized …
-
The U.S. government has granted Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix annual licenses allowing them to ship chipmaking equipment to their …
-
California’s proposed billionaire wealth tax has rapidly evolved from a fiscal policy debate into a political stress test for the …
-
Meta’s acquisition of Singapore-based AI startup Manus marks a strategic turn rather than a routine expansion. From the perspective of …
-
Octopus Energy’s plan to spin off its AI and software division, Kraken Technologies, signals a structural shift rather than a …
-
India’s startup ecosystem closed 2025 with nearly $11 billion in funding, but the headline figure masks a deeper shift in …
-
Leapmotor’s ambitions are no longer framed as incremental growth. The company is now openly positioning itself as a future global-volume …
-
The abrupt collapse in the reported value of L&F’s supply relationship with Tesla has become one of the clearest warning …