Listen to the audio version of this newsletter, including my interview below:
I published my first podcast, called PodLeaders back in around 2006 and ran it for two years. I have set up and published a several more podcasts since then, including my most recent one, the Digital Supply Chain podcast which I set up in June of last year.
Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, we are woefully short of ventilators that can give the most gravely ill a chance for life. There are many efforts afoot to build more ventilators.
Google says two million developers have used its Flutter user-interface (UI) framework for building apps targeting mobile, desktop, and the web since declaring it production ready at Google I/O 2018.
As travel restrictions in response to the pandemic savagely cut the number of flights, airlines are scrambling to find places to park their redundant planes
In early April, writer Jen Miller urged New York Times readers to start a coronavirus diary. During a different pandemic, one 17th-century British naval administrator named Samuel Pepys did just that.
Animal behaviorists explain. Whether they’re kneading our flesh like bread or following us into the bathroom, cats are always trying to tell their humans something — most of it involving food.
An update to a tiny JavaScript library has thrown a large part of the JavaScript ecosystem into chaos on Saturday, with millions of projects believed to have been impacted.
Ireland is yet to issue a single fine for a GDPR breach against an American tech giant. It’s been two years since the new data regulations were enforced and the wait is making German regulators impatient.