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Apple is reportedly planning to build fewer than 1 million foldable iPhones for Q3 2026, with analyst Ming-Chi Kuo warning that delivery times could stretch four to six weeks or longer after the device’s expected September launch at around $1,999.
Europe’s highest court has upheld a record €4.1 billion antitrust penalty against Google, ending an eight-year legal battle over the company’s Android licensing practices and opening the door to follow-on damages lawsuits from rival firms.
Tesla has officially launched its fully unsupervised robotaxi service in Miami, Florida — its fifth U.S. city — with no safety driver in the vehicle. The launch brings new questions about camera-only FSD performance in tropical weather conditions.
Connecting your bank account to QuickBooks Online lets it automatically import transactions through bank feeds, eliminating manual data entry. This step-by-step guide covers how to link your bank, categorize imported transactions, set up automation rules, handle connection failures, and manage multiple accounts.
A database is an organized collection of data stored and accessed electronically. SQL databases store data in structured tables with fixed schemas and relationships. NoSQL databases offer flexible schemas and horizontal scaling for unstructured data. This guide explains both types and when to use each.
Notion and Jira are both used by software teams but built for different things. Jira is purpose-built for agile issue tracking with sprints, velocity charts, and Git integration. Notion is a flexible workspace better suited for documentation and lightweight project management. This guide compares both tools to help you choose.
Notion is an all-in-one workspace combining notes, docs, databases, and task management used by 100 million people including software engineering teams. This guide explains what Notion is, how developers use it for documentation, project tracking, and team wikis, and how it compares to Confluence and other tools.
Kubernetes (K8s) is an open-source platform that automates the deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications across clusters of servers. Built by Google and used by over 5.6 million developers, it is the standard production infrastructure layer for cloud-native software in 2026.
Docker is an open-source platform that packages applications and their dependencies into containers that run consistently on any machine. It solves the “works on my machine” problem and is used by roughly 71% of developers. This guide explains what Docker is, how it works, and why developers use it.
Cloud computing is the delivery of computing services (servers, storage, databases, and software) over the internet on a pay-as-you-go basis. It is valued at over $700 billion globally in 2026. This beginner’s guide explains what cloud computing is, the 3 service types, 4 deployment models, and the major providers.