Unlocking Document Understanding with Mistral Document AI in Microsoft Foundry: What’s Actually New, Why It Matters, and How to Put It to Work

Enterprises have a long-running tradition of treating documents like a necessary evil: contracts that must be read, invoices that must be typed, forms that must be checked, and PDFs that must be… politely ignored until quarter end. If your organization has ever tried to “digitize” a business process and found that the biggest bottleneck is…

Countries Moving to Ban Social Media for Children: Australia’s Under‑16 Crackdown Spurs Europe and Southeast Asia

On March 6, 2026, TechCrunch consumer reporter Aisha Malik published a tidy list of governments “moving to ban social media for children.” It’s the kind of roundup that starts as a public-policy story and quickly mutates into a product requirements document for every platform on Earth: age verification, parental consent flows, enforcement dashboards, appeals processes,…

Before You Migrate: Five Surprising Ingress-NGINX Behaviors You Need to Know (and How Not to Break Prod in March 2026)

Kubernetes migrations have a special talent: they always seem to happen on the same week someone scheduled a “quick” upgrade, a holiday, or both. And if your clusters still rely on the community-maintained Ingress-NGINX controller, the calendar is no longer your friend: Kubernetes has announced that Ingress-NGINX will be retired in March 2026, and the…

Google Workspace CLI: The Command Line Is Back, and This Time It’s Bringing AI Agents to Gmail, Docs, and Sheets

Somewhere, a veteran sysadmin just felt a strange tingling sensation: the command line is cool again. On March 6, 2026, VentureBeat’s Carl Franzen reported on a new Google Workspace CLI that pulls Gmail, Google Drive, Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Chat, Admin, and “every Workspace API” into a single terminal-first interface designed for both humans and AI…

Converge Bio’s $25M Series A Is a Vote for “GenAI Labs” in Drug Discovery (and a Warning About Hallucinating Molecules)

On January 13, 2026, TechCrunch reported that Converge Bio, an AI drug-discovery startup with operations spanning Boston and Tel Aviv, raised $25 million in a Series A round. The round was led by Bessemer Venture Partners, with participation from TLV Partners, Saras Capital, and Vintage Investment Partners, plus backing from unnamed executives affiliated with Meta,…

JPMorgan’s Nearly $20B Tech Budget Isn’t a Flex—It’s a Banking Survival Plan for the AI Era

JPMorgan Chase is preparing to spend about $19.8 billion on technology in 2026, a figure so large it sounds like the GDP of a small island nation—or the annual budget for “things my printer refuses to do.” But in JPMorgan’s world, this isn’t a vanity project. It’s a blunt competitive reality: modern banking is now…

TerraPower’s Natrium reactor gets NRC approval: why Bill Gates’ next-gen nuclear bet just cleared its biggest hurdle

On March 5, 2026, The Verge ran the kind of headline that makes both climate hawks and electricity planners sit up straighter: Bill Gates’ nuclear company, TerraPower, is the first to get federal approval to build a next-generation reactor in the United States. The piece—written by Jess Weatherbed—tracks a pivotal milestone: the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory…

Live Nation, Ticketmaster, and the “Vanishing Billie Eilish Show”: What the Barclays Center Testimony Means for the Future of Concert Ticketing

On March 5, 2026, The Verge ran a story with a question that sounds like gossip but lands like antitrust dynamite: Did Live Nation punish a venue by taking Billie Eilish away? The piece—written by Lauren Feiner—isn’t about pop-star scheduling drama. It’s about whether the biggest player in live entertainment used its power like a…

Bridging the Operational AI Gap: Why Most Enterprises Can’t Scale AI (and What Actually Works)

On March 4, 2026, MIT Technology Review published an item titled “Bridging the operational AI gap”. It’s credited to MIT Technology Review Insights (the publication’s research and analysis arm), and it points to a familiar enterprise reality: plenty of organizations can demo AI, but far fewer can operate it reliably—across departments, across data sources, and…

Will Data Centers Make Your Power Bill Worse? Who Really Pays for AI’s Electricity Boom

America is building data centers the way it once built shopping malls: quickly, everywhere, and with the unshakable belief that the future will sort out the parking. Except this time the “parking” is electricity—lots of it—delivered with the kind of reliability we typically reserve for oxygen. That brings us to the question posed by Ars…