#BrainUp Daily Tech News – (Monday, July 13ᵗʰ)
Welcome to today’s curated collection of interesting links and insights for 2026/07/13. Our Hand-picked, AI-optimized system has processed and summarized 26 articles from all over the internet to bring you the latest technology news.
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1. Apple’s M7 Ultra Chip Designed to Match a 2019 Mac Pro Feat
According to @Mark Gurman, Apple’s M7 Ultra chip targeted for 2028 is designed to support up to 1.5TB of #unified memory, matching a high end capability previously seen in the 2019 Intel based Mac Pro. The report notes that whether Apple will actually offer a 1.5TB configuration could depend on the ongoing #memory chip shortage. As described, the design goal suggests Apple is aiming to bring workstation class memory capacity to Apple silicon while using unified memory architecture. The comparison to the 2019 Mac Pro frames the M7 Ultra’s potential as a successor level feature for pro users if supply conditions allow.
2. Special Microsoft Flight Simulator controller is coming to Xbox
Honeycomb is preparing an Xbox-focused version of its Echo Aviation Controller, the Echo Aviation Controller XPC, aimed at Xbox Series X|S flight sim players and not supporting PlayStation 5. Like the existing PC and Mac model, it is a 3-in-1 controller that combines rudder, throttle, and a control unit into a compact device meant to avoid a more complex setup with separate peripherals, and it is designed to be light and clamp-free. Notebookcheck’s earlier testing of the standard controller found it worked well overall, with straightforward setup in Laminar Research’s X-Plane 12 but some issues configuring rudder controls, while setup in @Microsoft Flight Simulator was difficult due to Microsoft’s interface rather than the controller itself. The Xbox release is notable because Honeycomb currently provides a downloadable profile to assist players, and the article hopes @Microsoft will add one or more profiles for the XPC controller to the Xbox version via an update. The XPC is scheduled for fall 2026 with no price announced yet, and the current PC and Mac version is hard to find, with Honeycomb saying it will be available again soon and offering email notifications instead of preorders.
3. Leaked Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra footage shows off a crease you can barely see
Leaked footage of a working Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra suggests Samsung has made major progress on the #display crease, making it nearly invisible in normal use. A reliable supply chain linked insider reportedly shows the device playing video, folding and unfolding, and viewed from multiple angles, with the crease only faintly visible at specific angles under bright direct light; the phone also appears very slim and similar in design to the Galaxy Z Fold 7. The article argues this refinement addresses a key remaining complaint about Samsung foldables, implying foldable flagships are nearing maturity with only minor improvements left. It also claims the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8 is shifting to a new wide folding form factor, compared to Huawei Pura X Max and an upcoming Apple foldable that could be named iPhone Ultra, while the Fold 8 Ultra reflects what the original Fold 8 was meant to be. On that basis, the author recommends the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra over the first generation base Fold 8, citing uncertainty about public adoption and potential first gen issues.
4. Apple plans new Apple pencils, expands iPhone tap to pay in stores: Report
@Apple is reportedly preparing new #ApplePencil models with easier repairs and is expanding #TapToPay use in its retail stores by replacing dedicated payment terminals with iPhones. Bloomberg’s Power On newsletter by @MarkGurman says Apple plans to unveil new Pencil styluses alongside next-generation iPad Pro models in the first half of next year, with a redesigned entry-level MacBook Pro and refreshed iPad Pro models also expected around spring. The report describes two Pencil variants, B582 as an updated entry-level model and B632 as a refreshed Apple Pencil Pro, redesigned to help meet the European Union’s #repairability requirements by using more easily replaceable batteries instead of glued-together designs. In stores, Apple has been shifting from customised Isaac terminals to iPhones, but iPhone 14 Tap to Pay reportedly had reliability issues with some metal credit cards from #AmericanExpress and #Chase. The report says those issues are resolved with iPhone 16, enabling more employees to take payments by having customers tap a card directly on the phone without external card readers.
5. Microsoft may make big changes to bring Android and Windows 11 closer together
Microsoft is reportedly planning to make Android integration in #Windows11 feel more native by expanding #PhoneLink and related experiences. According to Windows Central, upgrades include a richer Start menu Phone Companion view that shows more recent activities and lets you hover to see details, such as a full message, without opening Phone Link. Another proposed change is a dedicated smartphone taskbar flyout that shows phone status and offers toggles like do not disturb, vibrate, and find phone, plus drag and drop file transfer via the phone icon. The report also claims Microsoft is working on syncing full clipboard history between phone and PC, not just the latest copied item, and a standalone Messages app you can pin from Start rather than relying only on Phone Link’s built-in messaging. These features are said to be internal prototypes that may change, and Microsoft will likely seek feedback from its Insider community before any release.
6. XREAL’s First Budget AR Glasses Go on Sale Internationally, Priced at $300
XREAL is expanding its new ‘X by Xreal’ sub-brand (xbx) beyond China by launching its first budget #XR glasses, the xbx a01+, internationally for $300. The a01+ is now sold in the US via xreal.com, Amazon, Best Buy, B&H, and Micro Center, and is also available through XREAL and partners across the EU, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and South Korea, after first launching in China in May. For the price it offers a 50° field of view, HDR10 with real-time SDR-to-HDR conversion, 120Hz refresh rate, bird bath optics, and @Sony micro-OLED displays reaching up to 1,600 nits, while weighing 62g, but it is not standalone and is intended for tethered content viewing from phones, tablets, portable game consoles, and laptops. To hit the lower price point versus XREAL’s $400 to $600 premium lineup, it omits camera sensors, electrochromic dimming, and ‘Sound by Bose’ audio. @Chi Xu says the product aims to make big-screen AR more accessible, targeting entertainment and gaming use cases, especially movie lovers and gamers.
7. Majority of U.S. workers support an AI wealth fund as tech layoffs surge, survey finds
A new survey finds broad support among Americans for using an #AI sovereign wealth fund to hold major AI firms accountable and spread the industry’s gains more widely as #tech layoffs rise. In a June poll of 1,690 adults by Verasight, 69% supported forcing AI companies to transfer 50% of their stock into a public fund, a concept echoed by @Bernie Sanders’ proposed American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act that would give the public a 50% stake in the largest U.S. AI companies. The article links this sentiment to worker anxiety about job security as companies increase AI-related capital spending, alongside a Goldman Sachs estimate that over a 10-year AI transition about 9% of the labor force, roughly 15 million workers, could lose jobs, though the report expects job losses to be temporary as new roles emerge. It also notes that sovereign wealth funds could finance national AI infrastructure and take equity stakes to capture AI-driven gains for the public treasury, but may face tensions between maximizing returns and building domestic AI capacity in a global race where the best investments might be foreign. Overall, the poll reflects growing public interest in policy tools that redistribute #AI-driven profits and shape how AI’s economic benefits are shared.
AI executives told CNBC that demand for #AI compute and the data center buildout remains extremely strong despite volatility in AI-related chip stocks and investor debate about overcapacity. @Pat Gelsinger said AI demand is “almost unlimited,” with energy availability as a key limiter, while noting enterprises are scrutinizing AI costs and expected returns more closely. Market swings were fueled in part by reports that @Meta and @Elon Musk’s xAI were selling or renting excess AI capacity, and by a profit forecast from #Samsung followed by a stock drop after a steep rally. Marc Boroditsky of #Nebius and Andrew Feldman of #Cerebras said demand still far exceeds available capacity, citing shortages in data centers and other inputs, and Sungyun Park of #Rebellions echoed that momentum remains huge and that hyperscalers are not necessarily overinvesting. Overall, executives framed the sell-off catalysts as company-specific or valuation-related signals rather than evidence of a broad slowdown in #AI infrastructure demand.
9. Meet the Floating Robot Companion Designed for Safe, Friendly Human Interaction
A research team led by Mingyang Xu at Keio University, with participation from the MIT Media Lab, is exploring #lighter-than-air soft robots as companions designed for safe, friendly human interaction and stronger emotional connection. Their demo shows a finned, white floating robot that glides and hovers quietly, and because of its light construction, soft body, and lack of pinch points, it can engage with people with little risk of injury. The researchers argue that soft floating robots can reduce #uncannyValley discomfort by relying on gentle whole-body movements instead of humanlike facial expressions while remaining physically safer due to a pliable form. In the video, the robot is presented as a dance partner, study buddy, alarm clock, reminder, and entertainment source, illustrating potential roles for this approach to #humanRobotInteraction.
10. More tech workers are retiring early
An increasing number of tech workers are choosing early retirement, driven by the impact of layoffs in the technology sector and the evolving job market. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Labor Department reveals a sharp rise in early retirements among highly skilled workers, reflecting broader trends of workforce reshaping. This shift affects companies’ talent pools and could accelerate the tech industry’s adaptation to changes such as automation and #AI advancements. Early retirements also influence economic patterns, as experienced professionals exit the labor market sooner, creating both challenges and opportunities for innovation. The trend underscores the need for companies and policymakers to address workforce transitions amid rapid technological changes.
Prominent tech leaders who helped build today’s #screen-focused world often impose strict limits on their own children’s #screenTime and exposure to #socialMedia and #shortFormVideo. @Steve Jobs said in 2010 that his kids had never used an iPad and that he limited technology at home, while @Peter Thiel said at the 2024 Aspen Ideas Festival that his two young children get only 1.5 hours of screens per week, and @Steve Chen warned that short-form content may shorten attention spans and suggested limiting kids to videos longer than 15 minutes. Other executives have described similar rules: @Bill Gates said he withheld smartphones until age 14 and banned phones at dinner, @Evan Spiegel cited the same 1.5-hours-per-week limit, and @Elon Musk said it might have been a mistake not to set rules for his children’s social media use; @Shou Zi Chew said he would allow use of #TikTok under its under-13 experience with vetted content, no posting, and no ads. The article links these parenting choices to broader concerns, citing U.S. youths’ average of 7.5 hours of daily screen use and a 2025 study of nearly 100,000 people associating short-form video use with poorer cognition and declines in mental health. As backlash grows and governments consider restrictions, including bans on under-16 social media use in Australia and Malaysia, the piece suggests tech insiders’ strict household rules mirror rising public efforts to curb perceived harms to minors, even as enforcement questions remain.
12. IT admins feel overwhelmingly “sick of” Microsoft and Windows 11 “garbage” apps, products
The article says some IT admins are increasingly frustrated with @Microsoft, citing #Windows11 changes, bundled apps, and day to day product reliability as reasons they feel “sick of” the company. It points to multiple highly upvoted complaints on Reddit’s sysadmin community, including a report that a security patch broke authentication for #Microsoft365 apps in #RDS environments, leaving admins choosing between a critical business app and Office 365 functionality, alongside criticism of pushing #Copilot. It also highlights frustration with #MicrosoftGraph #PowerShell commands described as “garbage” because many are wrappers over the native Graph API requiring JSON parameters, framed as a time and budget compromise to meet deprecation deadlines like the #AzureAD module replacement. Another post attacks managing and deploying #WindowsApps and #Appx packages and calls for the #MicrosoftStore to be removed from enterprise machines. The upvotes are presented as evidence these complaints resonate widely among sysadmins, supporting the article’s claim that dissatisfaction with Microsoft’s policies and tooling is not isolated.
13. New sodium metal battery design charges in just 4 minutes and retains its capacity for years
Researchers in China report a new #sodium metal battery design that can charge from 0% to 100% in about four minutes while remaining stable for long use, aiming to provide a cheaper, safer alternative to #lithium-ion batteries. The key advance is a tough, quasi-solid gel electrolyte called Sn-FB QSE that forms a semisolid internal structure to suppress #dendrite formation, a failure mode where sodium deposits grow and short-circuit the cell after the SEI layer cracks. In tests, the battery cycled for more than 6,000 hours without dendrite short-circuiting, delivered 80.1 mAh g–1 when charged in four minutes, and at a 20-minute full charge retained 90% capacity over 2,000 cycles, which the authors say matches theoretical Li-ion limits while improving safety and lowering cost. Because fast, convenient charging is a major barrier for #electric vehicles, the work is positioned against current EV charging realities, from very fast proprietary systems like the BYD Denza claim of 10% to 70% in five minutes to slower common chargers that can take far longer. Overall, the gel-electrolyte approach targets the central chemistry problem that has kept sodium metal batteries largely theoretical, potentially enabling rapid-charging batteries that avoid lithium’s supply and fire-safety drawbacks.
@Scott McNealy’s blunt claim that users have “zero privacy” is revisited as an early signal of how data collection would shape modern tech. He made the remark while dismissing reporter concerns that Sun’s #Jini platform, a network architecture meant to let devices communicate and share resources without configuration, could threaten user privacy, even though it required devices to continuously upload data and maintain network leases that created a large digital footprint. Privacy advocates criticized him sharply, including @Lori Fena of the @Electronic Frontier Foundation, who called the comments “completely irresponsible.” The article argues there was a kernel of truth because the industry has increasingly pursued massive user-data collection to build profiles for advertising and marketing, with notable abuses such as #CambridgeAnalytica for political advertising. It connects that trajectory to today’s landscape of web-scraping #generativeAI, #IoT deployments in cities and offices, and the broader idea of #surveillanceCapitalism where consumers are often expected to accept pervasive tracking.
15. Journalist Alarmed When He’s Fired, But Company Keeps Posting AI Slop Under His Name
Freelance writer Ben Touati said he was alarmed to find #AI-generated articles continuing to be published under his byline after he was fired from ClickOut Media, calling it a “slap in the face” because the pieces were obvious low-quality “slop” appearing days after his dismissal from the company’s German operation. He told Press Gazette he had repeatedly resisted managerial pressure to use #AI for writing, including being shown guidance on creating and “humanize” AI-written articles, and was later told freelancers were being cut as others boosted productivity with AI and because Esports Insider was de-indexed by @Google. ClickOut Media did not explain why his name was used, but said it uses AI-assisted content with human checks and edits and is evolving its AI agents to improve accuracy and editorial processes. The episode is framed as part of broader controversies around ClickOut properties, including a prior case where an article on Videogamer was attributed to a fake AI journalist with AI-generated profile elements. Touati sought recourse via the EU’s #GDPR, after which ClickOut removed his byline from the disputed articles and reassigned them to another name.
In 2025, #dataCenters used 23% of Ireland’s total electricity, nearly approaching residential demand at 28%, underscoring how rapidly server farms have become a dominant power consumer. Ireland’s Central Statistics Office reported data center consumption rose to 7,663 GWh in 2025 from 6,973 GWh in 2024, a 10% jump, while the rest of national consumption increased only 2%; over a decade, data centers’ share grew from 5% in 2015 to 23% in 2025, and quarterly metered use climbed 584% from 291 GWh in Q1 2015 to 1,991 GWh by late 2025. The article links this surge to the #AI boom and the concentration of about 89 facilities around Greater Dublin, largely operated by hyperscalers like @Microsoft, @AWS, @Google, and @Meta, alongside colocation providers. Concern over grid reliability led the #CRU in November 2021 to impose a de facto moratorium directing #EirGrid to stop processing standard new connection applications unless developers self-generated power or moved to unconstrained regions, yet consumption continued rising. With the @IEA having projected in 2024 that data centers could reach one third of Ireland’s electricity use by 2026, the continuing upward trend keeps that outcome plausible and highlights ongoing tension between digital infrastructure growth and national power constraints.
17. Windows 11 Copilot now tells you what’s slowing down your PC, while using 1GB RAM itself
Microsoft is testing an optional Windows 11 #Copilot feature called #PCInsights that can explain what is slowing down your PC by reading current system status through Windows APIs, even as Copilot itself is a web app that can use up to about 1GB of RAM and appears as a “Browser” in Task Manager because it ships with a private copy of #MicrosoftEdge. Windows Latest found references to PC Insights in Copilot’s code and a support document, and reports it is rolling out slowly in the United States and is not yet available to everyone. With user permission, PC Insights can interpret CPU, RAM, and GPU usage, storage capacity and free space, folder size totals for areas like Downloads and Documents, connected USB devices and peripherals, network states like Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, plus battery health, antivirus status, BIOS details, and overall device state. The idea is that Copilot can answer contextual questions using this live device data, for example stating available storage and then checking online requirements for a game like GTA V to advise whether you have enough space and suggest cleanup steps. Microsoft positions this as a faster alternative to manually checking Task Manager, Settings, or File Explorer by translating relevant diagnostics into plain language actions.
18. University of Chicago Law bans electronics in first-year law classes to combat AI
The University of Chicago Law School will ban electronics in class for first-year law students to counter the use of #artificial intelligence. The article reports the policy as an announced change aimed at limiting AI-related use during class sessions. It frames the decision within broader, growing ambivalence toward #AI across society. The move links classroom technology restrictions to concerns about how AI is being used in academic settings.
19. Kaiser nurses say technology is making their jobs, and patient care, worse
Call center nurses at @Kaiser Permanente say workplace surveillance and #AI tools are pressuring them to prioritize speed and cost savings over patient safety and compassionate care. Seven current and former nurses told CalMatters that calls lasting more than 15 minutes can trigger criticism or performance evaluation meetings, with call time affecting monthly scores, alongside software that predicts daily “unproductive” behavior and #AI systems that rate empathy and tone. Nurses described staying on lengthy, high stakes calls, including a suicidal patient requiring over an hour on the line, while worrying the time would distort their “average handle time” and invite managerial scrutiny, and another nurse said fear of discipline kept her from offering additional comfort to a terminally ill patient in shock. They argue these metrics can discourage going “off script,” push nurses toward quitting or early retirement, and risk degrading patient care even when nurses are doing clinical work correctly. The concerns are surfacing as the #CaliforniaNursesAssociation negotiates a new contract for 25,000 nurses and as California lawmakers consider bills on workplace #AI, while Kaiser says it deploys AI with patient safety in mind and does not use average handle time to assess performance.
University of Auckland research argues that #generativeAI tools such as @ChatGPT are accelerating a “silent knowledge reset” by driving high-skill contributors away from online communities like Stack Overflow. The article cites Stack Overflow’s roughly 76% drop in monthly questions since 2022, and describes how AI has become a faster, more pliable alternative for routine coding queries, compounding existing frustrations with perceived hubris and heavy-handed moderation, even after a generative AI ban. Dr Kenny Ching describes “#signal compression,” where AI makes expert and non-expert outputs harder to distinguish, reducing the rewards for sharing expertise and participation. The piece warns this dynamic could spread beyond coding forums into classrooms, workplaces, and scientific communities as low-effort AI answers become harder to spot. It also raises a concern about future AI training data, asking where models will learn if user-contributed knowledge declines, suggesting training may shift to sources like Slack, Discord, or direct user interactions.
21. China’s solar empire enters a new era as standards change old factories
China is resetting its solar industry with new mandatory #energy-efficiency standards designed to cut inefficient capacity and move competition away from ultra-low prices across the #photovoltaic supply chain. Three binding rules, #GB29447-2026, #GB47835-2026, and #GB47834-2026, take effect on January 1, 2027, and cover polysilicon production, monocrystalline silicon wafers, and finished crystalline silicon modules and grid-connected inverters, influencing production, procurement, imports, and renewable project decisions. The polysilicon standard tightens power-use limits and is expected to pressure older plants to adopt heat recovery, hydrogen recycling, and process optimisation, while the wafer standard targets outdated crystal-pulling and inefficient lines, favoring continuous crystal pulling, improved thermal management, and thinner wafers. For modules, the rules reportedly introduce three efficiency grades and additional requirements such as environmental stress testing and bifacial performance, with minimum Grade 3 efficiency levels cited around 23.2% for #TOPCon and #HJT, and 23.5% for #BC designs. With nearly two years of oversupply and price wars, the measures are expected to accelerate retirement of legacy #PERC and early #TOPCon capacity and high-energy polysilicon facilities, while pushing state-backed tenders and utilities toward higher-performing compliant products even as manufacturers face short-term upgrade costs.
22. Meta appeals landmark jury verdict that found it to blame for social media addiction
@Meta has appealed a landmark Los Angeles jury verdict that held it responsible for allegedly designing #Instagram and #Facebook to hook young users without regard for their well being. The case involved a 20 year old woman, identified as KGM and Kaley, who said she became addicted as a child and that it worsened her mental health struggles, and the jury found negligence by both Meta and Google owned @YouTube to be a substantial factor in her harm, awarding $3 million in damages and recommending another $3 million in punitive damages. Meta and Google previously sought to overturn the verdict or obtain a new trial, but Judge Carolyn B. Kuhl denied those motions in early June, and the appeal now begins what can be a lengthy process. The plaintiffs sought to bypass #Section230 protections by focusing on platform design features like #infiniteScroll and autoplay rather than third party content, an issue that drew frequent defense objections during the five week trial. The verdict arrives amid broader legal pressure on Meta, including a separate New Mexico jury penalty of $375 million that Meta also says it will appeal, while Meta maintains teen mental health is complex and cannot be linked to a single app.
23. ‘This was a righteous case. A holy war’: the lawyer who took on Meta and Google – and won
In a landmark Los Angeles trial, lawyer Mark Lanier and his client Kaley won against @Meta and @Google by persuading a jury that Instagram and YouTube were designed as “addiction machines” that harmed young people’s mental health, shifting accountability from user content to platform design. Kaley, identified as KGM, testified that heavy use starting with YouTube at six and Instagram at nine contributed to body dysmorphia, anxiety, and depression, while Snapchat and TikTok, originally named, settled out of court for undisclosed sums. Lanier’s team fought for an anonymous jury and objected when @MarkZuckerberg arrived with an entourage wearing Meta smart glasses, arguing they could enable #facial_identification and violate courtroom rules against cameras, after which the judge required assurances and the glasses were removed. The prosecution framed the moment as an illustration of pervasive #digital_surveillance and the imbalance of power between plaintiffs and tech giants. The verdict is presented as a “big tobacco” style moment for #big_tech and a test case that could open the way for many similar lawsuits.
24. Meta Patent: AI That Tracks Your Emotions Over Time
@Meta has filed a patent for an always-on, voice-based system that continuously captures speech, infers emotional state over time, and produces periodic personal mood reports tied to context. The described pipeline records spoken audio across many situations, transcribes it, uses an #AI/#ML emotional-state model to analyze both words and nonverbal cues like tone, pitch, and pacing, then correlates the resulting emotional indicators with time of day, location, activity, and the digital service or app in use. It also generates transcript citations, specific passages from a user’s conversations that the system uses as supporting evidence for each emotional finding, and compiles these into trend summaries. Although the patent frames the use case as fitness coaching, the claims are written broadly and emphasize operation “across contexts,” making it a persistent emotional monitoring approach rather than a workout-limited feature. The article notes that because the method depends on ambient, continuous listening rather than a wake word or single session, it raises privacy concerns about tracking not only what people say but how they sound over time, especially in wearable form factors like @Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses.
25. New Research Debunks Data Center Industry Job Claims
Food & Water Watch says new research shows the data center industry’s claims of robust permanent job creation are highly overstated and argues the sector delivers major resource burdens with minimal employment. Using #Virginia as a key case study, it estimates that as of 2024 as few as 23,000 people held permanent data center jobs nationwide, about 0.01% of U.S. employment, while data centers consumed more than 4% of U.S. electricity. The research also finds the investment needed to create a permanent data center job in Virginia was nearly 100 times higher than the investment required to create a job outside the industry. The group links the boom in #AI and #cryptocurrency data centers to environmental, social, and economic harms such as rising electricity costs and threats to local drinking water system stability, and notes projections that U.S. data center energy demand could triple from 2023 to 2028. Citing these findings, @Mitch Jones calls for a halt to new data center construction, aligning with a letter to Congress from 230+ organizations urging a national moratorium on new data center approvals and construction.
26. Kalshi, Polymarket are more optimistic about midterms than the betting markets
The prediction platforms Kalshi and Polymarket suggest different outcomes for the 2024 midterm elections compared to traditional betting markets, reflecting a more optimistic perspective about the electoral results. Kalshi and Polymarket use event-based contracts and decentralized markets, respectively, to forecast political outcomes, emphasizing #financialtechnology in election predictions. Their data shows varying probabilities for party control of the House and Senate that diverge from conventional betting odds, implying that new market mechanisms might capture alternative sentiments or information. This contrast highlights a shift in how political forecasting utilizes diverse market insights, potentially influencing campaign strategies and voter expectations. The growing role of innovative prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket underscores the evolving landscape of #electionanalytics and public engagement with electoral forecasting.
That’s all for today’s digest for 2026/07/13! We picked, and processed 26 Articles. Stay tuned for tomorrow’s collection of insights and discoveries.
Thanks, Patricia Zougheib and Dr Badawi, for curating the links
See you in the next one! 🚀
