
OCSF Explained: The Security Data Language Teams Need
Security teams waste hours translating data between systems. OCSF provides the common language that finally lets security tools talk to each other without constant translation.

How large can numbers truly get? Richard Elwes explores googology, where mathematics ventures beyond comprehension into realms of truly enormous numbers that dwarf the universe itself.

Jensen Huang unveiled Nvidia's Agent Toolkit at GTC 2026 with 17 major enterprise software companies signing on immediately. The open-source platform could reshape how AI agents are built.

Apple's internal storage upgrades cost a fortune. HyperDrive Next offers a faster, more affordable solution with 80Gbps Thunderbolt 5 speeds that rival built-in SSDs.

The Omnisphere 3 update question dominates music production discussions. Discover what Spectrasonics has actually released, their unique update philosophy, and whether waiting makes sense.

A Russian attack on a Ukrainian market killed five and wounded 25, highlighting how drone technology and cyber warfare shape modern conflict and civilian safety.

Despite rumors of an impending MacBook Pro redesign, the M5 model offers compelling reasons to buy now. Performance advantages and proven reliability outweigh waiting for aesthetic changes.

iNaturalist combines AI-powered image recognition with crowdsourced expertise to create the world's largest biodiversity database, transforming how we document and understand nature.

Detecting single microwave photons just became possible. This breakthrough could revolutionize quantum computing, secure communications, and our understanding of the quantum world.

NASA's Artemis 2 mission is set to make history by traveling farther from Earth than any human has ever ventured, surpassing a record that has stood for over five decades.

Two wild Nintendo synthesizers hit the scene this week alongside Jean-Michel Jarre's upcoming book. Discover Love Hultén's latest creation and a glitchy Game Boy synth revolution.

Researchers achieved 360 gigabits per second using miniature lasers instead of radio waves, cutting energy use in half compared to conventional Wi-Fi systems.