
Amazon engineers slam 30,000 layoffs while company spends $200 billion on AI
The revolt puts a sharp question in front of Amazon's leadership and peers: how do you justify mass cuts while funding a historic AI buildout?
Executive intelligence curated from Americas sources and global coverage.
202 briefings briefings in Americas

The revolt puts a sharp question in front of Amazon's leadership and peers: how do you justify mass cuts while funding a historic AI buildout?

The quantum computing company chose a traditional IPO over the SPAC-heavy path, signaling a bid for mainstream credibility that other founders and boards will be watching closely.
The quick-commerce startup’s fast climb to a $255 million valuation and $50 million annualized GMV shows how quickly execution can reprice a young consumer business.

Nintendo says it is preparing Switch 2 versions for the EU that let users replace the battery, a preview of how the bloc’s 2027 regulation could reshape gadget design.

SpaceX's updated IPO prospectus puts Elon Musk's shares above $866 billion, sharpening the stakes for investors, rivals, and boards watching private-market valuations.

The multiyear pact gives Lovable far more cloud capacity and wider access to Anthropic Claude, a meaningful signal for AI app builders chasing scale.

Fox is betting a full season chopped into 101 two-minute clips can travel farther on phones than on Hulu, which raises the bigger question: how far TV will bend to microdrama economics.

Microsoft, Atom Computing, and EeroQ all released fresh quantum progress reports, a reminder that the race is being won one hard technical step at a time.

Texas’s App Store rules are now live enough to force Apple into verification, a compliance shift that could reshape how platforms handle minors.

Hasbro is launching CharacterOS to license AI versions of its characters, a move that could open new revenue while raising fresh questions about IP control, voice rights, and brand safety.

Defense tech is pulling in money fast, yet the real test is whether new startups can survive long enough to land and keep government contracts.

The deal puts a famous toy and game catalog into AI audio, signaling how fast legacy IP owners are choosing licensing over fighting the machine.