Adrian Villellas
An 87-year-old grocery giant is shutting more stores and cutting hundreds of jobs, and the retreat is starting to look bigger than a local reset
America’s air dominance over Iran just changed the B-52 story, because a 70-year-old bomber is now doing missions that once looked too risky
A concrete alternative made from corn is no longer just an eco experiment, because it could help build homes faster with far less waste
A wind tree with 36 turbines is no longer just a backyard experiment, because one homeowner is using it to erase the power bill completely
A Latin American country is no longer just buying police vehicles, because it is now putting luxury SUVs into the hands of its security forces
San Diego just changed the recycling game with new blue bins, and holdouts outside the system may be about to feel it where it hurts
No one expected California’s paid leave option for the self-employed to stay this buried, but most workers may find it only when it is already too late
Lockheed Martin is no longer just making the Precision Strike Missile, because the U.S. now wants PrSM production to surge far beyond its original pace
Offshore wind turbines may be turning into AI data centers, and the idea could solve one of the industry’s biggest problems where the cold never runs out
A 300-mile route through redwood country is turning an old rail corridor into one of America’s wildest mega projects, with a scale hard to picture at first
USPS is about to add its first-ever fuel surcharge, and the move could change how millions of Americans feel about package delivery
Boeing’s KC-46 was supposed to replace an aging tanker fleet, but unresolved flaws are now blocking the next order and raising a bigger readiness question
A Texas city built around industry is running into a water wall, and the clash is exposing how fast growth can turn into a supply crisis
Mexico is about to open one of Latin America’s longest lagoon bridges, and Cancun’s new route could change how millions reach its hotel zone
New York just opened a harbor-view community space that feels too good to be public, and the sunset backdrop may be the least surprising part
Apple’s AirDrop wall is starting to crack, as Samsung brings Galaxy and iPhone users into the same file-sharing moment people wanted for years
What looked like a dirty side hustle for students is now a multimillion-dollar junk business, proving Gen Z may be finding money where others see waste









