Many activists and lobbyists had called for a European company register as part of EU Inc. Today’s EU legislative proposal has indeed included one.
Today saw the official launch of the EU Inc or ‘28th Regime’ legislative proposal by European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels, after it got its first outing at Davos in January. It includes the much requested European company register, despite earlier indications that this would be unwieldy and not be part of the proposal.
“It can still take weeks or even months to set up a company or to start doing business in another country within the single market,” von der Leyen said this morning in Brussels.
“Barriers inside Europe hurt us more than tariffs from the outside. Across our union, entrepreneurs who want to scale up are the first victims of regulatory fragmentation. Instead of one market, they face 27 legal systems and more than 60 national company forms. And the consequences are real.”
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“The time and money spent filling paperwork is not spent on creating or innovating,” she said. “Obviously, this must change and fast. And so here comes EU Inc, the 28th regime.”
The EU Inc movement had gathered steam since its launch back in 2024, and the announcement from von der Leyen at the World Economic Forum in Davos was widely celebrated as progress. The initiative launched today includes many of the elements for which the start-up community lobbied hard.
What’s included?
The 48-hour incorporation benchmark – the Holy Grail for many in the European start-up sector – is there, as had been anticipated given it was included in von der Leyen’s Davos speech. Less expected was the confirmation that the proposal includes the EU Business registry for EU Inc companies.
“EU Inc creates a single European company framework,” said von der Leyen. “It is one simple set of rules that works across our entire single market of 450m consumers. It will make it drastically easier to start and to grow a business in Europe. Any entrepreneur will be able to create a company within 48 hours from anywhere in the European Union, fully digitalised for less than €100 and without minimum share capital.
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“At the heart of this proposal is one simple principle that says, ‘once only’. Companies will provide their information to public authority, the data one time only, and that information will then be shared automatically between relevant administrations, from business registers to taxes to social security … and this information will be stored and easily accessible in a new EU Business register for EU Inc companies.”
A third element of EU Inc will be around talent, she said.
“Now, with EU Inc, employee stock options will be simpler to offer and easier to manage across borders, so it will help you in companies to compete for the best people, and founders will be able to protect companies and employees from unwanted takeovers,” said von der Leyen.
Finally, she addressed the much-discussed ‘risk factor’. Many in the community had pointed to the lack of a risk culture in Europe, where failure was not recognised as a necessary part of any true start-up ecosystem.
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“In business, failure should not be the end of the road,” said von der Leyen. “It should be part of the journey. With EU Inc, we want to reward entrepreneurship and make it less risky, and this is why we will fully digitalise insolvency procedures and introduce a fast-track insolvency process for start-ups so that entrepreneurs can start again more easily.”
She also addressed the concerns of labour activists and trade unions around EU Inc.
“Let me be very clear on one important point. The EU Inc proposal will in every way respect existing social standards and labour law, and this includes all employees’ rights to participate in companies’ boards. This proposal includes strong safeguards to ensure that such rules are applied.”
Boosting EU start-ups and scale-ups
EU-INC, a movement with more than 22,000 signatories including the founders of Stripe and venture capital players from Sequioa to Index, had been running a policy campaign since October 2024 pushing for the creation of the so-called 28th regime, and in 2025 presented legal proposals to the Commission.
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DC Cahalane is a venture partner at Sure Valley Ventures. In a SiliconRepublic.com op-ed in September last year, he described EU Inc as “Europe’s greatest opportunity to build a unified tech ecosystem that can compete globally”.
Simon Paris is CEO of Unit4, an Utrecht-headquartered enterprise software company. He told SiliconRepublic.com he is very positive about the potential for Europe to create European software champions, and that he sees EU Inc as a positive step in the right direction.
“Some are saying we are better off focusing efforts elsewhere, as we’re too far behind the US and China,” he said. “I disagree. I would remind critics of Europe’s decision to build Airbus in response to the need for an alternative to Boeing. A collective decision was made to define this as a strategic priority for the region, despite all the risks it entailed. As the Airbus example shows, we have been here before, and we made it happen.”
Capital challenge
Availability of capital remains a major challenge for European scale-ups in comparison to their US and Chinese counterparts, and von der Leyen did address this briefly, saying there are plans afoot to tackle the issue.
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“This is only the beginning. We will make it easier for venture capital to flow to businesses,” she said. “This will be done by the savings and investment union. We will explore new possibilities for cross-border telework, for start-ups and scale-ups. And today, we also adopted a recommendation to harmonise the definition of innovative start-ups and scale-ups across Europe so that we can design better policies to help our businesses to grow and to thrive in Europe.”
At a later press conference, Henna Virkkunen, executive vice-president of the European Commission, said the intention was to have the EU Inc regime in place by the end of 2026.
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Compass’ signature 3-phased marketing strategy, in which sellers are encouraged to launch their home as a Compass Private Exclusive and then enter a Compass Coming Soon phase before listing publicly via the MLS, had been in direct conflict with those standards.
Compass dismissed its lawsuit without prejudice, which means the company could file the case again at a later date.
What Compass said: Reffkin specifically cited Zillow’s “Preview” product announcement — which he referred to as a policy “reversal” — in a post on social media announcing the dismissal.
“Because of this reversal, we are dismissing our lawsuit against Zillow,” he wrote.
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“Our goal has always been to give homeowners more choice to decide when, where, and how to market their homes. We are pleased to see that both other brokerages and portals are now recognizing the strong consumer demand for more options in how they sell their homes,” Reffkin’s post said.
“At Compass International Holdings, we will always defend our real estate professional’s ability to put their clients first, and we will continue to advocate for more choices, not fewer, for homeowners.”
What Zillow said: “Zillow welcomes Compass’ decision to voluntarily withdraw its lawsuit. As we said from the outset, the claims lacked merit, and the court’s preliminary injunction ruling reinforced that view,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
“The underlying issue remains: Private listing networks are not in the best interests of consumers, and they never have been. Restricting listings to hidden networks limits transparency, disadvantages buyers and sellers and undermines fair access to real estate information which is so critical in this housing affordability crisis,” the statement continued.
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The Listing Access Standards “were introduced to protect core principles of competition, openness and access that support healthy markets and benefit homebuyers, sellers and agents,” and those standards “remain in effect.”
“Zillow will continue to choose not to display listings that were previously hidden from the public for the benefit of any one company. Any suggestion that these standards are no longer being enforced is incorrect,” the company said.
“Hidden listing networks that gate access to listings behind a registration wall or require buyers to work with a specific brokerage do not meet our standards and, to the extent Compass continues operating a network of inventory hidden in the shadows, those listings remain at odds with our standards.”
Zillow had recently notched a win in its court battle with Compass. Months after filing a preliminary injunction asking the court to pause Zillow’s ban while the case proceeded, a judge denied Compass’ request in a Feb. 6 ruling that allowed Zillow to continue enforcing its listing standards.
Compass said at the time that it planned to move forward with the lawsuit, declaring that the judge’s ruling was “not a loss.”
“A sincere thank you to Zillow for offering homeowners more choice,” he wrote in response to Zillow’s announcement. “Sellers deserve the choice to decide when, where and how they market their homes.”
REI’s Member Days sale starts today and runs through March 23, 2026. As the name implies, the bulk of the deals are exclusively for REI members. Members get 20 percent off one full-price item with the coupon code MEMBER26. Members also get 20 percent off one used Re/Supply item, and 40 percent off all REI Co-Op Campwell and Wonderland tents. If you’re not yet an REI member, you can join today.
We’ve combed through the member deals, as well as some more limited outlet deals to find the best price on all our favorite tents, backpacks, outdoor apparel, and more.
Updated Wednesday, March 2026: We’ve added a few more deals, including a great sale on REI’s Flash 22 daypack, a Sea to Summit sleeping pad, a Mystery Ranch backpack, and an Exped sleeping pad.
WIRED Featured Deals
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What You Should Get With Your Member Coupon
During the REI Member Days sale REI Members get 20 percent off one full-price item with the coupon code MEMBER26. Here are a few pieces of outdoor gear we love that are good candidate for buying with your member coupon. Not an REI member? You can sign up today and get access to the coupon.
Upgrade Your Sleeping Experience
Therm-a-Rest
NeoLoft Sleeping Pad
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I just got back from a three-day trip using this pad for the first time in a few months. What a revelation it is, every time I sleep on this thing. I’d been testing other pads most of the winter. While some are very good, nothing compares to the Therm-a-Rest NeoLoft for comfort. This pad reinvigorated my love of backpacking by ensuring that I get a great night’s sleep in the backcountry. It’s cushy and comfortable, like a plush car-camping pad, with excellent pressure relief (pro tip: for max comfort, don’t over inflate it). The R-4.8 insulation keeps you warm down to about freezing, though I’ve used it in colder conditions by pairing it with a closed cell foam pad. I also love that it packs up quite small considering how massive it is when inflated.
Lighten Your Load With an Ultralight Tent
Big Agnes
Copper Spur HV UL Tent
The Big Agnes Copper Spur tents are high quality, lightweight, and well designed. At 2 pounds 10 ounces for the two-person model, this is one of the lightest freestanding tents on the market. It’s easy to set up, and stable even in strong winds. The Copper Spur is also very livable, with steep sidewalls to maximize interior space. Mesh pockets help with gear storage and give you a place to stick your headlamp for dispersed light. The ingenious “awning” design makes getting in and out a snap (provided you have trekking poles to set it up). All seams are taped with waterproof, solvent-free polyurethane tape. They’re also durable despite their lightweight fabrics, standing up to years of abuse on the trail. I do recommend grabbing the footprint ($80), though, to help protect the floor. It also allows you to pitch the fly only, which is nice shelter on sunny days at the beach.
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Grab REI’s Best Lightweight Backpack
Photography: Scott Gilbertson
REI Co-op
Flash Air 50 Backpack
I tested this pack quite a bit last summer as part of an upcoming ultralight backpack guide. It’s very comfortable, carrying a 25-pound load without issue. It’s not the lightest pack I’ve tried (it’s 1 pound, 14 ounces for a medium), but like most REI-brand gear, it strikes a great balance between features and price. It’s made of UHMWPE ripstop nylon, with shaped steel piping for the frame, making it studier than a frameless pack. I love the precurved back panel and hip belt, which were much more comfortable than most ultralight framed packs in this class. It’s got nice load lifters as well, and the minimalist design works well to keep weight down. My only real gripe is that the exterior pocket isn’t very big.
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Get the Best Camp Stove
Coleman
Cascade 3-in-1 Stove
Any flame will work, but Coleman’s Cascade 3-in-1 stove really elevates your outdoor cooking experience. I lived full time in an RV for over seven years and cooked on this stove almost every day. It’s all about the cast iron grates. They’re sturdier than the usual metal and don’t warp over time. Apply a light coat of oil to them periodically and they’ll develop a protective seasoning just like a cast iron pan. The flat top is also handy for cranking out camp pancakes for a hungry family. The coupon brings the price here down to $200.
Deals on Camping and Backpacking Gear
Photograph: Scott Gilbertson
Nemo Equipment’s Mayfly Osmo tent is the two-person tent I reach for the most. It’s solidly built, cleverly designed, and has proved durable, and most importantly, dry, in my years of testing. I tested the Mayfly two-person model, which has a trail weight of 3 pounds 8 ounces. A little heavier than our top pick for ultralight hiking (the Copper Spur suggested above) but still pretty light when split between two people. It’s a semi-freestanding design, which means there are fewer poles, but you have to stake out the foot-end of the tent. Two sewn-in ridged stays help ensure there’s plenty of room by your feet, but the Mayfly is on the tight side. Two sleeping pads fit, and hikers under 6′ 4″ will be fine, but if you’re not close with your hiking partner, the three-person model for $375 ($125 off) will be a better option.
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The Dragonfly Osmo is a slightly lighter tent than the Mayfly above, aimed at ultralight backpackers who want a freestanding tent. I’ve tested and liked the one-person version, which is spacious, lightweight, and sturdy. The Osmo fabric is Nemo’s proprietary blend of nylon and polyester, which in my experience sheds rain better than most nylon rainflies. The Dragonfly Osmo 3-person version is also on sale for $435 ($145 off), and the bike-packing friendly two-person version, with poles that fit between your handlebars, is on sale for $376 ($204 off)
This is the best value of the REI Member’s Day sale. The Wonderland 6 replaces my beloved Kingdom 6, as REI spacious, hoop-design family car camping tent. While I prefer the square design of the Base Camp 6, the Wonderland 6 is undeniably roomier, better ventilated, and overall a better choice for most families. The biggest thing I miss about the Wonderland is the interior divider wall, which makes it easy to have a sleeping area and separate area for hanging out. The Wonderland 4 is also on sale for $257 ($172 off), but I highly recommend the two-person version as it’s nearly the same price and gives you considerably more living space.
Photograph: Thermarest
The Z-Lite Sol weighs next to nothing (10 ounces for the small), folds up small enough to lash to the outside of any pack, and can double as a chair, extra padding on cold nights, table, you name it. I am too old and too soft to be the sort of ultra-minimalist who gets by with just a Z-Lite for sleeping, but I still have one around on almost every backpacking trip I take.
The self-inflating Comfort Plus inhabits an interesting borderland between car camping pad and backpacking sleeping pad. At 3 pounds it’s definitely not light, but if you don’t mind the weight it’s a comfortable option. The open-cell interior offers a nicely cushy sleeping experience with enough padding to help even side sleepers avoid bottoming out.
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Formerly our top pick for backpacking sleeping pads, the Exped Ultra 7R is still a great winter sleeping pad, especially at this price. The Ultra has down insulation inside it to achieve the high R-rating. At under 2 pounds for the wide version, it’s not that heavy for a four season pad, but it is quite bulky, taking up considerable pack space due to the down. I have used this pad down to 20 degrees Fahrenheit and was very comfortable (in a 10-degree bag). Exped rates it to –20 degrees F.
Photograph: REI
Sea to Summit’s Ether Light XT is a 4-inch thick ultralight sleeping pad—the ever-popular Therm-a-Rest X-Lite is only 3—making it the best ultralight option for side sleepers. I also like the baffle design better than the Therm-a-Rest, and it seems to be a little more durable in my testing. Note that the XT has been replaced by a newer model, but this one is still great.
Nemo’s Forte 35 is our favorite synthetic sleeping bag. It’s rated to 35 degrees (comfort rated), making it a good choice for summer. What I like most about this bag, and nearly all of Nemo’s sleeping bags, is the wider cut through the torso area down to the knees. This bag is almost a hybrid of a mummy bag and your father’s good old 1970s square sleeping bag. Which is to say, this bag is roomy.
Photograph: Adrienne So
The Arc’teryx Beta SL rain jacket is our favorite rain jacket. This is Arc’teryx’s lightest rain shell, but it’s also one of the few jackets that has never failed to keep me dry. It has Gore-Tex’s latest fabric innovation, called ePE (expanded polyethylene)—it’s a breathable, waterproof membrane laminated to a nylon face (PFC-free). It has a hydrostatic head (HH) rating of 28,000, which is far better than the usual rating of 10,000 that you find in most jackets. This deals takes a little of the sting out of the one thing I don’t like about this jacket—the price.
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Patagonia’s classic rain jacket, now with a a PFC-free DWR finish. I like the roomier fit of the Arc’teryx Beta SL above, but this jacket is 95 percent as good and less than half the price of the Beta. It’s got a two-way adjustable hood, and cuffs have velcro to give a nice, tight seal against the rain. The only real complaint I have with this jacket is that’s it’s on the noisier side, but at this price, I can deal with a little extra nylon crinkling.
There’s only a couple colors available at this price, but this is a great deal on one of the most packable synthetic puffer jackets we’ve tested. If you’re avoiding down, but want a light puffer for three-season backpacking, or just around town wear, this the jacket to get.
Photograph: REI
Another deal with limited color selection, but this is too good of a price to ignore. The 650 Down Jacket is one of the best budget three-season puffers you can buy, more so at this price. At 10.9 ounces, it’s reasonably lightweight and has large hand pockets and some very nice internal pockets for stashing a hat or gloves. The kids’ version is also on sale in a nice yellow color that’s handy for spotting your child in the snow.
Patagonia’s Down Sweater is a much-loved, classic puffer jacket. It uses 800-fill-power down and borders on overstuffed, making for a beefier coat than many others I’ve tried. It has plenty of loft nonetheless, and the recycled nylon ripstop fabric still looks like it does the day I took it home (that fabric is now made from recycled fishing nets).
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Nemo’s Resolve is a great pack that incorporates a low-waste footprint into the design. It uses solution-dyed fabrics and eschews straps and buckles in favor of bungees and pull-tabs. This does make adjusting it fussier, but once you’re used to it and have the fit dialed in, it’s not an issue. The Resolve is a comfortable pack. While technically frameless, it feels like it has some structure. and it sits nice and high on your back. At 1 pound 15 ounces, it’s also pretty light.
Photograph: Scott Gilbertson
The Flash 22 is possibly the best-value day pack on the market, especially on sale. I was surprised by how comfortable this thing is, despite the lightweight straps and minimal padding. It carries loads up to 15 pounds without straining the shoulders, and the side stash pockets are fabulously large—big enough for a Nalgene bottle or rain jacket. The Flash 22 is made of 70-denier recycled ripstop nylon, which is on the lighter side, but mine has held up well, even coming through some rough canyon hikes in Utah without any more than mud stains. Note that this deal is only on the print versions.
This is Mystery Ranch’s stab at an ultralight pack. It’s still 3 pounds, 13 ounces, but the full suspension system can handle loads far beyond what most ultralight packs (even those with frames) can handle. This is one of the most comfortable packs I’ve tested and my top pick for any load over 25 pounds, but unfortunately, Mystery Ranch has discontinued it, so this might be your last chance to snag one.
If you want to bring a chair backpacking, this is the one to get. It’s just about the lightest on the market at 18 ounces, and it packs down nice and small. Nemo also solved the main problem with all pole chairs: The included base pad keeps it from sinking in soft ground.
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Photograph: Ryan Waniata
As with most Yeti sales, this one applies only to a single color, in this case the insanely bright Firefly Yellow. I can almost guarantee you will never lose it if you get that color. Yeti’s Hopper cooler is my go-to cooler for an afternoon at the beach. It’s just large enough for ice, drinks, and snacks for my family of five.
Assuming you aren’t currently hiding under a very large rock, you’ve likely noticed that gas prices spiked dramatically in early March. Pain at the pump can be attributed to the war in Iran, specifically the difficulty of getting ships through the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of all exported oil and natural gas typically passes. Until recently, gas prices were relatively low, averaging just below $3 a gallon in the U.S. At time of writing, the average price of a gallon is $3.79, but of course, you may pay more or less depending on where you live.
According to GasBuddy, the cheapest gas can currently be found in Oklahoma, where residents will pay about $3.20, and residents of the Golden State are getting hit the hardest. Californians are paying more than $5.53 per gallon as of mid-March. One station in Los Angeles raised prices to more than $8 a gallon. Why is gas so much more expensive in California, especially when the state is home to several refineries? It all comes down to science — the formula of the gas, to be specific.
Fuel standards differ from state to state and often reflect local air quality needs. The federal Clean Air Act sets national standards but permits states to set their own specialized programs. In 1996, California’s Air Resources Board mandated that the state sell a unique blend to help reduce pollution. It’s cleaner than gas sold elsewhere, but more expensive to make because it requires more processing. Because California is the only state with this requirement, it can’t simply import gas from other states.
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Other contributors to cost
Mario Tama/Getty Images
California’s strict fuel standards aren’t the only contributors to its high fuel costs. There’s also an age-old complaint: taxes. The state pays more in taxes per gallon than any other part of the country. A whopping $0.90 of each gallon is a combination of local, state, and federal taxes. In addition to high taxes, California’s tough environmental standards impact more than just the blend of the fuel. The Cap-and-Invest Program, previously called Cap-and-Trade, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and its Low Carbon Fuel Standard, which is designed to decrease the carbon intensity of fuel, both increase costs at the pump.
California is also considered a fuel island — an isolated market that refines most of its own fuel. There are no pipelines across the Rocky Mountains and only a few from the Gulf Coast. Additionally, there are few refineries outside the state that can meet California’s strict blend requirements. To further complicate the issue, the state is losing refineries at an alarming rate. The Phillips 66 Wilmington refinery closed in late 2025, and Valero Energy Corporation plans to close its refinery in Benicia this year.
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In 2023, California passed a law that would allow it to cap refinery profits and penalize oil companies for price gouging, legislation that many hoped would help when prices skyrocketed. The law has never been used, however, and in 2025, the California Energy Commission delayed it for five years, worried that penalizing refineries could lead to more closures. Critics of the law maintain it doesn’t address the real issue — the state’s isolation — while proponents argue that the state remains dangerously exposed to global shakeups in the energy market.
Apple is finally fixing one of Family Sharing’s most awkward limitations in iOS 26.4, letting multiple adults on one family pay for their own purchases without breaking shared access.
Apple updates payments for Family Sharing
For years, Family Sharing forced everyone into a single payment method whenever purchase sharing was enabled. The approach worked for traditional households, but it created friction for anyone sharing with friends, partners, or extended family. One person effectively became the default payer, even when it made no practical sense. iOS 26.4 changes the structure by letting adult members use their own payment methods while still joining shared purchases. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
AI training with sketchy data repository “The Pile” returns to the courts in a lawsuit by Chicken Soup for the Soul, LLC accusing just about all of big tech of piracy. The problem is, Apple denies using it to train Apple Intelligence.
Apple accused of using ‘The Pile’ for AI training yet again
Artificial intelligence is a term that has virtually lost all meaning because of its being applied to everything. In that sense, it seems a lawsuit has mistakenly included Apple when it has previously denied utilizing the dataset in question. According to a lawsuit from Chicken Soup for the Soul, LLC, Apple, Meta, xAI, Google, Anthropic, OpenAI, Perplexity, and NVIDIA are all in violation of copyright thanks to training their respective artificial intelligence tools on a dataset known as “The Pile.” While that dataset is filled with proprietary content, like YouTube subtitle files, it wasn’t used by Apple to train Apple Intelligence. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
On 15 February 1946, ENIAC—developed in the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia—was publicly demonstrated for the first time. Although primitive by today’s standards, ENIAC’s purely electronic design and programmability were breakthroughs in computing at the time. ENIAC made high-speed, general-purpose computing practicable and laid the foundation for today’s machines.
On the eve of its unveiling, the U.S. Department of War issued a news release hailing it as a new machine “expected to revolutionize the mathematics of engineering and change many of our industrial design methods.” Without a doubt, electronic computers have transformed engineering and mathematics, as well as practically every other domain, including politics and spirituality.
ENIAC’s success ushered the modern computing industry and laid the foundation for today’s digital economy. During the past eight decades, computing has grown from a niche scientific endeavor into an engine of economic growth, the backbone of billion-dollar enterprises, and a catalyst for global innovation. Computing has led to a chain of innovations and developments such as stored programs, semiconductor electronics, integrated circuits, networking, software, the Internet, and distributed large-scale systems.
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Inside the ENIAC
The motivation for developing ENIAC was the need for faster computation during World War II. The U.S. military wanted to produce extensive artillery firing tables for field gunners to quickly determine settings for a specific weapon, a target, and conditions. Calculating the tables by hand took “human computers” several days, and the available mechanical machines were far too slow to meet the demand.
In 1942 John Mauchly, an associate professor of electrical engineering at Penn’s Moore School, suggested using vacuum tubes to speed up computer calculations. Following up on his theory, the U.S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory, which was responsible for providing artillery settings to soldiers in the field, commissioned Mauchly and his colleaguesJ. Presper Eckert and Adele Katz Goldstine, to work on a new high-speed computer. Eckert was a lab instructor at Moore, and Goldstine became one of ENIAC’s programmers. It took them a year to design ENIAC and 18 months to build it.
The computer contained about 18,000 vacuum tubes, which were cooled by 80 air blowers. More than 30 meters long, it filled a 9 m by 15 m room and weighed about 30 kilograms. It consumed as much electricity as a small town.
Programming the machine was difficult. ENIAC did not have stored programs, so to reprogram the machine, operators manually reconfigured cables with switches and plugboards, a process that took several days.
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By the 1950s, large universities either had acquired or built their own machines to rival ENIAC. The schools included Cambridge (EDSAC), MIT (Whirlwind), and Princeton (IAS). Researchers used the computers to model physical phenomena, solve mathematical problems, and perform simulations.
After almost nine years of operation, ENIAC officially was decommissioned on 2 October 1955.
In the early 1970s, there was a controversy over who invented the electronic computer and who would be assigned the patent. In 1973 Judge Earl Richard Larson of U.S. District Court in Minnesota ruled in the Honeywell v. Sperry Rand case that Eckert and Mauchly did not invent the automatic electronic digital computer but instead had derived their subject matter from a computer prototyped in 1939 by John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry at Iowa State College (now Iowa State University). The ruling granted Atanasoff legal recognition as the inventor of the first electronic digital computer.
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IEEE’s ENIAC Milestone
In 1987 IEEE designated ENIAC as an IEEE Milestone, citing it as “a major advance in the history of computing” and saying the machine “established the practicality of large-scale electronic digital computers and strongly influenced the development of the modern, stored-program, general-purpose computer.”
The commemorative Milestone plaque is displayed at the Moore School, by the entrance to the classroom where ENIAC was built.
“The ENIAC legacy heralded the computer age, transforming not only science and industry but also education, research, and human communication and interaction.”
“The Second Life of ENIAC,” an article published in the annals in 2006, covers a lesser-known chapter in the machine’s history, about how it evolved from a static system—configured and reconfigured through laborious cable plugging—into a precursor of today’s stored-program computers.
“These six women found out what it took to run this computer, and they really did incredible things,” a Penn professor, Mitch Marcus, said in a 2006 PhillyVoice article. Marcus teaches in Penn’s computer and information science department.
Two other women contributed to the programming. Goldstine wrote ENIAC’s five-volume manual, and Klára Dán von Neumann, wife of John von Neumann, helped train the programmers and debug and verify their code.
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To honor the women of ENIAC, the IEEE Computer Society established the annual Computer Pioneer Award in 1981. Eckert and Mauchly were among the award’s first recipients. In 2008 Bartik was honored with the award. Nominations are open to all professionals, regardless of gender.
An ENIAC replica
Last year a group of 80 autistic students, ages 12 to 16, from PS Academy Arizona, in Gilbert, recreated the ENIAC using 22,000 custom parts. It took the students almost six months to assemble.
A ceremony was held in January to display their creation. The full-scale replica features actual-size panels made from layered cardboard and wood. Although all electronic components are simulated, they are not electrically active. The machine, illuminated by hundreds of LEDs, is accompanied by a soundtrack that simulates the deep hum of ENIAC’s transformers and the rhythmic clicking of relays.
This machine prints and tabulates the answers to the problems solved by the ENIAC.
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“Every major unit, accumulators, function tables, initiator, and master programmer is present and placed exactly where it was on the original machine,” Tom Burick, the teacher who mentored the project, said at the ceremony.
The replica, still on display at the school, is expected to be moved to a more permanent spot in the near future.
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ENIAC’s legacy
ENIAC’s significance is both technical and symbolic. Technically, it marks the beginning of the chain of innovations that created today’s computational infrastructure. Symbolically, it made governments, militaries, universities, and industry view computation as a tool for improvement and for innovative applications that had previously been impossible. It marked a tectonic shift in the way humans approach problem-solving, modeling, and scientific reasoning.
The ENIAC legacy heralded the computer age, transforming not only science and industry but also education, research, and human communication and interaction.
As Eckert is reported to have said, “There are two epochs in computer history: Before ENIAC and After ENIAC.”
The remarkable evolution of computer hardware during the past 80 years has been sparked by advances in programming languages—the essential drivers of computing.
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From the manual rewiring of ENIAC to the orchestration of intelligent, distributed systems, programming languages have steadily evolved to make computers more powerful, expressive, and accessible.
Predictions for computing in the decades ahead
The evolution of computing will continue along multiple trajectories, with the emphasis moving from generalization to specialization (for AI, graphics, security, and networking), from monolithic system design to modular integration, and from performance-centric metrics alone to energy efficiency and sustainability as primary objectives.
Increasingly, security will be built into hardware by design. Computing paradigms will expand beyond traditional deterministic models to embrace probabilistic, approximate, and hybrid approaches for certain tasks.
Those developments will usher in a new era of computing and a new class of applications.
Cybersecurity in 2026 is one of the most pressing issues since everything we interact with is connected to the internet. HP has just released a new report titled The Workflow Wakeup, highlighting how everyday workplace technologies, including printers, can impact cybersecurity in modern organizations. According to the study, 51% of SMBs consider print security a low priority, even as businesses increasingly adopt digital tools and hybrid work environments.
Print Security Still a Blind Spot
The research was based on responses from 200 IT decision-makers and 600 knowledge workers across Indian SMBs with 50 to 1,000 employees.
One of the most notable findings is that employees often underestimate the risks associated with printers connected to office networks. Around 75% of knowledge workers assume network printers are secure, while 48% do not consider printers to be a cybersecurity threat.
At the same time, concerns about document privacy remain significant. Nearly 49% of workers worry about confidential documents being printed and accessed by the wrong person. The study outlines several key risks organizations worry about when it comes to printing infrastructure:
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Cybersecurity threats linked to connected printers
Employees mishandling or misprinting sensitive documents
Managing security across multiple printers in an organization
Unauthorized access to print queues or files
Security risks tied to cloud-based scanning workflows
Smart Printing Technology Could Help
While the report highlights several challenges, HP also suggests that adopting smarter print management systems can improve security.
Among SMBs that have implemented smart printing technology, 88% reported improved security outcomes. Businesses cited three main benefits:
Better visibility into printing and scanning activity (90%)
Improved compliance with security standards (85%)
Stronger enforcement of printing rules and restrictions (83%)
The Research Ireland St Patrick’s Day Medal honours exceptional academic and industry leaders with strong Irish roots.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin, TD has presented Prof Lynne Taylor, a Retter distinguished professor of pharmacy at Purdue University, and Dr Sarah O’Keeffe, the group vice-president for product research and development at Eli Lilly, with the Research Ireland St Patrick’s Day medal.
The medal is awarded each year to academic and industry leaders with established Irish roots, who from their positions in the US, support and champion Ireland’s research community. Previous winners include computer scientist Dr Eamonn Keogh, Stripe founders John and Patrick Collison and Dr Ann Kelleher.
A global authority on drug formulation science, Taylor’s research provides the foundation technologies that support the delivery of life-saving treatments for diseases such as cancer and hepatitis C. An Irish citizen, she is a vocal advocate for Ireland’s pharma space through her advisory roles with the Research Ireland Centre for Pharmaceuticals and collaboration with universities.
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She is also the editor-in-chief of Molecular Pharmaceutics and is committed to supporting other women in STEM via the mentorship of emerging scientists and has built a formidable talent pipeline, with many former group members now holding prominent positions globally.
Commenting on the award, Taylor said: “It is a great honour to receive this award from Ireland’s research and innovation agency. For many years I have been involved with championing Irish research and supporting scientists at every stage of their development, across Ireland and globally.
“Whether serving as a mentor, adviser, collaborator or guest speaker, these interactions with Irish scientists have been deeply rewarding. It is a privilege to continue playing a role in fostering greater connectivity and knowledge exchange between the United States and Ireland, and I am confident that the long-standing bonds between our two countries will grow even stronger into the future.”
O’Keeffe is considered among one of Ireland’s most senior leaders in global pharmaceutical R&D and she oversees more than 1,000 scientists and engineers who translate discovery molecules into medicines for patients worldwide. She has been central to a number of major advances in drug development, including in the development of the investigational drug candidate orforglipron, which was recognised by Time magazine for its potential global health impact in the management of diabetes and obesity.
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Beginning her career with Eli Lilly in Indianapolis, O’Keeffe played a central role in advancing manufacturing capabilities at the company’s Kinsale site, earning the facility the IPSE Global Facility of the Year Award for Innovation in 2017 and is a central figure in the development of the $4.5bn Lilly Medicine Foundry.
Of her win, she said: “I am delighted and proud to receive this recognition from Research Ireland. I would like, firstly, to acknowledge UCC for being the launchpad for my career in industry. I’d also like to thank all my Lilly colleagues in Ireland, United States and internationally over the last two decades, for their extraordinary commitment and relentless pursuit of excellence.
“Pharmaceutical research endeavours are a team pursuit, and collective passion and perseverance through times of challenge and often, failure is how progress and success happens. It has been a pleasure to have shared my journey to date with such talented colleagues who have the patient front and centre in all that they do.”
Presenting both recipients with their medals in Washington DC, Martin stated: “Today, we honour two outstanding scientific leaders whose achievements exemplify the very best of our global research community. Prof Taylor and Dr O’Keeffe demonstrate how members of the Irish diaspora, working at the highest levels in the United States, are helping to shape the future of medicine and strengthen international partnerships.
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“Their respective work has enhanced Ireland’s reputation as a leader in research and innovation, and reflects both the deep and enduring ties between Ireland and the US, and our shared commitment to scientific excellence. I am delighted to recognise their leadership and achievements here today, and to celebrate the impact they continue to make on behalf of Ireland.”
Updated, 3.35pm, 18 March 2026: This article was amended to clarify that O’Keeffe helped Eli Lilly’s Kinsale site earn the IPSE Global Facility of the Year Award for Innovation.
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CISA has ordered U.S. government agencies to secure their servers against an actively exploited vulnerability in the Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS).
Zimbra is a very popular email and collaboration software suite used by hundreds of millions of people worldwide, including thousands of businesses and hundreds of government agencies.
Tracked as CVE-2025-66376 and patched in early November, this high-severity security flaw stems from a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) weakness in the Classic UI that remote unauthenticated attackers could exploit by abusing Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) @import directives in email HTML.
While Synacor (the company behind Zimbra) didn’t share any details on the impact of a successful CVE-2025-66376 attack, it can likely be exploited to execute arbitrary JavaScript via malicious HTML-based emails, potentially allowing attackers to hijack user sessions and steal sensitive data within the compromised Zimbra environment.
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CISA added it to its catalog of vulnerabilities exploited in the wild on Wednesday and gave Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies two weeks to secure their servers by April 1st, as mandated by the Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01 issued in November 2021.
Although BOD 22-01 applies only to federal agencies, the U.S. cybersecurity agency encouraged all organizations, including those in the private sector, to patch this actively exploited flaw as soon as possible.
“Apply mitigations per vendor instructions, follow applicable BOD 22-01 guidance for cloud services, or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are unavailable,” CISA warned. “These types of vulnerabilities are frequent attack vectors for malicious cyber actors and pose significant risks to the federal enterprise.”
Zimbra servers under attack
Zimbra security flaws are frequently targeted in attacks and have been exploited to breach thousands of vulnerable email servers worldwide in recent years.
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For instance, as early as June 2022, Zimbra auth-bypass and remote code execution bugs were abused to breach more than 1,000 servers.
Starting in September 2022, hackers exploited a zero-day vulnerability in Zimbra Collaboration Suite, breaching nearly 900 servers within two months after gaining remote code execution on compromised instances.
The Russian state-backed Winter Vivern hacking group also used reflected XSS exploits to breach the Zimbra webmail portals of NATO-aligned governments and the mailboxes of government officials, military personnel, and diplomats.
More recently, threat actors exploited another Zimbra XSS vulnerability (CVE-2025-27915) in zero-day attacks to execute arbitrary JavaScript code, enabling them to set email filters that redirect messages to attacker-controlled servers.
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Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.
Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.
VeilBook’s cooling strategy sacrifices touchpad access during heavier computing workloads
Taiwanese manufacturer Inventec has revealed an experimental laptop called the VeilBook, a concept device built around an unusual keyboard placement and thermal design.
The machine features a 14-inch display and an ultra-thin chassis measuring less than 10mm thick, placing it among the slimmer notebook concepts proposed in recent years.
The design ignores the traditional layout used by most business laptops and instead introduces a detachable keyboard that slides across the upper surface of the device.
Article continues below
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Movable keyboard design
Rather than sitting permanently above the touchpad area, the keyboard can shift position depending on how the laptop is used.
In its default position, the keyboard rests directly over the touchpad area and palm rest – but when touch input is required, the keyboard slides backward, revealing the touchpad underneath.
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The idea relies on a simple mechanical adjustment, yet it changes how the laptop is used during everyday tasks.
The keyboard arrangement is closely linked to the system’s thermal design. In many conventional laptops, cooling fans sit beneath the keyboard section.
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The VeilBook attempts to take advantage of that layout by allowing the keyboard to move away from the ventilation area.
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When the keyboard shifts backward, the ventilation openings above the cooling fans remain uncovered, allowing more air to circulate through the chassis.
The expectation is that improved airflow could help reduce the risk of thermal throttling when the processor and other components are under heavier workloads.
However, the design introduces a practical compromise. Achieving the highest cooling efficiency means the touchpad remains hidden beneath the keyboard, leaving keyboard shortcuts or an external mouse as the primary navigation methods.
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This assumption may not affect users who already depend on keyboard commands or separate pointing devices.
For others, the arrangement could feel unfamiliar, particularly for those who normally rest their palms near the touchpad while typing.
The VeilBook concept has already received industry recognition and won an award from the iF Design Award program.
Despite that recognition, there is still no indication that the laptop will become an actual retail device.
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Inventec typically operates as an original design manufacturer, producing hardware for other brands rather than releasing products under its own name.
Ironically, Inventec won a design award in 2021 with a fanless laptop that used the back of the screen as a heat dissipator surface rather than internal cooling fans.
The VeilBook moves in a different direction, one that adds mechanical complexity simply to give cooling fans more breathing room.
For now, the device appears to function more as an exploration of alternative laptop layouts than a clear answer to a widespread design problem.
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