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With 2 factories in the Amazon, this biz sells 1 bil Brazil nuts/yr to 45 countries

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Brazil nuts are nearly impossible to farm, but White Lion Foods has cracked the challenge 

The fitness and health industry has been growing rapidly around the world, including in Singapore. Alongside this shift, consumers are increasingly seeking out nutrient-dense foods that can support healthier lifestyles.

Among the most nutrient-dense foods on the planet is the Brazil nut, widely recognised as the richest natural dietary source of selenium.

Despite its nutritional benefits, however, producing Brazil nuts is far from straightforward. Unlike most nuts, they are not cultivated on plantations but are wild-harvested from trees deep within the Amazon rainforest.

Even when producers manage to source them, most Brazil nuts are sold either raw or coated in chocolate. This is because seasoning them has historically been difficult—the nut’s natural structure prevents flavours from sticking well.

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But Singapore-based Truly Nuts! has taken on that challenge. In 2024, it launched what it claims to be the world’s first savoury-flavoured Brazil nuts to local supermarkets.

Behind the brand is Singapore-headquartered agri-tech company White Lion Foods, which sources and processes Brazil nuts directly in the Amazon rainforest. The company operates two factories there—nearly 18,000 kilometres from the city-state—that can process up to one billion Brazil nuts each year.

We spoke with Gareth Lloyd, 48 and Greg Vickers, 46, the co-founders behind the business, to learn more about their entrepreneurial journey and how they managed to turn a nut that’s nearly impossible to farm into a global business.

They went from DJ tours to farming crops

Gareth and Greg’s path into the food industry was far from conventional.

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(Left to Right): Gareth Lloyd and Greg Vickers./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

They first met during university in the United Kingdom and spent years working as electronic music DJs, performing across more than 15 countries and touring extensively throughout Latin America.

It was during these travels that they became familiar with the region’s agricultural exports. Countries like Peru were producing high-quality foods, such as avocados and blueberries, that were increasingly appearing in global supermarkets.

When Gareth moved to Singapore in 2012, he noticed many of these products were starting to be stocked locally, sparking the idea that other lesser-known exports could also find a market.

And thus, White Lion Foods was born. That same year, Gareth roped in Greg, who had been living in Brazil since 2010, and the duo invested about £60,000 each (about S$102,000 each) to start the Singapore-based agri-tech venture.

Andean purple garlic./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

They first chose to focus on purple garlic. After extensive research, the duo discovered that these varieties were rare outside Peru, prompting them to concentrate on harvesting, processing, and exporting this unique crop grown high in the Andean mountains.

Over time, their business expanded globally, supplying purple garlic to markets “around the world,” and today, White Lion Foods claims to be the number one exporter of Andean purple garlic.

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It was a milestone for the business, but focusing solely on Peruvian garlic soon revealed a major challenge.

We were basically investing all year, and the garlic harvest would come around Sept. We’d sell until Dec, and then we had no revenue for the rest of the year.

Gareth Lloyd

In other words, the company had year-round operating costs but only a few months of income.

To solve the seasonal revenue problem, the founders began experimenting with other crops that could complement the garlic harvest cycle.

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Over the next few years, they experimented with a variety of crops—potatoes, onions, tomatoes, and even raisins—while exploring different supply chains. Many of these ventures, however, ended up as costly lessons.

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The Brazil nut fruit, also called a pod, typically contains 10 to 25 individual nuts./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

Eventually, in 2016, the duo discovered Brazil nuts.

Unlike purple garlic, Brazil nuts are harvested between Jan and May, creating a complementary revenue cycle. “We suddenly had this brilliant cycle,” Gareth said. “Brazil nuts collected during Q1 and Q2, and garlic in Q4.”

Hence, the founders decided to focus entirely on these two products: garlic and Brazil nuts, which are now known to be their signature offerings.

An “unusual” nut

brazil nut tree white lion foods worker crack open truly nutsbrazil nut tree white lion foods worker crack open truly nuts
The Brazil nut tree often tower over 50m in height and is a highly protected species of the Amazon./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

But harvesting Brazil nuts came with its own set of challenges.

They are unusual when compared to most other nuts found in supermarkets. Attempts to farm them commercially have failed, making their production entirely dependent on natural, wild ecosystems deep within the Amazon rainforest.

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The Brazil nut tree itself can live for hundreds of years, producing large, coconut-like fruits that fall naturally to the forest floor when ripe during the rainy season. Local collectors, many from communities living in Amazon regions, gather the fallen fruits, crack them open, and transport the in-shell nuts back to processing facilities—it is largely a manual process.

As such, alongside the factory it had established in the Peruvian Amazon for purple garlic, White Lion Foods built another facility deep in the Brazilian Amazon in 2016 to manage Brazil nut processing, hiring a workforce capable of handling the labour-intensive work.

Currently, the company employs more than 10,000 local and indigenous harvesters to collect the fallen fruits, along with over 3,000 staff across both its factories. Gareth claimed that his workers are paid more than 50% higher than the regional market rate because he believes in supporting the local communities.

truly nuts white lion foods processing brazil peru factoriestruly nuts white lion foods processing brazil peru factories
Brazil nuts are collected and processed mostly by hand, and shipped in bulk to across the world./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

At White Lion Foods’ factories, the Brazil nuts are carefully cleaned and dried in controlled environments until their moisture content drops to around 2–3%, ensuring optimal quality and long shelf life.

The nuts are then sorted into different sizes and packed before being exported to retailers and supermarkets such as Aldi and Hyundai department stores under white-label arrangements.

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Today, Gareth shared that White Lion Foods controls roughly 16% of the global Brazil nut market. The company also processes both Brazil nuts and purple garlic for partners and retailers across more than 45 countries.

Creating their own consumer brand

After years of supplying Brazil nuts as a white-label manufacturer, the founders decided to create their own consumer brand, with a focus on highlighting the Brazil nut itself.

For decades, these nuts had been sold mostly raw or coated in chocolate, so the duo set out to develop a way to introduce new flavours, particularly savoury ones, that the market had never seen before.

truly nuts white lion foods processing retailtruly nuts white lion foods processing retail
Truly Nuts! offers raw Brazil nuts that can be enjoyed on their own or in various flavours with or without other nuts./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods, Vulcan Post

But savoury seasoning was difficult to apply because of the natural structure of Brazil nuts, which prevented flavours from sticking well.

After months of trial and error—and collaboration with confectionery flavouring experts in the UK—the company finally developed a process that allows savoury seasonings to adhere properly, unlocking a whole new way to enjoy this nutrient-dense superfood.

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That led to the launch of Truly Nuts! in the UK in December 2023 through British travel retailer WHSmith’s outlets across the country and e-commerce platform, Amazon.

The brand started out with four Brazil nut flavours, including chilli, smoked, and chocolate variants.

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White Lion Foods manages the entire Brazil nut journey—from harvesting the nuts off the forest floor to packing them for retail shelves./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

Since March 2024, White Lion Foods begun selling Truly Nuts! products in Singapore. Its products are now stocked in retailers such as FairPrice, Cold Storage, and Guardian, with a 120g bag of Brazil nuts starting from S$8.50.

“The Brazil nut was such an undermarketed nut,” Gareth said. “People don’t know about it, they don’t know about the health benefits, and they don’t know that it supports the Amazon.”

Singapore was chosen as one of the brand’s early markets partly because of its growing appetite for healthier snacks. Moreover, that lack of awareness is precisely what the brand hopes to change.

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The healthy snack market here has been on the rise and is projected to grow by about 70% to US$890 million (S$1.14 billion) by 2033, driven by consumers seeking convenient options amid increasingly busy lifestyles.

That said, the brand has also had to adjust some flavours to suit Asian taste preferences. Local consumers, Gareth noted, tend to prefer slightly lower salt levels but stronger flavour profiles in certain variants.

And of course, maintaining product quality has also led to tradeoffs, which the duo is willing to make.

Chocolate-coated nuts, for instance, are sensitive to heat—especially in tropical climates like Singapore. Instead of using stabilising chemicals often found in confectionery products, Gareth shared that the company transports its chocolate variants in refrigerated conditions to prevent melting.

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While this incurs additional logistics costs, he believes it is necessary to keep the products free from additives.

Targeted expansion through travel retail

As White Lion Food and its Truly Nuts! brand grows, the company expects its facilities to process more than one billion Brazil nuts this year—equivalent to roughly 3,500 tonnes.

Revenue from its Brazil nut segment alone is projected to reach between US$40 million and US$45 million, with about US$2 million coming from Truly Nuts!. Gareth envisions White Lion Foods expanding to supply a third of the world’s Brazil nuts in the future.

Considering the brand is still relatively young, Gareth sees this as just the beginning. Rather than expanding into new countries all at once, the company plans to grow through travel retail first.

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truly nuts white lion foods workers whsmith united kingdomtruly nuts white lion foods workers whsmith united kingdom
(Left): Some members of the White Lion Foods team behind Truly Nuts!; (Right): Truly Nuts! is expanding through travel retailers like WHSmith./ Image Credit: White Lion Foods

It might sound surprising, but his reasoning is simple: airports give the brand direct access to international travellers, helping build awareness and demand before moving into broader retail markets.

By May, Truly Nuts! aims to go live in about 80 more WHSmith airport outlets across the globe, including Europe and Singapore.

The company is also developing new product lines, with Brazil nut butter seen as having particularly high potential.

Reflecting on the company’s unconventional journey—from DJ tours to running processing facilities in the Amazon—Gareth says entrepreneurship rarely follows a linear path.

“You’ve just got to get going with it,” he said. “As I like to say, you should build the plane while you’re flying.”

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  • Learn more about Truly Nuts! here and White Lion Foods here.
  • Read more stories we’ve written on Singaporean businesses here.

Featured Image Credit: Truly Nuts!

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OCSF explained: The shared data language security teams have been missing

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The security industry has spent the last year talking about models, copilots, and agents, but a quieter shift is happening one layer below all of that: Vendors are lining up around a shared way to describe security data. The Open Cybersecurity Schema Framework (OCSF), is emerging as one of the strongest candidates for that job.

It gives vendors, enterprises, and practitioners a common way to represent security events, findings, objects, and context. That means less time rewriting field names and custom parsers and more time correlating detections, running analytics, and building workflows that can work across products. In a market where every security team is stitching together endpoint, identity, cloud, SaaS, and AI telemetry, a common infrastructure long felt like a pipe dream, and OCSF now puts it within reach.

OCSF in plain language

OCSF is an open-source framework for cybersecurity schemas. It’s vendor neutral by design and deliberately agnostic to storage format, data collection, and ETL choices. In practical terms, it gives application teams and data engineers a shared structure for events so analysts can work with a more consistent language for threat detection and investigation.

That sounds dry until you look at the daily work inside a security operations center (SOC). Security teams have to spend a lot of effort normalizing data from different tools so that they can correlate events. For example, detecting an employee logging in from San Francisco at 10 a.m. on their laptop, then accessing a cloud resource from New York at 10:02 a.m. could reveal a leaked credential.

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Setting up a system that can correlate those events, however, is no easy task: Different tools describe the same idea with different fields, nesting structures, and assumptions. OCSF was built to lower this tax. It helps vendors map their own schemas into a common model and helps customers move data through lakes, pipelines, security incident and event management (SIEM) tools without requiring time consuming translation at every hop.

The last two years have been unusually fast

Most of OCSF’s visible acceleration has happened in the last two years. The project was announced in August 2022 by Amazon AWS and Splunk, building on worked contributed by Symantec, Broadcom, and other well known infrastructure giants Cloudflare, CrowdStrike, IBM, Okta, Palo Alto Networks, Rapid7, Salesforce, Securonix, Sumo Logic, Tanium, Trend Micro, and Zscaler.

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The OCSF community has kept up a steady cadence of releases over the last two years

The community has grown quickly. AWS said in August 2024 that OCSF had expanded from a 17-company initiative into a community with more than 200 participating organizations and 800 contributors, which expanded to 900 wen OCSF joined the Linux Foundation in November 2024. 

OCSF is showing up across the industry

In the observability and security space, OCSF is everywhere. AWS Security Lake converts natively supported AWS logs and events into OCSF and stores them in Parquet. AWS AppFabric can output OCSF — normalized audit data. AWS Security Hub findings use OCSF, and AWS publishes an extension for cloud-specific resource details. 

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Splunk can translate incoming data into OCSF with edge processor and ingest processor. Cribl supports seamless converting streaming data into OCSF and compatible formats.

Palo Alto Networks can forward Strata sogging Service data into Amazon Security Lake in OCSF. CrowdStrike positions itself on both sides of the OCSF pipe, with Falcon data translated into OCSF for Security Lake and Falcon Next-Gen SIEM positioned to ingest and parse OCSF-formatted data. OCSF is one of those rare standards that has crossed the chasm from an abstract standard into standard operational plumbing across the industry.

AI is giving the OCSF story fresh urgency

When enterprises deploy AI infrastructure, large language models (LLMs) sit at the core, surrounded by complex distributed systems such as model gateways, agent runtimes, vector stores, tool calls, retrieval systems, and policy engines. These components generate new forms of telemetry, much of which spans product boundaries. Security teams across the SOC are increasingly focused on capturing and analyzing this data. The central question often becomes what an agentic AI system actually did, rather than only the text it produced, and whether its actions led to any security breaches.

That puts more pressure on the underlying data model. An AI assistant that calls the wrong tool, retrieves the wrong data, or chains together a risky sequence of actions creates a security event that needs to be understood across systems. A shared security schema becomes more valuable in that world, especially when AI is also being used on the analytics side to correlate more data, faster.

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For OCSF, 2025 was all about AI

Imagine a company uses an AI assistant to help employees look up internal documents and trigger tools like ticketing systems or code repositories. One day, the assistant starts pulling the wrong files, calling tools it should not use, and exposing sensitive information in its responses.

Updates in OCSF versions 1.5.0, 1.6.0, and 1.7.0 help security teams piece together what happened by flagging unusual behavior, showing who had access to the connected systems, and tracing the assistant’s tool calls step by step. Instead of only seeing the final answer the AI gave, the team can investigate the full chain of actions that led to the problem.

What’s on the horizon

Imagine a company uses an AI customer support bot, and one day the bot begins giving long, detailed answers that include internal troubleshooting guidance meant only for staff. With the kinds of changes being developed for OCSF 1.8.0, the security team could see which model handled the exchange, which provider supplied it, what role each message played, and how the token counts changed across the conversation.

A sudden spike in prompt or completion tokens could signal that the bot was fed an unusually large hidden prompt, pulled in too much background data from a vector database, or generated an overly long response that increased the chance of sensitive information leaking. That gives investigators a practical clue about where the interaction went off course, instead of leaving them with only the final answer.

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Why this matters to the broader market

The bigger story is that OCSF has moved quickly from being a community effort to becoming a real standard that security products use every day. Over the past two years, it has gained stronger governance, frequent releases, and practical support across data lakes, ingest pipelines, SIEM workflows, and partner ecosystems.

In a world where AI expands the security landscape through scams, abuse, and new attack paths, security teams rely on OCSF to connect data from many systems without losing context along the way to keep your data safe.

Nikhil Mungel has been building distributed systems and AI teams at SaaS companies for more than 15 years.

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Our guest posting program is where technical experts share insights and provide neutral, non-vested deep dives on AI, data infrastructure, cybersecurity and other cutting-edge technologies shaping the future of enterprise.

Read more from our guest post program — and check out our guidelines if you’re interested in contributing an article of your own!

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AT&T’s New OneConnect Bundles Mobile and Home Internet but There’s a Catch

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It’s easier now to stay connected wherever you are, but getting to that point is still complicated. Wireless plans for phones and home internet plans are typically two separate things, with some crossover or discounts if you get them from the same provider.

AT&T OneConnect puts wireless and home service together in one bundle, with unlimited mobile data for up to 10 voice lines and gigabit broadband at home. However, it’s limited to new AT&T customers only. Here’s how the details break down.

OneConnect offers three pricing tiers, billed monthly:

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  • Individual — $90: One member, one voice line, up to three data devices and one household with 1Gbps internet.

  • Duo — $120: Two members, two voice lines, up to six data devices and one household with 1Gbps internet.

  • Family — $225: Unlimited members, up to 10 voice lines, up to 10 data devices and one household with 1Gbps internet.

One notable detail is that the OneConnect subscription prices listed above include taxes and fees, a practice that’s quickly becoming increasingly rare among major carriers. On many plans, including AT&T’s newest wireless plans, those costs are added on top.

For comparison, an AT&T bundle for two people with unlimited wireless and gigabit-speed home internet would cost about $225, including two lines on the AT&T Premium 2.0 plan and AT&T Internet 1000 fiber at $65. For one person, a single Premium 2.0 wireless plan costs $90, plus $65 for home fiber. (It’s also important to note that speeds and availability vary depending on your location.) 

As with any new connection plan, you’ll want to scrutinize the details so you know what you’re getting into.

For instance, OneConnect is currently limited to new customers; existing AT&T customers have no migration path to combine their broadband and wireless services under this digital umbrella. According to an AT&T spokesperson, “Once we gather customer feedback and validate the experience with our initial cohort, we will make OneConnect available to as many customers as possible.”

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It’s also entirely BYOD — or ‘bring your own device’: “Limited to bring your own eSIM compatible, unlocked smartphones, tablets, and wearables,” reads the fine print on AT&T’s press statement. There are no phone deals tied to OneConnect, although the spokesperson didn’t rule out that possibility in the future.

Unlike AT&T’s standalone wireless plans, OneConnect follows a one-size-fits-all model. One benefit of AT&T mobile service is that each person on an account can select their own plan. For instance, a parent might choose AT&T Premium 2.0, while a teen could opt for the cheaper but more limited AT&T Value 2.0.

Other major carriers offer home internet and mobile service bundles, but they’re not packaged in the same way. Verizon and T-Mobile, for example, provide discounts if you’ve signed up for both types of plans. 

AT&T is betting that account owners will want a simpler, bundled service instead of two separate plans. With unlimited talk, texting, data and AT&T’s Active Armor service for filtering out unwanted calls and texts, that’s a size that does seem to fit all.

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Lucid blames dip in Q1 sales on seat supplier issue

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Lucid Group finished 2025 on an upswing — building twice as many EVs as the previous year and reporting a 55% uptick in sales. Then the first quarter of 2026 arrived.

The company, which makes the Air sedan and Gravity SUV, reported Friday that it sold 3,093 vehicles in the first quarter, a 42% drop from the previous quarter and about 0.5% lower than the same period last year. It had built many more, about 5,500 in total.

Lucid said the sales dip, and the gap between production and deliveries, is not a demand problem. Instead, the company blames a supplier quality issue with its second-row seats, which disrupted deliveries of the Lucid Gravity for 29 days.

The supplier issue also prompted Lucid to recall more than 4,000 Gravity SUVs. Lucid told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that it discovered some of the anchors for the SUV’s second-row seat belts were not properly welded.

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Lucid spokesperson Nick Twork confirmed to TechCrunch that the decrease in sales was tied to problems with the supplier. He said that due to an unapproved change made by a supplier, the company issued a stop on Gravity sales that lasted most of February to ensure proper vehicle quality before restarting them. Twork made a point of noting Lucid’s more recent success, saying that “following eight record quarters, we showed strong results in both January and March which very nearly achieved year-over-year growth on their own.” 

Lucid said in its securities filing Friday that the issue has been addressed, and the company seems confident that disruption won’t affect its production goals.

Lucid reaffirmed its previously announce production guidance of between 25,000 and 27,000 vehicles this year. Lucid built 18,378 EVs in 2025. That would represent an increase of as much as 47% from last year.

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Lucid’s seat supplier troubles come as the company prepares to start building its first vehicle on a new lower-cost platform aimed at the mass market. Lucid has said that first vehicle will cost around $50,000, a price point that will put it in direct competition with the upcoming Rivian R2 SUV, as well as existing products like the Tesla Model Y, Tesla Model 3, and Chevrolet Equinox EV.

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Seattle VR gaming studio Polyarc announces ‘significant’ layoffs

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Moss: Book II. (Polyarc screenshot)

Polyarc, the Seattle-based VR gaming developer behind the award-winning Moss series, announced that it’s had to “significantly reduce the size of the company.”

The announcement, via LinkedIn on Monday, notes that the layoffs come after “an unsuccessful team-wide effort to secure funding following the cancellation of a major project.”

The company, which had around 52 employees according to LinkedIn, did not specify how many were affected, but said it plans to share a spreadsheet with information about those who were impacted to help them make connections in new job searches.

Polyarc was founded in 2016 by Tam Armstrong, Danny Bulla, and Chris Alderson, all three of whom had formerly worked on Destiny at Bungie. The studio’s debut project, the fantasy adventure Moss, came out in 2018 to critical and commercial success, which led to both a 2021 sequel and a multiplayer spinoff in 2023.

The Moss series, which began as exclusives for the PlayStation VR platform before going multiplatform, is on the short list of candidates for VR gaming’s “killer app.” In Moss, players take the role of a Reader, an unseen individual who discovers a magical book in a forgotten library. That book allows you to watch and affect events in the fantasy world of Moss, where a young mouse named Quill is on a quest to save her kingdom.

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The problem for the VR market, however, is that much of it is driven by Meta, and Meta has been steadily stepping back from its VR endeavors for the better part of the last couple of years. In January, another wave of VR layoffs at Meta closed several studios and dramatically lowered the headcount at Bellevue, Wash.-based Camouflaj.

There are still major players in VR gaming, such as Valve and its upcoming Steam Frame. It’d be a mistake to say the sector is dead or dying, but Meta drove so much of the conversation around VR that its slow abandonment has destabilized the format.

In addition, the last three years have been a tough time to work in the video game industry, as numerous companies have been forced to slim or shut down. Other recently affected studios in the Pacific Northwest include Phoenix Labs, Monolith Productions, and Rec Room.

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Amazon meets FedEx Office: A seamless return and one very dumb question about stamps

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A microchip pet door awaits its fate at the FedEx Office on NW 46th Street in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

For a while now, since the closure of the Amazon Fresh Pickup in Seattle, I’ve been complaining about having to drive across the Ballard Bridge to Whole Foods to do my Amazon returns. 

So when news emerged that FedEx Office locations are now part of Amazon’s drop-off network, I jumped at the chance to try it. Turns out there’s a FedEx Office on the way to GeekWire HQ, near the PCC on NW 46th Street (across from the “Up” house in the Ballard Blocks complex).

I walked in with a microchip pet door (long story), showed the QR code on my phone, got it scanned, handed over the unpackaged item, and walked out with a receipt. No box, tape, or label required, just as with other drop-off locations. There was no line.

The refund hit my account the same day.

The one thing that made me scratch my head is that, unlike returning something at a Kohl’s or Whole Foods, there’s no real ancillary benefit for FedEx Office. I dropped off the package and there was nothing else to do in the store. I had no copies to make, nothing to ship, and no need for any of the miscellaneous supplies in their limited displays.

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However, I was in need of traditional U.S. Postal Service stamps, so I asked if they sold them, and the guy looked at me like I was a complete idiot. Fair enough.

But for pure convenience, it seems like a win for Amazon customers. 

Amazon and FedEx severed their logistics relationship back in 2019 as Amazon built out its own delivery network. Now they’re patching things up, and more than 1,500 FedEx Office locations are accepting returns as part of a network of over 10,000 drop-off points nationwide. 

We discussed this (and much more) on this week’s GeekWire Podcast. Listen above, and subscribe to GeekWire in Apple PodcastsSpotify, or wherever you listen.

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KeeperDB brings zero-trust database access to privileged access management

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Database credentials remain one of the most common attack vectors in enterprise breaches, yet most organisations still manage them through shared spreadsheets, hardcoded connection strings, or standalone credential vaults with no session oversight. Keeper Security, the Chicago-based cybersecurity company best known for its password management platform, is attempting to close that gap with KeeperDB, a new capability that embeds database access controls directly into its privileged access management (PAM) platform.

The product was announced at RSA Conference 2026 in San Francisco, where Keeper also collected 18 industry awards across categories including password management, privileged access management, and zero-trust security.

What KeeperDB actually does

KeeperDB adds a vault-native database access interface to KeeperPAM, Keeper’s unified privileged access management platform. In practical terms, this means developers, database administrators, and security teams can connect to MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, and Microsoft SQL Server databases directly from the Keeper Vault, without exposing credentials in plaintext or relying on separate database management tools.

Every database session is governed by centralised policies, with full session recording for audit and compliance purposes. The idea is straightforward: if organisations already store their passwords, secrets, and privileged credentials in Keeper, database access should live there too, rather than requiring a separate tool with its own credential store.

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“KeeperDB represents a natural evolution of our zero-trust architecture,” said Darren Guccione, CEO and co-founder of Keeper Security. “By embedding database access directly into the vault, we eliminate the credential sprawl that creates risk in most enterprise environments.”

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The credential sprawl problem

The challenge KeeperDB addresses is well documented. Database credentials in most organisations are scattered across configuration files, environment variables, CI/CD pipelines, and individual developer machines. When an employee leaves or a credential is compromised, tracking down every instance of that credential becomes an exercise in archaeology.

Traditional database access tools compound the problem. Each tool maintains its own connection profiles and saved credentials, creating multiple copies of sensitive information outside any centralised governance framework. For organisations subject to SOC 2, HIPAA, PCI DSS, or similar compliance requirements, this fragmentation makes audit preparation significantly more time-consuming.

KeeperDB’s approach consolidates database access under the same zero-knowledge encryption and policy engine that already governs passwords, SSH keys, API tokens, and remote desktop sessions in KeeperPAM. Credentials are never exposed to users in plaintext, access is granted based on role-based policies, and every query session is recorded.

Proxy mode for existing workflows

Recognising that many teams have established workflows with existing database clients, Keeper is also introducing KeeperDB Proxy. This companion feature allows developers to continue using their preferred tools (pgAdmin, MySQL Workbench, DBeaver, and similar clients) while routing connections through Keeper’s infrastructure. The proxy maintains centralised policy enforcement, credential protection, and session visibility without requiring teams to abandon their existing tooling.

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This is a pragmatic concession. Asking database administrators to switch from tools they have used for years is a reliable way to generate friction and reduce adoption. By offering both a native vault interface and a proxy mode, Keeper is betting that organisations will adopt whichever path creates the least disruption.

A broader PAM strategy

KeeperDB is the latest addition to a platform that has expanded considerably beyond its password management origins. KeeperPAM now includes password and passkey management, secrets management for DevOps and CI/CD pipelines, privileged session management with recording, remote browser isolation, secure remote desktop and SSH access via Keeper Connection Manager, and now database access.

The company’s strategy is to consolidate multiple point solutions into a single platform with a single credential store and a single policy engine. For managed service providers (MSPs), Keeper announced a revamped 2026 partner programme in February with tiered discounts and expanded enablement resources, suggesting that the mid-market and channel are key growth targets alongside direct enterprise sales.

The F1 connection

Keeper’s RSAC presence coincided with the company’s broader visibility push. Now in its third season as the official cybersecurity partner of the Atlassian Williams F1 Team, Keeper launched a global advertising campaign in March 2026 featuring driver Alex Albon. The campaign, filmed during pre-season testing in Bahrain, draws parallels between the real-time data protection required in Formula 1 operations and the identity-first security model that Keeper promotes for enterprise environments.

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Williams uses KeeperPAM to protect passwords, infrastructure secrets, and privileged accounts both at its Grove headquarters and trackside, where race strategy, telemetry, and engineering systems depend on tightly controlled access to sensitive data.

What this signals

The broader trend KeeperDB reflects is the continued consolidation of identity and access management tools. Organisations that once maintained separate solutions for password management, secrets management, privileged access, remote connectivity, and database access are increasingly looking for unified platforms that reduce complexity and the number of credential stores to protect.

Keeper is not the only vendor pursuing this strategy. CyberArk, BeyondTrust, and Delinea have all expanded their PAM platforms in recent years. What distinguishes Keeper’s approach is its zero-knowledge architecture (meaning Keeper’s own servers cannot access customer data) and its consumer-grade user experience, which the company argues drives higher adoption rates than traditional enterprise PAM tools.

KeeperDB is available now for KeeperPAM customers, with support for MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, and Microsoft SQL Server. KeeperDB Proxy is expected to follow in a subsequent release.

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The Dreame Miracle Pro finally gives my scalp and hair the attention they deserve

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We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Dreame Miracle Pro: two-minute review

The Dreame Miracle Pro is a premium dryer that does a lot more than just dry your hair. Alongside six modes — Cool, Scalp, Essence, Comfort, Quick Dry, AI Smart — it comes with a built-in essence mister, a ring of red and near-infrared light therapy around the barrel, and a distance sensor that automatically adjusts heat and airflow depending on how close the dryer is to your head.

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Open Graphics Card Powers Cyberpunk “Laptop”

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For once, we can avoid debating in the comments what constitutes a “cyberdeck”, because [LCLDIY] does not refer to his cyberpunk masterpiece as such — he calls it a laptop. Considering the form factor is more like an all-in-one with a built-in laser projection keyboard, that’s arguably an even more controversial label to use, but as stylish this build is, it’s what’s inside it that interests us most.

This would be much easier than the original for our old eyes, especially in the dark.

No, not the cash-register motherboard that serves as the brain, though that has got to be worth some hacker cred. No, it’s the graphics card [LCLDIY] designed to drive 10″ electroluminescent (EL) displays that really has us interested. EL screens have a unique and beautiful glow that many find captivating, but we don’t see them all that often for two reasons. One is price: if you can’t find them surplus, they’re not cheap. The other is driving them, which [LCLDIY]’s project helps with, because the graphics card is open source.

The card is PCI, so you’ll need an adapter to plug it into a modern PCIe slot, or you’d have to redesign the thing. Since this isn’t elegant-engineering-a-day, we know which we’d do. The card is based on the CHIPS65548/5 chip, which means you should be able to find driver support under Linux and Windows. [LCLDIY] seems to be using Windows 2000, but that might just be because it’s all been downhill since then.

If the cyberpunk laptop wasn’t enough inspiration, [LCLDIY] also created a giant-scale Game Boy using the same 10″ screen and DIY graphics card. The soft glow of the EL display is particularly suited to the low-res nature of the retro games, as it’s not entirely unlike a CRT. You can see it in action–both builds!– in videos embedded below.

The last time somebody posted an EL display here, they had to build the driver board for it, too.

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Fixing Your Slow SSD Might Be Easier Than You Think

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Solid-state drives have completely changed the game for storage on computers and laptops. No moving parts, no RPM (revolutions-per-minute) to worry about, and lightning-fast read and write speeds. Even early SSDs were impressive, but once the M.2 format hit the market, things got even better. While SSDs are currently monstrously expensive, pretty much every modern desktop and laptop uses them, mostly due to the demands of modern software, video games, and operating systems.

Here’s the thing, though. Even though modern SSDs are super fast, and they will last a lot longer than most hard drives due to their lack of moving parts, they can still slow down. As you fill them up with data, which can happen very quickly if it’s a smaller SSD, that advertised speed of several thousand megabytes per second goes down fast. 

Fortunately, modern operating systems like Windows support a standard hardware command to help you solve this issue, with a very fitting name: TRIM. TRIM cleans up so-called blocks of data so that the SSD knows which ones to use, making it more efficient and increasing its lifespan.

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Why should you use TRIM?

Although it has a much cooler name, TRIM is essentially the modern equivalent of disk defragmentation, which Windows can still do. Defragmenting old hard drives brought all the data closer together in a more accessible spot, allowing the hard drive to cycle through the data more efficiently and make it faster. TRIM doesn’t work on the same principle as defragmentation, as SSDs and HDDs store data in different ways, but TRIM does serve a similar purpose. It increases your SSD’s efficiency and lifespan by clearing up empty blocks of data that are no longer in use.

Recent releases of Windows run this process automatically in the background, and you can check this through the drive’s properties from inside This PC on your computer. If the scheduled optimization (which you can find inside of Properties > Tools > Optimize) is set to On, then Windows runs TRIM for you on a weekly basis. 

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Another way to check if TRIM is on is through PowerShell. Simply run PowerShell with administrator privileges. Next, type “fsutil behavior query DisableDeleteNotify” without the quotes, then hit Enter.

If both values are zero, then TRIM is on, and you don’t need to worry about it. We would not recommend disabling it, as in this era of highly unpredictable SSD prices and the importance of keeping our data safe and secure, it’s always a good idea to keep your SSD on its best behavior, and TRIM definitely helps out with that.



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Please, Apple, let me turn off this one feature on my iPhone

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We’ve all been there at one point or another; you unlock your iPhone with the intention of checking the weather or sending a quick text, only to be greeted by a sea of little red circles. 

They’re everywhere, screaming for your attention like a digital toddler until you open the app and clear it. It’s a core part of the iOS experience, sure, but after years of staring at these tiny stress-inducers, I’ve had enough. The problem? I can’t really do much about it. 

App badges are my worst enemy

The problem with app badges is that they are designed to be addictive. They’re pitched as helpful reminders, but in reality, they’re designed to draw you into an app to see what’s “new,” even when there’s nothing of substance actually waiting for you. 

Every time I unlock my iPhone and see a bunch of badges on my home screen, I’m immediately distracted. Instead of doing what I actually set out to do, I find myself mindlessly scrolling through a feed just to make the number go away.

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iPhone 17 in handiPhone 17 in hand
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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It’s even more infuriating when the badges refuse to leave. We’ve all dealt with that one stubborn app – it’s the Oura app for me at the moment, oddly enough – where you’ve cleared every notification, read every message, and checked every update, yet the badge remains. 

For a company that prides itself on “clean” design, the home screen often looks like a messy desk covered in red Post-it notes.

No, I’m not going to disable them one by one

Now, I know what the power users among you are going to say, “Just go into Settings and turn them off!” And yes, technically, you can. 

But, there’s the catch: Apple forces you to do it on an app-by-app basis. I have hundreds of apps installed on my iPhone, and the idea of diving into the notification settings for every single one of them to toggle off “Badges” leaves me in a cold sweat – and besides, it’d take the better part of an afternoon.

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It begs the question: why isn’t there a system-wide toggle? Apple gives us “Silence Unknown Callers” and “Focus” modes to reclaim our digital sanity, yet it won’t give us a single master switch to kill the red dots. It’s a bizarre omission when you really think about it, especially for an operating system that is supposed to be the very pinnacle of user-friendliness.

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Android fixed the issue years ago

What makes this even harder to swallow is that our friends over in the Android camp solved this ages ago. 

Samsung Galaxy S26 UltraSamsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

On most Android skins, app badges (or “dots”) are intrinsically linked to the notification shade. If you swipe away a notification because you’ve seen it and decided it’s not important, the badge on the app icon vanishes too. A system that, in my mind, makes a lot of sense.

On iOS, the badge and the notification centre live in two completely different worlds. You can clear your entire lock screen, but those red circles will stay pinned to your icons until you manually open the app. 

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At the very least, Apple should give us the option to mirror that Android-style functionality in the Settings menu for those of us who find the current system a little bit archaic.

It probably won’t change any time soon

As much as I’d love to be optimistic, I’m not holding my breath. With the reveal of iOS 27 scheduled for WWDC in early June, the rumour mill is buzzing about the long-awaited reveal of the Gemini-powered Siri and even more powerful AI features, but a badge overhaul is nowhere to be found.

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Badges have been a staple of the iPhone since the very beginning, and despite Apple redesigning the notification system multiple times over the last decade, they’ve remained largely untouched. It seems Apple is perfectly happy with the status quo, even if it means our home screens remain a cluttered, distracting mess for the foreseeable future. 

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Please, Apple, prove me wrong.

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