Here’s a simple guide on how the fight between Israel and Iran has changed tech—from cyber battles to web use, systems, and world reactions: 1. Cyber Warfare: The Digital Fight Zone The fight didn’t just stay on land—it moved quickly into cyberspace. A cyber war blew up next to the real fight, with attacks using fake emails, harm to systems, and attacks based on info. Israel is said to have used cyber attacks to mess up Iranian air defenses and key systems, while Iranian hackers aimed at Israeli supply lines, shared private info, and caused trouble. Iranian hacker groups made web pages and used a chat app to plan attacks, harm sites, and share stolen info. One case: a group linked to Israel took about $90 million from an Iranian digital money place, and they tried to take over Iranian house cams. All over, firms and key places were told to expect more threats. Iranian fake e...
In the last five years, work has changed more than it did in the fifty years before that. The need to stay home made many more people work from home, mixed office plans became usual, and now AI is changing not only where we work, but also the way we do our jobs. By 2025, jobs don't have to stick to one place, office walls, or the same 9-to-5 days. Rather, they take shape around being able to change , using machines to help, and the team work of people and smart machines. Let's dig in. 1. At Home Work: Not Just for a Few Working from home has grown from a short-term fix to a long-term way of work. Many places now start with the home-work model, letting workers live where they like and work when they do best. Good side : Reach to worldwide talent and better balance of work and life. Hard side : Keeping the team feel strong when meeting face-to-face is rare. Tip : The top home workers in 2025 use tools like Trello, Asana, or Notion, along with AI to plan their day, to keep up ...