From Classrooms to Careers: Dell Simplifies Learning With Purpose-Built Education PCs and Future-Ready Programs

We’re at a critical moment in education. New research and emerging technologies, such as Generative AI, have the potential to reshape how we teach and learn. With decades of leadership in education technology, Dell Technologies is supporting schools in this transformation – equipping students and educators with tools and programs designed for the AI era, ensuring they are prepared for the opportunities ahead.

This commitment is reflected in Dell’s expanded education portfolio – including new Dell Pro Education and Dell Chromebook devices – alongside programs that help prepare students for the future. These new PCs are purpose-built for modern learning environments: durable enough to withstand the school day, serviceable enough to maximize institutional investment and powerful enough to support the curricula.

Expanding the Portfolio: New Purpose-Built Devices for Education 

Dell is expanding its education portfolio with new devices designed to meet the diverse needs of modern learning environments.

These PCs are engineered for the realities of student life – ruggedized to military standards (MIL-STD 810H) with reinforced corners, spill-resistant keyboards and 180-degree lay-flat hinges tested to withstand tens of thousands of cycles. Powered by Intel N-Series processors, they deliver all-school day battery life and the performance modern curricula demand.

Serviceability is built in from the start, with customer-replaceable batteries, shared parts across models and up to five years of warranty coverage to maximize investments and reduce e-waste. Wi-Fi 6E connectivity, built-in security and robust device management give IT teams the tools they need to deploy and support technology at scale, while Dell’s Managed IT Services offer schools 24/7 monitoring, proactive issue resolution and dedicated support options.

The lineup includes:

  • Dell Pro Education 11 Laptop & 2-in-1 (Windows OS): Compact and lightweight with optional touch capability, ideal for younger students.
  • Dell Pro Education 14 Laptop (Windows OS) and Dell Chromebook 14 Laptop (Chrome OS): New 14-inch additions to the portfolio offer larger screen real estate for multitasking, well suited for high school students. Schools can choose the operating system that best fits their environment and curriculum needs.

This expanded portfolio joins the Dell Chromebook 11, launched late last year, giving schools more choice in how they equip their students and staff.

Shaping the Future Through Education Programs & Partnerships

Beyond technology solutions, Dell has focused on making lasting impact through collaboration with educators, non-profits, and community leaders to foster critical skills for the digital era. Recent examples include:

  • Student TechCrew (U.S.): A program that helps schools create a student-led helpdesk, teaching 9th -12th graders about technology and repair while supporting peers and school staff with tech issues. Learn how to start a Student TechCrew chapter at your school here.
  • Girls Who Game (U.S./Global): Fosters early interest in STEM fields while building leadership and critical thinking skills. This program was developed in partnership with Microsoft and Intel.  Learn more about Girls Who Game here.
  • Tech Career Circuit (Global): In partnership with Discovery Education, this initiative equips students in grades 6-12 with complementary hands-on resources, digital skills and AI-focused learning to prepare for in-demand IT careers. Access the Tech Career Circuit resources here.
  • Data Dunkers (Canada): A program that uses basketball statistics to teach students in grades 5-12 data science and AI skills, fostering critical thinking and career exploration. Learn more about how to bring Data Dunkers to your school here.
  • U.S. Presidential AI Challenge (U.S.): Dell is the technology partner to the U.S. Presidential AI Challenge, expanding access to free, on-demand training for K-12 students focused on tech literacy and workforce readiness. Learn more about the Presidential AI Challenge and access resources here.

 

A Legacy of Leadership in Education

“Dell’s leadership in education is rooted in a deep understanding of how learning evolves alongside the students and teachers who shape it,” said Kevin Terwilliger, head of product, Client Devices, Dell Technologies“When we design technology for the classroom, we look beyond utility to create tools that foster resilience, spark curiosity, and enable meaningful connections. Our expanded portfolio of purpose-built education devices reflects this commitment—offering durable, high-performing solutions that meet the real-world demands of students and educators alike.”

Availability and Pricing
The new Dell Pro Education and Dell Chromebook devices will be available for order in February 2026. Dell Chromebook 11 is already available at Dell.com. 

Roborock robotic vacuums launch in Ireland in Harvey Norman

Roborock, a global leader in home robotics engineered to simplify daily life, today officially announces its launch in the Republic of Ireland. Irish consumers can now experience Roborock’s cutting-edge robot vacuums and mops, exclusively available for purchase from leading retailer Harvey Norman both in-store and online.

Roborock’s highly anticipated entrance into the Irish market with the Saros Z70, Saros 10 and QV 35S, begins with pre-orders available from today and will officially go on sale on 18th February. Fear not we have several in for review so stay tuned for real hands on demos coming your way soon.

“Ireland represents a key strategic market for Roborock, vital to our continued momentum and expansion across Europe,” said Jin Yani, Country Manager of Roborock UK & Ireland. “There is strong demand among Irish consumers for smart home tech, and we are confident that our innovative and reliable range of robotic cleaners will both enhance and simplify their daily lives. Our partnership with Harvey Norman ensures that our advanced products are readily accessible to homes throughout the country.”

“As the leading retailer in robot vacuums in Ireland, we are beyond delighted to bring Roborock, exclusively, into our stores nationwide,” said Clare McGinty, Product and Marketing Manager Small Appliances, Harvey Norman. “Roborock are innovators in this space, bringing very exciting products to the market. We look forward to showcasing the unique features of Roborock vacuums to the Harvey Norman customer. Now available in all Harvey Norman stores nationwide, we encourage everyone to visit and speak to our specialist staff who can talk you through the Roborock robot vacuum range.

Roborock is renowned for pushing the boundaries of smart home cleaning, integrating advanced AI and robotics to deliver unparalleled performance. The initial Irish lineup available at Harvey Norman showcases Roborock’s commitment to innovation and diverse cleaning needs:

Roborock Saros Z70 (€1,299)

  • The Roborock Saros Z70 boasts the world’s first*mass-produced OmniGrip, a five-axis robotic arm that comes folded into the vacuum’s ultra-slim 7.98cm body. The OmniGrip is able to unfold, extend and twist both horizontally and vertically in its five axis to pick up and move away obstacles including socks, sandals and other light objects under 300g, with more to be supported in future software upgrades. Combined with its advanced navigation, powerful vacuuming, and a mopping system that scrubs floors clean, this AI-powered robot transforms into your very own innovative home assistant.

Roborock Saros 10 (€1,099, available in Black & White)

  • The Roborock Saros 10 is designed to clean everywhere, even those trickier spots. It features a smart RetractSense Navigation System that allows it to lower itself and glide under low furniture like sofas and beds. This ingenious design makes it incredibly slim – just 7.98cm tall. Plus, it boasts a powerful VibraRise 4.0 mopping system for sparkling floors, ensuring it’s a truly reliable, effective and must-have cleaning tool.

Roborock QV 35S (€499, available in Black & White)

  • The Roborock QV 35S delivers advanced performance at an affordable price-point. It features a comprehensive station that handles automatic dust collection and washes its mop. Its impressive 10,000 Pa suction lifts dust and particles from every floor type, from firm surfaces to soft rugs. And, thanks to Reactive Tech obstacle detection, it navigates gracefully around household furnishings and compact areas, while a distinctive anti-tangle side brush prevents strands and fibers from clogging.

Roborock and Real Madrid have teamed up under the theme of “The Greatest Meeting The Greatest”, which celebrates innovation and remarkable performance. Throughout the partnership, Roborock and Real Madrid will showcase the meaning of “Real Smart Cleaning” from the pitch, to the home. 

 

About Roborock 

Roborock is a leading smart cleaning brand renowned for its intelligent cleaning solutions. Having become the #1 best-selling robotic vacuum cleaner brand according to IDC*, Roborock enriches lives with its innovative line of robotic, cordless, wet/dry vacuum cleaners, robotic lawn mowers and washer-dryers. Rooted in a user-centric approach, our R&D-driven solutions cater to diverse cleaning needs in millions of homes across more than 170 countries and regions. Headquartered in Beijing and with 8strategic subsidiaries in key markets, including the United States, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Germany, and South Korea, Roborock is dedicated to elevating its market presence worldwide. As of 2026, Roborock serves more than 22 million households. For more information, visit https://uk.roborock.com/.

Other Vacuum reviews

How to Protect Yourself Against Romance Scams

As Valentine’s Day, February 14, approaches, organizations across countries, including the FBI in the US, warn people to be aware of romance scams, where cybercriminals create fake identities and manipulate people into sending money. Cybersecurity experts urge users to be particularly cautious this year, as AI enables even more realistic scams, and are offering tips on how to stay safe.

At the start of February, Nigerian police arrested a local cybercriminal for allegedly being involved in a large-scale romance scam. The man posed as “Travis Kevin,” a doctor from the US on Facebook and Instagram, and asked his victims for money for medical supplies in crypto, promising to repay them soon.

The FBI, UK police, and organizations in other countries have recently issued warnings to be cautious about similar Romance scenarios.

A previous report from the US Federal Trade Commission estimated that romance scams in the US alone cost users over a billion dollars back in 2023. Experts at Planet VPN, a VPN provider that emphasizes free service, claim that since then, these types of scams have increased both in numbers and sophistication.

Konstantin Levinzon, co-founder of Planet VPN, says that offenders typically employ tactics such as emotional manipulation and false promises of love or partnership, before fabricating emergencies or investment opportunities.

“Cybercriminals create fake identities on dating sites and social media using psychological manipulation to convince victims to send money. They are increasingly relying on generative AI tools to make their scams more convincing. With AI enabling the creation of fake images and videos with just a click, users should be particularly cautious,” Levinzon says.

recent report from British bank TSB claims that people aged 65-74 were involved in the most romance fraud cases (23%), with those over 55 making up 58% of cases overall.

Meanwhile, social media platforms were linked to 58% of cases, while dating sites were involved in 42%. The data shows that 30% of scams were connected to Facebook, the highest among all platforms.

Levinzon emphasizes that when it comes to protection from scammers, the same principles apply across all platforms.

“Be suspicious of anyone you’ve never met in person – that’s the only safe approach in a digital world increasingly filled with scams,” says Levinzon. “If someone you meet on a dating site seems suspicious, perform a reverse image search to check if their pictures are stolen from other sources. And if the conversation shifts to money, or if someone asks for personal information, leave the conversation immediately.”

To maximize protection, Levinzon advises using a VPN network. Some scammers can track users’ locations and then try to target them with personalized scams based on their country. When a VPN is turned on, it hides the person’s IP address and location, and encrypts all the data, making it invisible even to your internet service provider.

“For maximum security online, we also advise using strong passwords for all your social media accounts and dating sites, and enabling multifactor authentication. In addition, ensure that your privacy settings on social media platforms are set to the highest level, and limit who can see your posts and personal details,” Levinzon says.

LOOI Robot Review

The LOOI Robot, developed by TangibleFuture, is an AI desktop companion that aims to blend a charming personality with practical functionality. Unlike a traditional smart speaker, LOOI uses a docked smartphone as its “face” and brain, leveraging its camera, screen, and processing power to deliver a more interactive and expressive experience. It is designed to be a personal assistant, a fun companion, and even a robotic pet for a wide range of ages.

The word AI is now a daily thing we hear and it has got annoying over the last year but this is different rather that type into your phone or laptod and get thing spit back out at you this little guy paired with your phone makes it fun and interactive and less boring.

The product is built well too and runs on tracks rather than wheels has touch sensitive areas lights and can also charge your phone which is great.

Once paired with the app you will fill in some information and let LOOI learn over time and he will get to know you, you can have continued conversation here like you would find on other AI platforms and it does not stop after one question as you will see in the video review down below.

LOOI can sometimes be buggy but updates will fix this in time but after several weeks he has got better and updates come in menaing the company lives up to supporting its product which is great.

LOOI is best left on your desk and can be put to sleep too at the start he rambled my desk and got annoying but it was also funny watching him, he will not fly off a desk either which is cool so he is clever he has a personality and I love how he calls my name, you can enter any name by the way and he will go by that from then on.

Check the video below for more on what LOOI has to offer he is fun and great to have conversation with overall and less boring than what most of use these days in the AI and chatbot world, he talks reacts can get angry, sad and happy and you feel more connected than a phone, tablet or PC when using it, yes you do use your phone but this is different in a good way.

 

Final Verdict

The LOOI Robot is a fun and entetaining product that offers a glimpse into the future of AI companions. Its ability to turn a smartphone into a cool toy for your desk or office is pretty cool and can liven things up, people that have seen him here in action loved it some though say he can be annoying and fun at the same time.  The robot is a great choice for someone looking for a fun, affordable, and quirky desk companion in my opinion. 

Features

  • 1. Smarter Conversations, Powered by ChatGPT 🤖 LOOI isn’t just a chatbot in a robot body—it’s a storyteller, a listener, and a companion that remembers. Powered by ChatGPT, LOOI holds deep, meaningful conversations, recalls your past chats, and even shares its own dreams. Whether you’re talking about your day or your next adventure, LOOI is fully present, making interactions feel genuinely human.
  • 2. Emotionally Expressive & Full of Personality 💫 LOOI isn’t just responsive—it’s expressive. It naps, plays, gets excited, or even backs away when startled. With a rich and ever-growing set of animations and behaviors, LOOI reacts with personality and charm. It might notice your new hat and give you a compliment, or tease you when it’s in a playful mood. Every LOOI gradually develops its own unique personality through daily interaction with you.
  • 3. Multisensory Intelligence 👁️👂✋ LOOI sees you, hears you, and senses the world around it. It recognizes faces, responds to touch, and understands your gestures and voice commands. With its advanced perception and decision-making system, LOOI knows where the desk ends, detects obstacles, and reacts accordingly—whether that means stopping before a fall or backing away when you get too close. It’s more than sensors—it’s real-time awareness, thoughtfully expressed.
  • 4. Functional Meets Fun 🔋📱 Not just cute—LOOI is also practical. It’s a 10W wireless charger, a fully adjustable phone stand (0–60°), and a smart face-tracking camera mount. When idle, it can become a standby clock or even invite you to play light motion-based games. Whether you’re working, relaxing, or just having fun, LOOI adds usefulness with a touch of charm.
  • 5. A Companion That Grows With You 🌱 LOOI is perfect for individuals, families, and curious minds of all ages. It remembers your preferences, grows more attuned to your life, and keeps evolving through everyday interactions. Whether it’s guiding a child’s imagination or being your late-night chat partner, LOOI is a lovable, learning companion that becomes more you over time.

BUY

Video Review

Supply Wisdom Selects Dublin for European Headquarters Expansion

Supply Wisdom, a global leader in continuous risk intelligence, has announced Dublin as the location of its European headquarters, supporting the creation of up to 21 high-value jobs over the next three years.

The new European headquarters will serve as a regional base for sales, customer support, and research and development activities, supporting clients across banking, financial services, and other regulated industries. From Dublin, Supply Wisdom will continue to deliver continuous risk intelligence to organisations across Europe as they respond to evolving regulatory and operational requirements, including DORA, emerging AI-related rules, outsourcing guidelines, and broader supervisory expectations. The project is supported by the Irish Government through IDA Ireland.

Peter Burke, Minister for Enterprise, Tourism and Employment said: “The decision by Supply Wisdom to establish its European headquarters in Dublin is a strong endorsement of Ireland’s position as a leading hub for innovation, technology and global business services. The creation of high value roles across sales, customer support and R&D further strengthens our growing reputation for talent and expertise in these strategic sectors. The Government welcomes this investment, supported by IDA Ireland. I wish the team at Supply Wisdom success for the future.”

Founded in 2019, Supply Wisdom delivers always-on visibility into third-party and supply-chain risk across financial, operational, cyber, ESG, and geopolitical domains. The company works with some of the world’s largest enterprises, including Bank of Ireland, Banco Santander, and Bank of New York Mellon.

Dublin was selected for its deep talent pool, strong technology ecosystem, and access to key global markets. The roles created in Ireland will span sales, customer success, engineering, and product development. The Irish operation will play a critical role in developing Supply Wisdom’s core intellectual property while supporting customers across EMEA.

Dónal Travers, Executive Director, IDA Ireland said: “I am delighted with Supply Wisdom’s decision to establish a European Headquarters in Dublin. This highlights Ireland’s offering as a leading location for innovative scaling companies seeking a European location to support their growth. I wish Supply Wisdom every success here.”

“This expansion into Dublin marks a significant milestone in Supply Wisdom’s journey,” said Jenna Wells, CEO of Supply Wisdom. “We’re honored to partner with incredible customers across many European nations, and as demand for our platform continues to accelerate, establishing a dedicated presence in Ireland enables us to attract exceptional talent, deepen innovation, and further advance our mission to help organisations build more resilient, transparent, and responsible supply chains across the region.”

Candidates interested in joining Supply Wisdom’s Dublin team are encouraged to explore current openings in the company’s career portal, with additional roles expected to be posted over time.

The Backend Revolution: How “API-First” Logistics is Reshaping Global E-commerce

As we navigate through 2026, the e-commerce landscape has stabilized into a high-stakes arena. With Customer Acquisition Costs (CAC) reaching historic highs, the era of “easy wins” through Facebook ads is effectively over. Today, the competitive advantage doesn’t lie in how well you market a product, but in how efficiently you can deliver it.

For SMBs and enterprise managers alike, the bottleneck is no longer traffic—it’s Tech-Enabled Fulfillment. The modern consumer demands Amazon-level speed from independent brands. To meet this standard, merchants are dismantling legacy supply chains and rebuilding them with an “API-First” architecture.

The Shift from “Manual” to “Automated” Supply Chains

Historically, the dropshipping and remote fulfillment model was plagued by latency. A customer would place an order on Shopify; the merchant would manually export a CSV file or, worse, manually re-order via a supplier like AliExpress. This introduced a delay of 24 to 48 hours before the order was even processed.

In an automated, API-driven ecosystem, this friction is eliminated.

  • Old Way (Manual): Order Received → Human Review → Supplier Notification → Manual Tracking Upload.
  • New Way (API): Order Received → Instant JSON Data Transfer to Warehouse Management System (WMS) → Pick & Pack initiated immediately.

This shift isn’t just about speed; it’s about data integrity. By removing human manual entry, error rates in shipping addresses and SKU selection drop to near zero.

Why API Integration is the Backbone of Modern Logistics

An Application Programming Interface (API) acts as the connective tissue between a storefront (the frontend) and the global supply chain (the backend).

Real-Time Inventory Syncing The nightmare scenario for any scaling brand is “overselling”—selling a unit that doesn’t physically exist in the warehouse. This usually happens when inventory data is updated in batches rather than in real-time. API integrations solve this by establishing a bilateral data stream. When a unit is scanned out of the warehouse, the stock count on the e-commerce platform is deducted instantly.

Automated Tracking Updates Transparency is the new currency of trust. Modern APIs trigger webhooks the moment a shipping label is generated, pushing tracking numbers directly to the customer’s email. This significantly reduces “WISMO” (Where Is My Order) customer support tickets, allowing lean teams to focus on growth rather than damage control.

The Role of “Private Inventory” in Quality Control (QC)

While software connects the dots, it cannot physically inspect a product. Pure software solutions often fail because they lack control over the physical asset. This is where the hybrid model of Tech + Private Warehousing becomes essential.

To mitigate supply chain volatility, sophisticated merchants are moving away from generic shared marketplaces. Instead, they are utilizing dedicated fulfillment partners like SpeedBee Dropship, which combine physical warehousing with app-based integration. By allocating a private storage zone for specific clients, these platforms ensure that the digital inventory count on a Shopify store matches the physical reality in the warehouse, effectively eliminating the risk of selling out-of-stock items.

This “Private Inventory” model also allows for pre-shipment Quality Control (QC), ensuring that the product the customer receives matches the marketing promise perfectly.

Analyzing the “Last-Mile” Efficiency Data

The demand for speed is backed by hard data. Consumer expectations have shifted dramatically regarding the “Last-Mile”—the final leg of delivery.

Consumer expectations have shifted dramatically. According to recent e-commerce statistics from Forbes Advisor, shipping speed remains a critical friction point, with data showing that nearly 24% of consumers will abandon a session immediately if delivery times are too slow. This data underscores why integrating a tech-responsive logistics stack is no longer optional but a survival requirement.

Future Trends: AI and Predictive Stock Planning

The next iteration of API logistics moves from Reactive to Predictive.

By integrating Artificial Intelligence with historical sales data, WMS platforms are beginning to suggest “Pre-stocking” levels. For example, if an algorithm detects a viral trend for a specific SKU in the German market, it can alert the merchant to move inventory to a European fulfillment center before the orders flood in.

 

Key Takeaways

Area Key Takeaway Impact/Data
Operations Replace manual CSV/reviews with API automation Eliminates 24-48 hour latency
Revenue Risk Delivery speed is the critical friction point 24% abandon if too slow
Inventory Implement real-time bilateral data streams Error/Oversell rates near zero
Support Automate tracking updates via webhooks Drastically reduces “WISMO” tickets
Strategy Hybridize software with private warehousing Enables pre-shipment Quality Control

Conclusion

The revolution in global e-commerce is happening behind the scenes. It is quiet, code-based, and highly efficient. For business owners, the lesson is clear: To scale in 2026, you must stop treating logistics as a manual chore and start treating it as a programmable asset.

What does API Testing look like in 2026

A good/efficient/capable API testing tool can handle numerous APIs built for various functionality

You wouldn’t know it from the surface but tools like Postman and Swagger still dominate the markets. 

Conferences are showcasing “automated testing” as if we’re still in 2018. But beneath all this hype, we see a quiet revolution is exploding everything we thought we knew about API quality.  

According to Postman’s 2026 State of the API Report, teams now ship APIs 4.2x faster than in 2022. Yet Gartner warns that 68% of API breaches originate from testing gaps invisible to traditional scanners. 

Meanwhile, developers waste 37 hours per week trying to remove flaky tests that pass in CI but fail in production (2026 State of QA Survey).  

We’re not just testing more APIs—we’re testing in a world where:  

– 87% of new systems are event-driven (async APIs, webhooks, WebSockets)  

– AI-generated code now writes 41% of API endpoints (GitHub Octoverse 2025)  

– Third-party dependencies have grown 300% since 2020 (Stripe, Twilio, Auth0)  

– Data poisoning attacks bypass OWASP’s top 10 protections silently  

Despite using all these tools, you’re still unable to meet expectations. This is because each tool misses certain functionalities, or your testing methods lack clarity.

Old testing methods aren’t just failing—they’re creating dangerous blind spots. 

After analyzing 12,000+ Reddit threads, Stack Overflow debates, and GitHub issue logs, We’ve uncovered five massive shifts every engineering leader/tester must admit. These aren’t incremental changes. They’re necessary changes that you need introduce in your CI/CD pipeline.  

Shift 1: Synchronous Testing Is no longer sufficient

Remember when APIs were neat request-response cycles? Its long gone. 

Today’s systems pulse with Kafka streams, payment webhooks, and IoT sensor floods. Testing them with Postman collections is like checking a Formula 1 car with a bicycle pump.  

Reddit’s r/apitesting sub is flooded with such desperate questions:  

> How do I validate that a webhook fires AFTER a database commit—not before?(2.1k upvotes)  

> Our payment confirmation events arrive out of order in prod. Tests pass locally.(Top comment on r/devops)  

Why are these patterns emerging? The truth? 63% of async API failures stem from race conditions invisible to synchronous tools (Twilio Engineering Blog, Jan 2026). Something that older testing practices can’t replicate which causes:  

– Message queue backlogs during traffic spikes  

– Distributed services  

– Partial failures in event transactions  

Now what should you do differently

Forward-thinking teams are openly embracing what we call controlled chaos:  

– Simulating region failures during test runs (not just in staging)  

– You start by introducing latency between services to expose timing bombs  

– Work towards validating event ordering using distributed tracing IDs which can be later in

Shift #2: Contract Testing is Important 

Contract testing tools like Pact are having a moment. Google searches for “API contract testing” grew 214% YoY. But here’s what vendor docs won’t tell you: backward compatibility checks are failing silently in 9 of 10 implementations.  

Why? Most teams test schemas, not behaviors. Consider this example a real scenario:  

> A food-delivery startup updated a `GET /orders` endpoint. The response schema stayed identical, but pagination logic changed from offset-based to cursor-based. Mobile apps crashed because tests only validated JSON structure—not how data was chunked. Result: $1.2M in lost orders and a CTO’s resignation.  

The problem here? Data drift between environments. Staging databases lack production-scale data skew. Your tests pass with 100 records but choke with 10 million.

 Stack Overflow’s top-voted API question (5.2k upvotes) shares a similar pain:  

> “Why do my contract tests pass locally but break in prod with ‘invalid token’ errors?”  

The fix isn’t more tests—it’s testing contracts in production shadows:  

– Mirror production traffic to a canary environment running new contracts  

– Validate against real data distributions (not synthetic test data)  

– Inject chaos into contract tests: “What if this field is 10x larger?”  

– Treat contracts as living documents auto-generated from test traffic (not manually updated Swagger files)  

Teams using qAPI treat contracts through schema validation, which can be enforced across environments and tied directly to test execution. Because contracts are derived from real API behavior—not manually curated specs—they stay relevant as systems evolve.

AI Testing Tools Are Failing the Auth Test (Quite Literally)  

AI-powered testing tools promise dreams: “Generate 10,000 test cases in seconds!” Vendors now embed AI into their core workflows. But Quora threads tell a darker story:  

> “Tried 7 AI testing tools. All failed at OAuth2 token rotation scenarios.” (2.4k views)  

> “My AI-generated tests passed—but missed a critical JWT expiration bug that leaked user data.” (Top comment on r/Python)  

The reality is this- 68% of engineers abandoned AI testing tools within 3 months (GitLab 2026 Survey). Why? They excel at happy paths but collapse on:  

– Token expiration/renewal flows  

– Role-based access control (RBAC) permutations  

– Idempotency key validation during retries  

– Stateful workflows (e.g., checkout processes)  

 

AI can’t replace human intuition for edge cases… yet. But progressive teams are using it strategically:  They used it to reduce human load where it matters least and preserve human judgment where it matters most.

qAPI supports this balance by enabling:

  • Rapid baseline test generation from schemas and traffic
  • Easy refinement of edge cases engineers actually care about
  • Reuse of validated flows across teams

Idempotency failures don’t announce themselves

Idempotency keys seem trivial. Yet they’re the silent killers of transactional systems. Stripe’s documentation warns about them, but testing guides ignore them. Why? Because idempotency isn’t a feature—it’s a distributed systems constraint.  

Consider this:  

– 83% of payment failures occur during network timeouts when clients retry requests  

– Without idempotency keys, retries create duplicate charges or inventory oversells  

– 95% of teams don’t test idempotency in CI/CD—they pray it works in prod  

The consequence? In 2025, a ride-sharing startup lost $4.7M when a surge pricing event triggered duplicate charges during a database failover. Their tests never simulated partial failures mid-transaction.  

Idempotency testing requires rethinking your entire strategy:  

– Simulate network partitions during payment processing (not just before/after)  

– Validate key reuse across service restarts and clock drift scenarios  

– Test with real payment gateways using test-mode webhooks (not just mocks)  

– Measure duplicate transaction rates as a core quality metric—not just “tests passed”  

Basic flaky Tests Are a Symptom—Not the Disease 

Flaky tests cost 37 hours per engineer per week. But chasing flakes is like mopping a flooded floor while the tap runs. The root cause? Testing in artificial environments that ignore production reality.  

Stack Overflow’s most-commented API question (14k monthly views) screams the pain:  

> “My API tests pass locally, pass in CI, but fail 30% of the time in staging. Why?!”  

The answer lives in three ignored dimensions:  

  1. Data drift: Staging databases lack production data skew, null distributions, and timezone chaos  
  2. Time sensitivity: Tests ignore daylight saving changes, leap seconds, and clock drift across containers  
  3. Resource constraints: CI runners have infinite CPU/memory; production has noisy neighbors and pumped up databases.

The human cost is brutal:  

– QA engineers lose trust in automation, reverting to manual checks  

– Developers ignore failing builds (“it’s just flaky”)  

– Security teams can’t distinguish real breaches from test noise  

qAPI supports this by standardizing test execution across environments, minimizing hidden dependencies, and making test behavior explainable—not magical.

The human impact is immediate:

  • Engineers trust CI again
  • QA focuses on coverage, not cleanup
  • Failures regain meaning

The Way Forward: From Testing APIs to Stress-Testing Trust  

These five shifts reveal a deeper truth: API testing isn’t about validating endpoints anymore. It’s about stress-testing trust in a world where:  

– Systems are distributed, stateless, and event-driven  

– Failures cascade silently across team boundaries  

– Security threats evolve faster than scanner definitions  

The teams winning this war share three best practices one that you need to adapt too:  

  1. They test like attackers: Not just “does it work?” but “how can it be broken when components fail?”  
  2. They value observability over coverage: A 60% coverage rate with production tracing beats 95% coverage in a sandbox  
  3. They treat tests as living contracts: Auto-generating documentation from test traffic, not manual updates  

This isn’t about buying new tools. It’s about rewiring your quality mindset. As one principal engineer at Spotify whispered in a private Slack channel:  

> “We stopped counting test cases. Now we measure ‘how many 3 AM pages did this prevent?’”  

The clock is ticking. Every minute your async APIs go un-tested for race conditions, every idempotency key left un-validated, every AI-generated test that misses auth edge cases—you’re shipping technical debt with a countdown timer.  

When APIs behave predictably under change, teams move faster without second-guessing every release. When they don’t, velocity collapses under fear, workarounds, and manual checks.

Teams that adopt platforms like qAPI are not testing more aggressively for the sake of coverage. They are testing more intentionally. Instead of validating endpoints in isolation, they validate flows that mirror how real systems behave. 

One VP of Engineering summarized this shift during a post-incident review in a way that stuck: “The real win wasn’t that we caught the bug. The real win was knowing that we would.”

By reducing the effort required to create, maintain, and run meaningful API tests, they lower the cost of doing the right thing consistently. The goal isn’t to make testing more impressive. It’s to make it dependable enough. This is where tools like qAPI makes a difference.

 

The World of Work in 2026 – How Technology, Talent and Trust Will Redefine the Workplace

2026 will see businesses doubling down their focus on their people. As not only their biggest asset, but also one of their greatest investments – companies are ensuring that their teams are being offered the wellbeing, training, development and new technology-driven learning opportunities that they need to thrive.

With companies increasingly prioritising their employees, they are also recognising that productivity and engagement are driven by how, when, and with whom they collaborate rather than solely where they work.

Organisations of all sizes are embracing flexible and hybrid working models to attract and retain  the best talent. Recent technological advancements will further accelerate this shift, enabling smarter collaboration and more dynamic ways of working as businesses invest in data-driven workplace design and AI-powered personalised experiences. Increasingly, career pathways will be defined by skills rather than traditional degrees, and personalised human-AI collaboration will become an increasingly valuable skill for business success.

In 2026, the attention will now turn from where work happens to focus on a company’s profitability, productivity and the wellbeing of their teams. Businesses will invest in flexible workspace memberships, allowing employees to work closer to home where they will be most productive, avoiding costly, unnecessary commutes. For most, this will mean working from suburban commuter hubs, small towns or emerging 15-minute cities, with work becoming more local, more personal and more intelligent than ever before.

Below, International Workplace Group, the world’s largest platform for work with brands including Spaces and Regus,reveals the top 10 trends that are set to shape global working in 2026.

 

The Rise of AI: Your Work Co-Pilot

In 2026, hybrid teams will more regularly integrate AI copilots into their daily operations. These systems will significantly reduce the need for simple tasks such as admin, knowledge retrieval, and scheduling. Employees will find themselves with more time for creative work, able to tackle complex problem-solving tasks, and develop meaningful relationships. Moreover, this transformation will enable individuals to better manage their work-life balance, ultimately leading to increased productivity and job satisfaction.

This shift is being accelerated by a new wave of intergenerational collaboration. Research from IWG reveals that 62% of Gen Z employees are already coaching older colleagues on how to use AI to boost productivity and efficiency. In turn, 77% of Directors and Senior Directors have said this has boosted productivity levels, while 80% said it unlocked new business opportunities (1). Capitalising on this trend, employers will increasingly use AI and workplace analytics to create “personalised hybrid plans” for each employee, including optimised schedules, ideal collaboration days, and preferred office or coworking locations.

 

Return-to-Several-Offices

Companies of all sizes are moving away from loosely defined hybrid policies, to more structured, multi-location models with teams increasingly empowered to work from more convenient places closer to home. Rather than insisting on a “Return to the Office, it’s a case of a “Return to Several Offices”.

Microsoft recently announced that by 2026 many of its U.S. employees will need to be in their closest Microsoft office at least three days per week while many corporates are empowering their teams to work from a network of coworking or flexible workspace locations.

 

Micro-Certifications as Currency

Hybrid workers will stack “micro-certifications” (bite-sized, skill-focused credentials) instead of relying on traditional degrees or annual performance reviews. Employers will support this by funding on-demand learning platforms, creating more agile talent pools. This trend will change internal mobility, with skills becoming more portable and accessible.

 

Reversing The Quiet Crack

Unlike “quiet quitting”, where employees deliberately do the bare minimum, “quiet cracking” describes something subtler: employees who are still performing, but feel mentally and emotionally checked out resulting in burnout, stalled progression, and a lack of purpose.

With 57% of workers saying they’re more likely to disengage when they feel undervalued or micromanaged, companies will put more emphasis on employee wellbeing and flexible work options, to remain competitive and keep people engaged (2). As wellbeing becomes a bigger focus, companies are also expected to move past traditional perks and start using new “well-tech” tools – like stress-tracking wearables, AI mental health reminders, and wellness challenges that gamify healthy habits and make them more engaging.

 

Fractional C-Suite and Executive Talent

As they navigate economic uncertainty, more companies are turning to fractional executives, opting for part-time or contract-based C-suite talent who bring in laser-focused expertise without the cost of full-time appointments.

With nine in 10 (87%) CEOs and CFOs concerned about the impact of ongoing macroeconomic instability and two thirds (67%) already reducing operating costs, businesses are looking for smarter leadership models (3). This flexibility allows companies to secure world-class strategic insight when needed, while enabling experienced professionals to work across multiple organisations.

 

Building 15-Minute Cities from the Ground Up

The 15-minute city concept, where everything from work to leisure is accessible within a short walk or cycle is entering a new phase in 2026. Until recently, this has mainly been a story of adaptation: retrofitting existing neighbourhoods to bring work, living, and recreation closer together. In the year ahead, 15-minute cities will be taking an entirely new form, they will be built  from the ground up, designed to encourage connectivity, sustainability and community.

One standout example is The Ellinikon in Athens, one of Europe’s largest urban regeneration projects, built on the site of the former airport with over $8 billion in funding. Similarly, in the US, The Point in Utah is transforming the site of the former state prison into a model community designed around 15-minute city principles.

Hybrid work is making these urban ecosystems viable, as professionals choose to live and work locally while businesses decentralise their footprints to be closer to where people actually are – saving up to $30,332 a year thanks to the reduced need for lengthy commutes (4).

 

The Local Loyalty Effect

Hybrid work will foster a renewed connection to local communities. Companies may encourage employees to integrate volunteerism, local partnerships, or skill-sharing into their workweek, strengthening employer brands while supporting civic engagement, in the communities where employees live and work.

 

The Hospitality-Infused Office

The workplace will increasingly look and feel like boutique hotels. In 2026, expect concierge-style services, curated food and beverage options, and sensory design that mirrors boutique hotels. Take IWG’s latest partnership with YOO – blending design-led hospitality expertise with IWG’s flexible workspace network, these spaces will fuse work, socialising, and wellbeing together, transforming the office into a lifestyle experience.

 

Rising Day Office Demand

Day offices are set to become a key part of the landscape, providing a professional and productive office space whenever and wherever it is needed. Whether employees are seeking quiet, focus rooms or collaboration spaces for ad-hoc team days, these “on-demand” options eliminate the need for long-term commitments while offering all the amenities of a traditional office.

With wellbeing firmly on the agenda, features such as natural light and on-site wellness amenities will differentiate day offices, helping employees work efficiently, flexibly, and with purpose.

 

The New Workforce Demographic: Why Business Leaders Need to Know What Gen Z Wants at Work

Gen Z is entering the workforce with clear expectations that go beyond pay: they prioritise wellness, mental health, flexible hours and meaningful work that aligns with their core values.

With an aging global population, rising retirements and widening talent gaps, it is critical that business leaders understand and react to these changing priorities in order to stay competitive.

Companies that embrace flexibility, autonomy, and meaningful work will attract and retain the next generation of leaders – those that don’t, risk falling behind.

Mark Dixon, Founder and CEO of IWG, comments:

“Continuous improvements in technology including AI and new approaches to training and development will be significant drivers of productivity, engagement, and loyalty, enabling companies to create a  future-ready workforce and working environment that propels business growth.

We will continue to see a fundamental shift in the geography of work with the centre of gravity moving towards local communities. The remarkable advances in cloud technology and video conferencing software – both vital to enabling effective hybrid working – mean workers no longer need to travel long distances on a daily basis. Innovations in technology will continue to advance in years to come and will radically underline and fuel the flexibility of location.

The rising demand for more localised working has led to the majority of our new IWG centres opening in the heart of local communities, suburbs and rural areas, enabling many people around the world to say farewell to long daily commutes.”

 

(1) Research by IWG in collaboration with Mortar, sampling 1007 UK office workers in June 2025.

(2) Research by IWG in collaboration with Censuswide, sampling 1,005  Office full time/hybrid workers in June 2024

(3) Research by IWG in collaboration with Censuswide, sampling CEOs and CFOs (50/50 split) working at companies that operate a flexible working model in the USA and UK in May 2025.

(4) IWG Hybrid Working Report in collaboration with Arup, June 2025

OBSBOT Tiny 3 and OBSBOT Vox SE Wireless Microphone – Review

At TechBuzz Ireland we have looked at several OBSBOT products over the years, and the Tiny 3 with the Vox SE Wireless Microphone continues that trend with a compact PTZ webcam and matching wireless audio kit aimed at creators and remote workers. The camera itself is the real highlight here, with a small, solid build and plenty of smart features, while most of the drawbacks in this package are centred around the microphone and its accessories rather than the Tiny 3.​

Design, build and what you get

The Tiny 3 arrives in the familiar OBSBOT‑style packaging, and having reviewed many of these units before, the presentation and layout will feel very familiar. The first noticeable detail is just how small and compact the Tiny 3 is, yet it still feels solid in the hand and well put together.​

In the box you get the Tiny 3 camera, USB‑C cable, USB‑C to USB‑A adapter, adjustable mount, user manual, warranty card and a dedicated Tiny 3 storage case. The case is a big practical plus, as it keeps the camera, mount and cable together and protected, which matters more here because of the exposed gimbal design.​

The body uses an aircraft‑grade aluminium alloy with a dual‑axis gimbal, and despite the compact size it never feels flimsy. At around 63 g it is light enough to carry every day, but still has enough weight that it does not feel like a cheap plastic webcam perched on top of your screen.​

Key specs and features

Inside, the Tiny 3 is built around a 1/1.28‑inch CMOS sensor with effective pixels of 50 MP, giving it plenty of resolution to work with for both 4K and lower‑resolution modes. It supports up to 4K at 30 fps and 1080p at 120 fps, along with a 4x digital zoom and a 2‑axis gimbal for smooth framing and movement.​

You also get DCG HDR, wide ISO support from 100 to 12800, and Dual All‑Pixel PDAF autofocus for quick and reliable focusing. On the audio side, the Tiny 3 has an intelligent directional built‑in mic system and can also connect to external audio devices such as the Vox SE.​

OBSBOT has packed in a long list of headline features including:

  • Top‑tier spatial audio performance
  • “Tiny in Size, Titan in Performance” compact design
  • Premium imaging system aimed at flagship‑level webcam quality
  • Industry‑leading AI features such as Smarter AI Tracking 2.0, voice‑activated control and effortless framing
  • Powerful creative software with professional image controls and creative tools
  • RTC remote interaction for real‑time remote control and streaming
  • OBSBOT Avatar & Virtual Voice (beta) for VTubing and motion capture
  • Seamless integration into the wider OBSBOT ecosystem, including multicam setups and wireless audio workflows​

Setup and software

Out of the box, the Tiny 3 works as a plug‑and‑play webcam and can be used straight away with apps like Microsoft Teams, Skype and similar platforms. That said, to really get the most from the hardware it is strongly recommended to download and install the free OBSBOT Center software and update to the latest firmware.​

Once the software is installed, you gain access to more detailed image controls, AI tracking options, presets and creative tools. The physical unit can sit on top of a laptop or monitor using the adjustable mount, or you can use the built‑in 1/4‑inch thread to attach it to a tripod (tripod not included) for more flexible positioning.​

The overall setup process is straightforward if you are used to webcams, but there is still a bit of learning involved if you want to explore all of the AI and control features the Tiny 3 offers.​

Voice and gesture control

Voice control remains one of the more standout features on the Tiny 3, allowing you to use commands such as “Hi Tiny”, “Sleep Tiny”, “Track me”, “Unlock me”, “Zoom in”, “Zoom out” and preset positions 1, 2 and 3. When it works, it gives you a very convenient hands‑free way to control framing and behaviour, particularly useful when you are away from the keyboard during a call or recording.​

Gesture control is also supported and allows you to trigger actions using simple hand movements, making it easy to start tracking or adjust framing without fumbling around in software menus. Together with the AI tracking, these controls help the Tiny 3 feel more like a small PTZ studio camera than a basic webcam.​

OBSBOT Vox Wireless Microphone

Alongside the Tiny 3, I also tested the OBSBOT Vox Wireless Microphone, which is designed to work seamlessly with the Tiny 3 series. The microphone kit comes with its own carry case, and this is important because there are a lot of small accessories included which could easily get lost otherwise.​

In the case you will find the compact wireless mic unit along with a furry windshield, lanyard, magnetic holder, necklace and a USB‑C charging docking station. The mic itself is made from hard plastic and feels solid given its size, and the overall idea is to provide a flexible, cable‑free audio solution that fits neatly into the OBSBOT ecosystem.​

From a technical point of view the Vox has some strong numbers: it offers studio‑grade audio quality with omnidirectional pickup, dual‑channel recording, plug‑and‑play operation, extended battery life and versatile mounting options. It is designed to work with smartphones and tablets that have USB‑C, and integrates with OBSBOT Center and OBSBOT Live.​

The microphone specifications include:

  • Dimensions: 28.53 × 25.47 × 11.5 mm
  • Weight: approx. 9 g (excluding magnetic clip)
  • Usage time: up to 20 hours
  • Microphone directivity: omnidirectional
  • Sensitivity: −37 dBFS ±1 dBFS @ 1 kHz, 94 dB SPL
  • Maximum sound pressure level: 123 dB SPL
  • Signal‑to‑noise ratio: 68 dBA
  • Frequency response: 50 Hz–20 kHz
  • Sampling rate and bit depth: 48 kHz/24‑bit
  • Wireless mode: GFSK 2 Mbps
  • Battery voltage: 3.7 V (operating 3.3–4.4 V)
  • Working distance: up to 100 m in open, interference‑free conditions
  • Battery capacity: 170 mAh
  • Operating temperature: 0–40°C​

In use, the Vox works well in terms of audio quality and wireless range, delivering a clutter‑free, cable‑free workflow when paired with the Tiny 3. However, there are some niggles: the large number of small accessories makes it easier to misplace parts, and charging the microphones through the dock feels less convenient than if OBSBOT had used a more straightforward wireless charging solution or a single USB‑C connection directly to the kit.​

 

Software integration and niggles

Connecting the Vox to the OBSBOT camera through the software is not completely intuitive on first install. The instructions tell you to select mode, go to Audio, choose OBSBOT Microphone and then add TX1/TX2, but actually finding those options in the software for the first time can be a bit of a challenge.​

Once you have located the correct settings, pairing works as expected and is easy enough, but this initial friction is worth noting if you are not used to digging through software menus. This contrasts with the camera side of things, where basic setup is closer to plug‑and‑play, particularly if you just want to use the Tiny 3 as a standard webcam first and explore the extra features later.​

Warranty

One area that feels slightly out of step with the overall premium feel of the Tiny 3 and Vox kit is the warranty. The package comes with a one‑year warranty, which is fine on paper but a bit of a disappointment given the quality of the hardware and the fact that the Tiny 3 has moving parts in the gimbal.​

For a product at this level and price point, a longer warranty would provide more peace of mind, especially for users planning to use it heavily for work or content creation.​

Verdict

Overall, the OBSBOT Tiny 3 is a pleasure to use and feels like a Swiss‑Army‑knife style webcam – small, responsive and packed with genuinely useful features. The 2‑axis gimbal, digital zoom, fast response and hand gesture/voice controls make it easy to frame shots the way you want, whether you are on calls or creating content as part of the wider OBSBOT ecosystem.​

As with previous OBSBOT units I have used, the Tiny 3 feels solid in the hand, with a compact design and included storage case that make it simple to carry between setups without worrying about the gimbal. The free software adds more creative control and multiple ways to operate the camera, so you can get more out of it than a standard plug‑and‑play webcam while still being able to drop it into everyday apps like Teams or Skype.​

The add‑on Vox wireless microphone technically works well, with good audio and range, but the number of small accessories, the extra charging dock and the slightly awkward first‑time setup in the software mean most of my niggles are around the mic rather than the camera. A longer warranty than one year would better match the premium feel of the kit, but taken on its own, the Tiny 3 is an easy camera to recommend if you want a compact, feature‑rich webcam that can grow with you inside the OBSBOT ecosystem.​

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