Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
Rebuilding Healthcare From the Ground Up: Andrew Rudin MD on Prevention, Evidence, and Root Causes. AI-Generated.
For much of modern history, medical progress has been measured by innovation. New medications, sophisticated imaging tools, and increasingly precise procedures have transformed once fatal illnesses into manageable conditions. These advances have saved millions of lives and remain essential to modern care. Yet alongside this success, a quieter problem has taken shape. Healthcare has gradually become oriented around treating disease after it appears, rather than preventing it from developing in the first place. According to Andrew Rudin MD, this imbalance now underlies many of the system’s most persistent failures.
By Dr. Andrew Rudin16 days ago in Journal
Is Your WordPress Website Optimised for 2026 Standards? A Simple Checklist . AI-Generated.
A WordPress website that worked well a few years ago may not meet today’s expectations or tomorrow’s. In 2026, websites are judged on more than just how they look. Speed, search visibility, mobile experience, security, and overall usability all play a role in how users and search engines evaluate your site.
By Henry Davids16 days ago in Journal
The Quiet Evolution of Everyday Life. AI-Generated.
In a world that constantly celebrates the dramatic, the loud, and the spectacular, it is easy to overlook the small, almost invisible changes shaping our daily lives. While headlines scream about the latest breakthroughs or viral trends, some of the most meaningful innovations exist in silence. They don’t demand attention, yet they subtly influence the way we live, work, and interact with our surroundings.
By Reginald Pembroke16 days ago in Journal
How I.C.E. Shoots Renee Good and the Moment Minneapolis Broke
Sometimes a single bullet does more than tear through glass. Sometimes it shatters trust. On a cold Wednesday morning in south Minneapolis, a maroon SUV sat awkwardly on Portland Avenue. Horns echoed. Whistles pierced the air. Federal vehicles clogged the street like stones dropped into a river. Then came the gunshots — sharp, final, irreversible.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun16 days ago in Journal
Tips to Maximize the Health Benefits of Running by Lifelong Runners like Chad Pratt. AI-Generated.
Focus on Proper Warm-Up and Cool-Down Before beginning a run, it is essential to warm up the body through light activity. Gentle movements increase blood flow and prepare muscles for strain. Warm-ups such as leg swings, high knees, and dynamic stretches activate joints and reduce the risk of sudden injury during the running session.
By Chad Pratt16 days ago in Journal
Why I Felt Alert at Night Even When I Was Exhausted
For a long time, my nights followed a frustrating pattern. By the end of the day, I was clearly exhausted. My body felt heavy. My mind had worked through hours of tasks and conversations. Yet when night arrived, sleep did not.
By illumipure16 days ago in Journal
Merit-Based Hiring Isn't Just a Slogan:
Introduction Every hiring manager believes they make merit-based decisions. They consider qualifications, experience, and fit. But what they don't see—because it's unconscious—is how small, unrelated details shape their choices long before they evaluate actual skills. A candidate's name, their university, a shared hobby with the interviewer—these trigger snap judgments that override the facts. Many organisations still don’t have consistent systems to catch this, which means bias becomes baked into hiring decisions at scale.
By Amit Kumar16 days ago in Journal
Understanding the Surge in Business Aviation Accidents: Key Factors and Solutions. AI-Generated.
2025 has proven to be one of the deadliest years in business aviation history, with fatalities climbing 53.8% year-over-year to 143 lives lost. This marks the worst year for business aviation safety since 2011, with the number of fatal accidents sharply rising. What’s driving this spike, and what can the industry do to prevent it?
By Beckett Dowhan16 days ago in Journal
Coding Is Not Enough: Why 2026 Demands Full-Spectrum Product Engineering
In 2026, the barrier to creating functional code has vanished. Autonomous coding agents now handle the heavy lifting. Advanced neural IDEs manage boilerplate, debugging, and refactoring tasks. This change represents a major tipping point for the industry. Generating code is now a commodity rather than a rare skill. For developers, "just coding" is no longer a competitive advantage. The market now rewards those who bridge technical execution and business outcomes. Success requires delivering genuine value that goes beyond simple syntax.
By Del Rosario16 days ago in Journal









