Jun 25, 2026 · 11:24 AM
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Janet Harrison

Janet Harrison has over 16 years experience in the financial services industry giving her a vast understanding of how news affects the financial markets, and an early adopter of blockchain technology and digital currencies. Janet is an active holder and trader spending the majority of her time analyzing blockchain projects, reports and watching new and upcoming projects and other initiatives in the industry. She has a Masters Degree in Economics with previous roles counting Investment Banking.
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Nvidia is bringing its AI chip fight to Windows PCs next week
Janet Harrison ·
Nvidia is bringing its AI chip fight to Windows PCs next week
Nvidia is expected to debut the first Windows PCs using its chips as the main processor next week. The move puts Nvidia directly into the AI PC race against Qualcomm and Apple, while giving Microsoft a stronger hardware partner for Windows on Arm.

Andrew Kelley banned AI code from Zig and the reasoning is harder to dismiss than most critics expect
Janet Harrison ·
Andrew Kelley banned AI code from Zig and the reasoning is harder to dismiss than most critics expect
Andrew Kelley, creator of the Zig programming language, has formalized a ban on all AI-assisted contributions, calling them "invariably garbage" and arguing they impose a net negative cost on a project with limited reviewer capacity. Only four of 112 major open-source projects surveyed have taken the same stance , but Zig's reasoning, grounded in reviewer economics and mentorship culture, is proving harder to dismiss than a simple quality objection.


Peter Thiel moves his family to Buenos Aires as Argentina bets big on libertarian tech money
Janet Harrison ·
Peter Thiel moves his family to Buenos Aires as Argentina bets big on libertarian tech money
Peter Thiel has purchased a $12 million mansion in Buenos Aires, enrolled his children in local schools, and met with President Milei at the Casa Rosada, cementing a high-profile ideological and personal bet on Argentina's libertarian economic experiment. The move is partly driven by California's proposed billionaire wealth tax and signals a potential shift in where tech-adjacent capital chooses to base itself.

America's regulated Bitcoin perpetual market is finally taking shape.
Janet Harrison ·
America's regulated Bitcoin perpetual market is finally taking shape.
The first U.S.-listed Bitcoin perpetual futures contract did more than add one more crypto product. It opened a regulated path that now includes Bitnomial, Coinbase and a faster-moving CME, which is why the real story is the race to capture onshore derivatives liquidity.


Janet Harrison ·
The SEC is turning tokenized equities into a real Ethereum market.
The SEC has not issued a simple green light for tokenized equities, but its 2026 guidance and proposed exemptions have pushed onchain stocks much closer to regulated U.S. market structure. That shift matters for Ethereum, where custody, compliance, and settlement infrastructure may be first to benefit.

Xcena raises $135 million to prove that memory bandwidth is the real ceiling on AI progress
Janet Harrison ·
Xcena raises $135 million to prove that memory bandwidth is the real ceiling on AI progress
Xcena raised $135 million in a Series B at a $570 million valuation, betting that memory bandwidth rather than GPU supply is the defining limit on AI infrastructure. The startup, founded by Samsung and SK Hynix veterans, designs compute-near-memory chips to eliminate costly data movement overhead that scales with every AI inference request. Production chips are due from Samsung's foundries by end of 2026, with revenue expected in 2027.


Blue Origin Rocket Explodes as SpaceX Nears Historic IPO
Janet Harrison ·
Blue Origin Rocket Explodes as SpaceX Nears Historic IPO
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explodes on the pad at Cape Canaveral, destroying the only launch site capable of flying the vehicle, as SpaceX prepares to go public at a $1.8 trillion valuation.

Starbucks scrapped its AI inventory agent after nine months and the postmortem matters for every enterprise betting on agentic AI
Janet Harrison ·
Starbucks scrapped its AI inventory agent after nine months and the postmortem matters for every enterprise betting on agentic AI
Starbucks has retired NomadGo, an AI-powered inventory tool deployed across more than 11,000 North American stores, after the system hallucinated stock counts and forced baristas to manually verify and correct inaccurate scans. The nine-month deployment, part of CEO Brian Niccol's operational turnaround, became a case study in the gap between enterprise AI pilot performance and production reliability. The pullback arrives as Gartner projects over 40 percent of agentic AI projects will be cancell






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