Despite higher demand, Jacksonville industrial vacancies rise Vacancy is rising, while demand is cooling for some in the Jacksonville market and rebounding for others, according to reports from the leading brokerages. CBRE reported a 5.5% vacancy rate, soaring ... 10/22/2024 - 4:04 pm | View Link
Industrial Supply in Miami-Dade Outpaces Absorption for First Time in 4 Years While Miami-Dade finished the third quarter with a positive net absorption of 1.5 million square feet, the figure failed to outpace supply for the first time since 2020. That led to vacancy ticking up ... 10/17/2024 - 9:44 pm | View Link
Anderson-DuBose permits in review for Northwest industrial project The Anderson-DuBose Co.’s proposed $60 million cold and dry foods storage facility in Westlake Industrial Park. With site work approved, the city is reviewing construction permits for The ... 10/17/2024 - 4:10 am | View Link
Demand in Dayton's industrial market driving up prices (See the latest in major deals) Dayton's industrial market hit positive net absorption and the lowest vacancy rate seen in years. Read more about the impact. 10/16/2024 - 9:49 am | View Link
Industrial vacancy rises after onslaught of development Industrial vacancy rose to 11 percent in the third quarter, according to Avison Young, after a few years of rapid development. 10/16/2024 - 8:13 am | View Link
Today, Apple released the first developer beta of iOS 18.2 for supported devices. This beta release marks the first time several key AI features that Apple teased at its developer conference this June are available.
Apple is marketing a wide range of generative AI features under the banner "Apple Intelligence." Initially, Apple Intelligence was planned to release as part of iOS 18, but some features slipped to iOS 18.1, others to iOS 18.2, and a few still to future undisclosed software updates.
iOS 18.1 has been in beta for a while and includes improvements to Siri, generative writing tools that help with rewriting or proofreading, smart replies for Messages, and notification summaries.
Trying to watch your favorite NFL team's games throughout a season is a fiendish logistics puzzle, one that doesn't even have a "just pay for it" shortcut.
You can buy a Sunday Ticket package from YouTube, but that only covers games on Sunday and only those not shown in your local TV market.
Any company that makes Arm chips must license technology from Arm Holdings plc, the British company that develops the instruction set. Companies can license the instruction set and create their own CPU designs or license one of Arm's ready-made Cortex CPU core designs to incorporate into their own chips.
Bloomberg reports that Arm is canceling Qualcomm's license, an escalation of a fight that began in late 2022 when Arm sued Qualcomm over its acquisition of Nuvia in 2021.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) board has agreed to spend $212 million to get its Muni Metro light rail off floppy disks.
The Muni Metro’s Automatic Train Control System (ATCS) has required 5¼-inch floppy disks since 1998, when it was installed at San Francisco’s Market Street subway station. The system uses three floppy disks for loading DOS software that controls the system’s central servers.
One person is dead and 48 others across 10 states have been sickened in an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak that appears to be linked to McDonald's Quarter Pounders and the slivered onions used on the burgers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
McDonald's has paused distribution of the slivered onions and removed Quarter Pounders from the menus of restaurants in areas known to be affected.
A CTA employee was in good condition Tuesday after being attacked on a 71st/South Shore route bus in the city’s Grand Crossing neighborhood, according to Chicago police and CTA.
The employee, a 44-year-old instructor who was training a bus operator, was involved in an argument with a female rider who boarded the eastbound bus, which was near the 400 block of East 71st Street, around 11 a.m.