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  • Meta Poaches Apple Design Legend for AI Future – TechRepublic

    1. Meta Poaches Apple Design Legend for AI Future  TechRepublic
    2. Design executive behind ‘Liquid Glass’ is leaving Apple  CNBC
    3. John Gruber Shares Scathing Commentary About Apple’s Departing Software Design Chief  MacRumors
    4. Steve Lemay Is Apple’s New…

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  • Harnessing algal biodiversity for IBD solutions

    Harnessing algal biodiversity for IBD solutions

    The Algae4IBD project is unlocking the potential of algae, developing sustainable bioactive ingredients for inflammatory bowel disease and pain.

    The EU-funded Algae4IBD project, co-ordinated by Dr Dorit Avni from MIGAL Galilee Research Institute,…

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  • What are freeze-dried sweets and why are they popular?

    What are freeze-dried sweets and why are they popular?

    David SilverbergTechnology Reporter, Toronto

    Sow Good Close up of brightly-coloured sweets. The sweets looked puffed-up with visible holes.Sow Good

    With the right process chewy sweets can be turned crunchy

    When Savannah Louise West first tasted freeze-dried gummies, she was intrigued.

    “I think the crunch is so satisfying, and I find it interesting to experience a candy I’m familiar with that has an entirely new texture,” says the Toronto resident.

    Ms West is describing one of the main features of this spin-off candy that independent and major confectionary manufacturers have been releasing onto shelves, both online and offline, for the past three years.

    It’s been largely a US phenomena, hence we’ll use the US term candy, but for our UK readers, we’re talking about sweets here.

    Candy is usually chewy or glassy but place a familiar sweet like Skittles through the right process and you can turn it into a crunchy snack, like crisps, while also enhancing its sweet or tangy flavour.

    The process involves a special oven that chills the product, heats it, steals away its moisture and puffs it up.

    The market emerged when TikTok influencers showed off their favourite freeze-dried candy.

    “Our customer demographic is mainly under 45 as they’ve likely heard about this type of candy on TikTok or other social platforms, and wanted to try something that is going viral,” says Zachry Barlett, a partner at TheFreezeDriedCandyStore.com, a Missouri-based online business that sells crunchy varieties of peach rings, gummy worms and ice cream.

    “People have long eaten freeze-dried fruit, and it’s an industry where it can be accessible for anyone to enter as large freeze dryers have dropped in price,” he explains.

    It’s proved such a hit that confectionery giants including Hershey, Mars and Ferrara have launched their own products.

    With the help of those heavyweights, the freeze-dried candy market is projected to be worth $3.1bn (£2.4bn) by 2034, up from $1.3bn in 2024, according to a Market.us report.

    Getty Images A tray of freeze dried sweets being pulled out of an oven. The look like a puffed-up version of gummy bears.Getty Images

    To make them crunchy sweets are exposed to low temperatures and a vacuum

    Freeze-dried candy is a misnomer, as manufacturers aren’t exactly freezing the candy.

    Rich Hartel, a professor of food engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says the amount of freezable water in most candies is close to zero. The more appropriate term would be vacuum-puffing, he notes.

    Still, these unique candies have to go through a cold process in the beginning. They’re subjected to very low temperatures to freeze the internal moisture into solid ice crystals, and then they are moved to a vacuum chamber.

    “When the candies dry, the air bubbles cause an expansion, which is why you see gummies turn from soft to hard,” Prof Hartel explains.

    Another manufacturer equates the process to “creating our own weather system in these massive chambers,” says Claudia Goldfarb, CEO of Sow Good in Texas.

    “When the product reaches what we call the glass transition point, the ice crystals within the candy shift from ice to vapour at the speed of sound,” Ms Goldfarb adds.

    Without that moisture, the candy turns into a crispy structure with an interior texture that resembles a chocolate malted ball.

    Also, because moisture is removed from the end product, the flavour can be more intense.

    “Imagine you were making lemonade and you decided to remove the water, and you were left with sugar and lemons,” Ms Goldfarb points out.

    Not all candies are prone to being freeze-dried, she says.

    A Tic Tac or jellybean, for example, does not have enough water and too few air bubbles to allow it to expand. Meanwhile, chocolate melts too quickly under any heating application.

    Sow Good In a Christmas themed setting Claudia Goldfarb holds a large sweet and wears reindeer antlers on her head. Sow Good

    Claudia Goldfarb (right) says the freeze-dried process creates an intense flavour

    Three years ago, Prof Hartel noticed more small players competing for a share of the freeze-dried candy market, but now larger brands, such as Hershey, want in on the viral trend.

    “I wonder if the more independent businesses won’t be able to compete,” he says.

    For Ms Goldfarb and Mr Barlett, when the sizable corporations take notice, the crowded shelves adds more validation to what they do.

    “It’s hopeful to see big-brand adoption after we do something so unprecedented,” says Mr Barlett, “and I can see us taking on these brands by continuing to innovate, by not being satisfied with the status quo.”

    Prof Hartel, who teaches candy science to his students, wonders if freeze-dried candy “will just be a fad, but you never know if long-time customers will continue to come back to a type of sweet they didn’t really enjoy when it was chewy.”

    But for passionate fans of this brittle candy, there’s one pitfall.

    Much like crisps and crackers, the packaging is crucial. “If there’s a barrier for me when it comes to this candy, it’s that they are often crushed in the bag due to how fragile they are,” says Ms West. “Also, they can be expensive.”

    Ms Goldfarb is bullish on the future for her company and their competitors. “People want innovation in candy, and they want to try something fun and novel,” she says, “and that really resonates with consumers.”

    More Technology of Business

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  • Flu positivity hits 51% in China as school clusters rise

    Flu positivity hits 51% in China as school clusters rise

    Medical workers communicate with a young patient at the Children’s Hospital of Nanjing Medical University in Nanjing, East China’s Jiangsu province, Sept 23, 2025. (PHOTO / XINHUA)

    China’s flu activity has surged to high levels, according to the…

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  • NanoIC pilot line: Accelerating beyond-2nm chip innovation

    NanoIC pilot line: Accelerating beyond-2nm chip innovation

    The NanoIC pilot line has the ambition to become the world’s specialised R&D pilot line on beyond semiconductor technology.

    With the aim to support the European Chips Act’s vision to reinforce Europe’s leadership in the global semiconductor…

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  • IKEA joins SEN, URJC, and CIBEROBN in pioneering study on mealtime habits

    IKEA joins SEN, URJC, and CIBEROBN in pioneering study on mealtime habits

    The project will involve fieldwork using biometric equipment and artificial intelligence to detect brain responses and emotional wellbeing associated with preparing food at home; eating ready meals; dining alone, with others, or while using mobile devices.

    An innovative approach to studying everyday life

    This newly launched research, expected to deliver results in the first quarter of 2026, will explore a previously unexamined area from a scientific perspective: the behaviours and emotions Spanish people experience around cooking, eating, and mealtime habits at home.

    Two studies will be conducted: one led by SEN and URJC, analysing brain responses in different food preparation and consumption scenarios using biometric equipment and artificial intelligence; and another by CIBEROBN, exploring eating patterns and screen use during meals. For IKEA, understanding how people live in their homes is a priority, using both in-house research and collaborations with specialist partners to delve into less explored areas.

    “This public-private collaboration project aims to provide scientific evidence on how the home environment and lifestyle habits influence our health. Understanding these dynamics can help us build awareness and improve our wellbeing,” says Dr Fernando Fernández-Aranda, researcher at CIBEROBN.

    “For SEN, it is a pleasure to collaborate with CIBEROBN, URJC, and IKEA to explore the important implications of an act as human as cooking and enjoying food, allowing us to analyse the emotional and neuroscientific elements behind it,” adds Jesús Porta-Etessam, President of SEN.

    Two complementary studies

    The two new studies will run in parallel, aiming to provide a clear picture of people’s habits, behaviours, emotions, and feelings around cooking and dining.

    SEN and URJC will conduct fieldwork using biometric equipment and artificial intelligence to detect brain responses and emotional wellbeing linked to cooking at home, eating ready meals, dining alone, with company, or while using mobile devices.

    “From the Spanish Society of Neurology and the field of neuroscience, we know that cooking and sharing meals activate brain areas related to reward, empathy, and wellbeing. Analysing how these responses change in digital or solitary settings will help us better understand the impact of today’s lifestyle on brain health,” explains Dr Jesús Porta-Etessam.

    “We are more connected than ever, yet increasingly isolated. This pioneering study combines artificial intelligence and biometric technology to explore how cooking and related habits can help us emotionally reconnect in a hyperconnected world,” says Ana Reyes, Professor of Marketing and Market Research at URJC.

    In parallel, researchers from CIBEROBN will analyse eating patterns through interviews and surveys.

    “We’ll not only examine what foods are consumed and how they are prepared, but also the conditions under which these activities take place—including time, environment, social or family rituals, and how screen use influences them,” says Dr Fernández-Aranda, who highlights “the importance of integrating environmental, social, and cultural factors into the study of eating habits.”

    This approach could deepen our understanding of human behaviour and open new research avenues in brain and mental health and lifestyle patterns.

    Public–private collaboration to open new scientific questions

    The project highlights the importance of collaboration between public and private entities—businesses, scientific societies, universities, and research centres—to achieve outcomes that are meaningful for society.

    From the Swedish company’s point of view: “This partnership allows us to apply scientific rigour to the study of everyday life in a field that has been largely unexplored—the intersection between food, social experience, and brain response.”

    Results will be shared in the first quarter of 2026, offering what is expected to be an unprecedented snapshot of Spaniards’ habits and emotions around the table.

     

    About Ingka Group 

    With IKEA retail operations in 31 markets, Ingka Group is the largest IKEA retailer and represents 87% of IKEA retail sales. It is a strategic partner to develop and innovate the IKEA business and help define common IKEA strategies. Ingka Group owns and operates IKEA sales channels under franchise agreements with Inter IKEA Systems B.V. It has three business areas: IKEA Retail, Ingka Investments and Ingka Centres. Read more on Ingka.com.

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  • Pakistani Baby Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Rare Immune Disorder

    Pakistani Baby Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Rare Immune Disorder

    A two-month-old Pakistani baby has made a dramatic recovery in Abu Dhabi after undergoing an emergency bone marrow transplant to treat a rare congenital immune disorder, doctors at Yas Clinic Khalifa City said.

    Baby Ayra was transferred…

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  • Advances in pharmacological activities, biosynthesis, and structural m

    Advances in pharmacological activities, biosynthesis, and structural m

    1Pharmacy Department, Xi’an Mental Health Center, Xi’an, Shaanxi, 710061, People’s Republic of China; 2Key Laboratory of Resource Biology and Modern Biotechnology in Western China, College of Life Science, Northwest University, Xi’an,…

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  • At least 4 countries pull out of 2026 Eurovision contest over Israel’s participation

    At least 4 countries pull out of 2026 Eurovision contest over Israel’s participation

    GENEVA — Public broadcasters in Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and Slovenia on Thursday pulled out of next year’s Eurovision Song Contest after organizers decided to allow Israel to compete, putting…

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  • At least 4 countries pull out of 2026 Eurovision contest over Israel’s participation

    At least 4 countries pull out of 2026 Eurovision contest over Israel’s participation

    GENEVA — Public broadcasters in Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and Slovenia on Thursday pulled out of next year’s Eurovision Song Contest after organizers decided to allow Israel to compete, putting…

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