You’re drowning in tech news.
Every hour, another headline screams about AI, chips, or regulation. Most of it is noise. You know it.
I know it.
So why keep scrolling?
Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard cuts through that. Not with hype. Not with fluff.
Just what moves markets, shifts policy, or changes how engineers build.
I read thousands of sources every week. Not to impress you (to) find what actually matters.
You’ll learn what this feed is (and what it’s not). Why our filters catch things others miss. And how reading it for ten minutes a day changes your edge.
No gatekeeping. No jargon. Just clarity.
This isn’t another newsletter. It’s your signal line.
Ready to stop skimming and start seeing?
Feedworldtech: Not Another News Dump
Feedworldtech is a briefing. Not a feed. Not a scroll.
A human-written, time-filtered summary of what actually moves tech forward.
I read enough garbage every morning to last three lifetimes. Most “tech news” is press release regurgitation or SEO bait. Feedworldtech isn’t that.
It’s written by people who’ve built things, sold things, and lost money on things that didn’t pan out.
It’s the dedicated tech intelligence arm of Feedbuzzard. Think of Feedbuzzard as the parent brand. Broad coverage across markets and trends.
Feedworldtech is the sharp knife in that drawer. Focused. Precise.
No fluff.
Its mission? Tell you what’s coming before it hits the mainstream. Not just “AI startup raises $20M” (but) why that funding round signals a shift in chip supply chains (or doesn’t).
You’re not here to skim headlines. You’re here to know what to build next. Or kill.
Or bet on. Or ignore.
That means you care about the so what (not) the what.
If you open your inbox and sigh at another 47 unread tech newsletters, this is for you.
It’s not for people who want volume. It’s for people who want velocity (of) insight.
Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard delivers that. Every time.
No algorithms. No trending topics. Just judgment.
I’ve canceled five other services since I started using it. Two months ago.
You’ll know in seven days whether it’s worth keeping. I guarantee it.
What We Watch. And Why It Matters
I track five tech sectors. Not because they’re trendy. Because they’re moving the needle right now.
Artificial Intelligence & Automation
I ignore the hype about “sentient AI.” I watch where companies actually roll out models. Like insurance firms cutting claim processing from 14 days to 90 minutes. I track new EU AI Act rules.
I see layoffs in coding roles. And hires in prompt engineering and AI-audit roles. That shift isn’t theoretical.
It’s happening in your HR department.
Biotechnology & Digital Health
CRISPR isn’t just lab stuff anymore. Last month, a UK clinic approved its first in-vivo edit for sickle cell disease. Remote monitoring tools now feed real-time glucose and ECG data straight into hospital dashboards.
If your doctor hasn’t asked you to wear a patch yet. They will.
Sustainable Tech & Energy Transition
Lithium-ion batteries are hitting limits. So I follow solid-state battery startups shipping pilot units to EV makers. Green hydrogen plants?
They’re no longer PowerPoint slides. They’re under construction in Texas and Norway. Carbon capture still sucks up energy (but) new electrochemical methods cut that by 40%.
Pro tip: Look at power-usage ratios, not just tonnage captured.
The Future of Computing
Quantum computers won’t replace your laptop. But IBM’s 1,121-qubit Condor chip did just run error-corrected chemistry simulations. Edge computing?
It’s why your Tesla updates mid-drive without calling home. No cloud round-trip. Just raw local compute.
Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard delivers this (unfiltered,) sourced, updated hourly. Not summaries. Not press releases.
Actual signals.
You want context? I give you the why behind the headline. Not just what shipped.
But who it displaces. Who it empowers. What breaks next.
That’s the only kind of tech news worth reading.
The Feedbuzzard Difference: Less Noise, More Teeth

I used to scroll through tech newsletters like they were grocery lists. Same headlines. Same takes.
Same Silicon Valley yawn.
Then I tried Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard.
It felt like switching from AM radio to a live studio session.
Every story is picked by a human (not) an algorithm trained on my past clicks. A real person who’s shipped code in Taipei, debugged firmware in Tel Aviv, or negotiated chip supply chains in Shenzhen. They read the press release, check the patent filings, talk to engineers.
Then they write.
That’s why you won’t see “AI startup raises $27M” without context.
You’ll see why that funding matters (and) what it says about cooling limits in next-gen GPUs.
I covered this topic over in Best Tech News.
Global perspective isn’t marketing fluff here. It’s how the feed opens with a battery chemistry update from a lab in Berlin, then links it to a manufacturing shift in Vietnam, then flags the US policy lag. No echo chamber.
Just facts, sourced, cross-checked.
Every update ends with a “Why It Matters” line. Not vague. Not buzzwordy.
Just one sentence that tells you whether this changes hiring, budgets, or your weekend project.
Last month, they connected a packaging breakthrough in Osaka to actual latency drops in edge AI boxes shipping out of Austin.
I hadn’t even heard of the Osaka paper. But suddenly, my hardware roadmap made more sense.
Algorithms chase engagement.
Humans chase relevance.
If you’re tired of reading the same five sources repackaged as “breaking,” this guide shows exactly where else to look.
I unsubscribed from three feeds after week one.
You will too.
Tech Intelligence: Plug It In or Get Left Behind
I open Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard every morning. Five minutes. That’s all it takes.
I skim the headlines while my coffee brews. No deep dives. Just what moved overnight.
What broke. What launched. What got shut down.
You’re already checking your phone first thing. Why not make that habit work for you?
Set filters for AI, biotech, or whatever keeps you up at night. Turn off everything else. Noise is free.
Focus isn’t.
I use alerts to prep for client calls. If a new regulation drops in fintech, I know before the client asks.
This isn’t about hoarding info. It’s about spotting patterns before they hit your inbox.
That page? It’s where I start when something feels off-market.
Skip the newsletters that sound like press releases. Go straight to the source.
You’re Done Wading Through Tech Noise
I’ve been there. Scrolling past headlines that mean nothing. Clicking links that waste time.
Worrying you’ll miss the real shift.
You don’t need more tech news. You need Feedworldtech World Techie News by Feedbuzzard.
It’s not another feed full of hype and recycled press releases. It’s human-curated. Global sources.
Context baked in. Not just what happened (but) why it matters to you.
Most services dump data. This one delivers insight.
You’re tired of sorting. I get it. So stop.
Subscribe now. Get updates that land clean (no) fluff, no filler, no fear.
You’ll know what’s next (before) it hits the mainstream.
That’s the point.
Do it today.

Ask Keishaner Laskowski how they got into smart app ecosystems and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Keishaner started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Keishaner worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Smart App Ecosystems, Expert Breakdowns, App Optimization Techniques. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Keishaner operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Keishaner doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Keishaner's work tend to reflect that.