The End of 'No Layoffs'
Expeditors International, the Seattle-area logistics company known for never cutting jobs, laid off about 230 tech workers in the state on Monday, roughly 15% of its global technology workforce. The move breaks a no-layoff tradition dating back as far as the company's 1979 founding. The cuts hit software developers, quality-assurance testers, project managers and others across the company's offices in the Seattle area.
Seattle Sinks in New Ranking
The city fell 11 spots to No. 13 on a list of the best U.S. cities for attracting foreign investment, according to Financial Times and Nikkei. The report added fresh concern and criticism to the ongoing dialogue about the business climate in both the city and Washington state.
But Let's Keep Things in Perspective!
Many parts of the country would love to have the business and startup activity that the Seattle region enjoys. A couple examples today:
- Startup powerhouse emerges from stealth: ArchAstro launched with a founding team pulled from Microsoft, Stripe, Statsig and Meta, plus a backer list that reads like a who's who of technology leaders. The startup, which raised $6.2 million in pre-seed funding, is building a network of "privacy-aware" AI agents to automate complex software deployments across corporate boundaries.
- Fast follow: Golden Analytics, the AI analytics startup from former Tableau product chief Francois Ajenstat, added $14 million to its seed round just two months after launching, bringing the total to $21 million as Insight Partners joined NEA and Madrona.
See GeekWire's full list of recent Pacific Northwest startup fundings here.
First Digital Kiosk Unveiled
An 8-foot-tall IKE Smart City digital wayfinding device is up and running in downtown Seattle near the Pike Place Market.
Ask the Ocean
Seattle's Ai2 has launched Shippy, a free AI agent built on its Skylight platform that lets maritime analysts query live vessel-tracking and satellite data in plain language to spot illegal fishing and vessels that have gone dark.
Launchpad is Back
Meanwhile, on our own waterfront, here's the latest on Mark Zuckerberg's superyacht and its sidekick.
Hot Links
- Lumen Technologies is having some fun with the FIFA World Cup requirement to temporarily rename the Seattle sports stadium that bears its name. (YouTube)
- Weeks after its New Glenn rocket exploded on a Florida pad, Kent-based Blue Origin said its Blue Moon lander is still set for Artemis III, now planned for 2027. (NASA / Space.com)
- University of Washington researchers created a first-of-its-kind "digital twin" of the I-90 floating bridge, using real-time sensor data to help crews monitor and maintain the world's first floating light rail crossing. (UW CEE)
- What's it like for a computer science major to graduate into a job market upended by the AI revolution? One UW Tacoma student is concerned that the entry-level coding roles he spent years preparing for are vanishing. (The Seattle Times)
- Amazon launched "Sleep Studio," a new Amazon Kids+ feature that transforms Echo devices into automated bedtime systems with curated sleep content and meditations from Calm, Headspace, and Moshi. (Amazon)
- Seattle software development startup DevZero launched a platform that automatically adjusts Kubernetes and AI computing workloads in real time to cut cloud costs. (GlobeNewswire)
Sign up here to receive GeekWire's daily newsletter in your inbox each day at 11 a.m. PT.




Comments
Join Our Community
Sign up to share your thoughts, engage with others, and become part of our growing community.
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts and start the conversation!