Dienstag, 31. März 2026

The Daily

A curated briefing

Wien heute: Partly cloudy +2°C (feels -1°C), ↘10km/h wind, 87% humidity, sunrise 06:35:08 sunset 19:22:02

Biotech & Pharma

Eli Lilly signs a potential $2.75B AI-driven drug discovery pact with Insilico

Lilly is doubling down on the "AI platform" bet — but with milestone economics that keep downside limited. The company signed a multi-program collaboration with Insilico Medicine worth up to $2.75 billion across milestones and option payments, aiming to push multiple AI-designed candidates from target selection into clinical development. Insilico’s pitch is speed: compress the early discovery loop by combining generative chemistry with automated validation, then hand off to a pharma that can actually run trials at scale. The tell is the structure: big headline number, but value accrues only if programs clear real development gates.
Source: pharmaphorum.com

Takeda’s $4B psoriasis bet gets a Phase 3 boost — and a clearer FDA path

Takeda says Phase 3 data for its psoriasis asset supports the case for filing, putting some wind behind a deal valued at up to $4 billion. The core question is durability and differentiation in an already crowded immunology market where "good" isn’t enough — you need either a cleaner safety story, a meaningfully better PASI response, or convenience that changes prescribing. Regulators will want tight subgroup and safety readouts (especially infections) before treating this as more than another incremental entrant. If Takeda can frame a specific patient segment where the benefit is unambiguous, the commercial math starts to work.
Source: fiercebiotech.com

Six FDA decisions to watch in Q2 2026 — key PDUFA dates stack up in April and May

Q2 is shaping up as a deadline-heavy quarter, with multiple high-profile FDA decisions clustered in early spring. PharmaLive flags a slate of PDUFA dates stretching from early April through May 2026, spanning oncology and specialty indications where label language will matter as much as the yes/no. The practical takeaway: investors get volatility windows, while medical affairs teams get a compressed launch-prep timeline. If you’re tracking a name in this group, set alerts now — these decisions rarely land quietly.
Source: pharmalive.com

Wien – Kultur & Essen

52 Meter Street Art als Startsignal: Österreichs größtes Wandgemälde am APA-Turm-Areal

Kurzliste: Gunoldstraße 14 · 2,5 ha Planungsgebiet · 52 m Turm · 1.100 m² Fassade · Eröffnung 7. Mai (15–19 Uhr). Die Stadt Wien, BUWOG und Calle Libre starten die Transformation des ehemaligen APA-Turm-Areals in Döbling — und zwar mit einem riesigen Wandbild von Okuda San Miguel, das in rund drei Wochen fertig werden soll. Parallel beginnt ein Beteiligungsprozess: am 7.5. gibt’s Führungen (16:00/17:00) und die Möglichkeit, Ideen fürs Quartier einzubringen. Stadtentwicklung als öffentliches Kunst-Event ist nicht nur PR — es ist ein Test, ob man ein „graues“ Gelände emotional wieder an die Stadt andocken kann.
Source: presse.wien.gv.at

Bellaria Kino öffnet am 16. April wieder — 116 Plätze, neue Bar, zurück zur Programmkino-DNA

Das Bellaria hinter dem Volkstheater macht nach langer Umbauphase am 16. April wieder auf — im 115. Jubiläumsjahr. Herzstück ist ein technisch modernisierter Saal mit 116 Sitzplätzen plus neuem Barbereich (mit Café-Liebling-Team). Programmatisch will man wieder stärker auf ein Repertoire aus „best of current“ und Filmklassikern setzen. Für die Innenstadt ist das genau die Art Kultur-Ort, die nicht nur Vorstellungen verkauft, sondern Abende.
Source: wien.orf.at

AI & Tech

Mistral eyes $830M in debt to build a Paris-area AI data center cluster

Mistral is trying to do the hard thing European AI startups keep talking about: pair frontier model work with owned compute. CNBC reports the company is exploring roughly $830 million in debt financing tied to building a data-center cluster near Paris — a structure that signals capital discipline, but also locks in execution risk. The strategic bet is sovereignty: if you can secure domestic capacity, you’re less hostage to hyperscaler pricing and export-control politics. The question is whether a startup can run infrastructure with hyperscaler-level reliability while still moving fast on models.
Source: cnbc.com

Bluesky’s “Attie” uses AI to build custom feeds — a new kind of algorithm you can talk to

The Verge spotlights a small but important shift: recommendation systems are becoming conversational and user-steerable. Bluesky’s experiment lets you describe what you want (“less outrage, more local events,” etc.), and an AI agent helps assemble a feed recipe — closer to a playlist than a black box. If it works, it changes the incentive structure: users stop fighting the algorithm and start configuring it. The bigger implication is governance — once feeds are generated on demand, moderation policy becomes a moving target across thousands of micro-algorithms.
Source: theverge.com

DeepSeek’s chatbot hit its longest outage since its 2025 breakout

Reuters reports DeepSeek suffered its longest service disruption since its viral rise in early 2025 — a reminder that the "model" is only half the product. At scale, inference infrastructure failures become reputational events, especially when users treat a chatbot like a daily utility. Outages also expose where cost-optimization ends: aggressive batching and latency tradeoffs are fine until you tip into unreliability. In 2026, uptime is starting to look like the real moat.
Source: reuters.com

Travel

Airline route moves to watch: Cathay’s new Seattle flight, Iberia’s Madrid–Newark, ITA’s Rome–Houston (May 1)

Aviation Week’s rolling routes log is a good reality check on what’s actually expanding (and where). Highlights this week: Cathay Pacific launched a new Hong Kong–Seattle nonstop service 5× weekly on the A350-900; Iberia opened a daily Madrid–Newark route using the A321XLR; and ITA Airways says its new Rome–Houston service starts May 1, 2026 (initially 3× weekly, increasing to 5× weekly from June). If you’re planning summer travel, these are the kinds of additions that quietly change pricing and connection options.
Source: aviationweek.com

Some U.S. airport bottlenecks ease as TSA says workers finally got backpay

AP reports the TSA says most officers received much of their backpay, and wait times at some major chokepoints (notably Atlanta and Houston) improved Monday morning. But the agency says the system is still fragile: more than 500 officers left during the shutdown, and absenteeism remains elevated at several large airports. For travelers, the operational guidance stays boring but true — arrive earlier than you want to, because the recovery to "normal" isn’t uniform. The spring-break timing makes this a stress test.
Source: apnews.com

NBA

Wembanyama drops 41 as Spurs beat Bulls — another "this is not normal" night

AP’s game story reads like a weekly ritual at this point: Victor Wembanyama scored 41 points and San Antonio beat Chicago. The bigger storyline is usage and efficiency — the Spurs are increasingly comfortable letting him initiate, not just finish, which is the step from superstar talent to offensive system. Late-season games can be messy, but these are still data points for what the next era looks like when a 7'4" player bends spacing like a guard. Chicago’s problem remains consistency; San Antonio’s problem is time (and health).
Source: apnews.com

Bulls vs. Spurs recap: Chicago rallies, but San Antonio closes behind Wembanyama

CBS Sports’ recap adds the possession-by-possession texture: momentum swings, the late-game shot quality, and how the Bulls tried to crowd Wemby without giving up clean threes. It’s also a reminder that with a generational focal point, the supporting cast becomes a roster-construction math problem — who can defend, shoot, and not need the ball. For the Spurs, this is the front office’s real task over the next 18 months. For everyone else, it’s scouting.
Source: cbssports.com

Science

A gene therapy “off switch” for pain — morphine-like relief without the addiction pathway (in mice)

Researchers at Penn report a preclinical gene-therapy approach that targets pain-processing circuits in the brain while avoiding reward pathways linked to addiction. The ScienceDaily write-up says the team used an AI-powered behavioral system in mice to estimate pain levels and guide dosing, then deployed a circuit-specific genetic “off switch.” The paper is in Nature and frames the work as a blueprint for CNS-targeted pain medicine. It’s early — translation, delivery, and long-term safety are the real cliffs — but the concept is clear: treat pain like a signal-processing problem, not a systemic drug exposure problem.
Source: sciencedaily.com (Nature paper cited)

NHANES analysis: every +100 g/day sugar intake linked to ~41% higher odds of gallstones

A Scientific Reports paper (summarized by News-Medical) analyzes 8,975 NHANES participants (2017–2023) and finds a positive association between higher total dietary sugar intake and self-reported gallstones. In the fully adjusted model, each +100 g/day increase in sugar was associated with roughly a 41% higher odds of gallstones; top-quartile consumers had materially higher risk than the lowest quartile. The authors are clear on limitations — cross-sectional design and self-report — but the message is actionable: sugar may be a modifiable risk factor worth targeting beyond the usual metabolic endpoints.
Source: news-medical.net (Scientific Reports paper linked)

Wien für Kinder

Robinsonspielplatz: Ostern am „Robi“ (31.3.–4.4., jeweils 14–18 Uhr) — basteln, Geländespiele, Wildkräuterküche

Kurzliste: Pflanzentöpfe · Schildkrötengehege · Oster-Deko · Insektenhotels · Geländespiele. Am Kinderfreunde-Robinsonspielplatz läuft von Di, 31.3. bis Sa, 4.4. täglich ein Oster-Programm (14:00–18:00) mit Naturmaterial-Bastelei und viel „draußen sein“. Praktisch: keine Anmeldung nötig (Gruppen ab 8 Personen ausgenommen) und der Fokus liegt auf niedrigschwelligen Aktivitäten, die auch bei unterschiedlichem Alter gut funktionieren. Das ist genau die Sorte Ferienprogramm, die Eltern entstresst, weil es nicht wie ein Terminmarathon wirkt.
Source: wienxtra.at

Oper mit Kindern in Wien: NEST (Karlsplatz) + Volksoper — mit echten Kinderpreisen

Kurzliste: NEST (Karlsplatz 5) · Stücke ab 6/10/16+ · Tickets ab 5 € · Workshops · Familienmatinee in der Volksoper. Der Kinderinfo-Blog sammelt gute Argumente gegen das klassische „Oper ist nix für Kinder“-Vorurteil: moderne Spielstätte, klare Altersformate und echte Preisstaffelung (unter 16 oft 5–15 €). Der Tipp ist weniger ein einzelnes Event als ein Baukasten für die nächsten Wochen: ein Stück auswählen, vorher kurz die Story lesen, und die Erwartungshaltung realistisch halten (Oper = viel Gesang). Wenn’s klickt, ist es ein super Indoor-Plan.
Source: kinderinfowien.at