
#economist.com. Why investors should still avoid Chinese stocks. The debate about “uninvestability” obscures something important
#Oct.14.2024 ×

#economist.com. The trouble with Elon Musk’s robotaxi dream. Scaling up self-driving taxis will be hard, and competition will be fierce
#Oct.13.2024 ×

#linuxinsider.com. Strong Basics: The Building Blocks of Software Engineering. The following observations were compiled with software engineering in mind, as I identified them while working in that discipline. However, these practices apply universally.
#Oct.11.2024 ×

#economist.com. Iran’s leader must choose how to fight his war with Israel. Hardliners may force the supreme leader to escalate the conflict with Israel
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Israel has these four options for attacking Iran. Its politicians, and some generals, are gung-ho that the moment has come
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. How to send a cake from New Jersey to Accra. A Ghanaian app hints at the potential and problems of Africa’s diaspora
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Masayoshi Son is back in Silicon Valley—and late to the AI race. This isn’t the first time the Japanese tech investor has missed the hot new thing
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#wired.com. The American Who Waged a Tech War on China. China is racing to unseat the United States as the world’s technological superpower. Not if Jake Sullivan can help it.
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. The threat of an Israeli attack is reviving Iranian nationalism. Iranians fear their country is being dragged into war
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. China is writing the world’s technology rules. It is setting standards for everything from 6G to quantum computing
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Can Mytheresa make luxury e-commerce a success?. It reckons it can succeed where Richemont has failed
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. China’s property crisis claims more victims: companies. Unsold homes are contributing to a balance-sheet recession
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. How America learned to love tariffs. Protectionism hasn’t been this respectable for decades
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Europe’s green trade restrictions are infuriating poor countries. Only the poorest can expect help to cushion the blow
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Can the world’s most influential business index be fixed?. Two cheers for the World Bank’s new global business survey
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Why have markets grown more captivated by data releases?. Especially when the quality of statistics is deteriorating
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Ratan Tata, a consequential and beloved figure in Indian business. He reshaped one of India’s most successful conglomerates
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Can markets reduce pollution in India?. An experiment in Gujarat yields impressive results
#Oct.10.2024 ×

#economist.com. Big tech is bringing nuclear power back to life. Artificial intelligence needs clean and reliable energy sources
#Oct.09.2024 ×

#wired.com. Alfonso Cuarón Subverted Sci-Fi and Fantasy. Now He’s Coming for TV. “Gravity,” “Children of Men,” the best Harry Potter movie—and now a seven-part miniseries? With “Disclaimer,” director Alfonso Cuarón has set out to conquer TV in the name of cinema.
#Oct.09.2024 ×

#economist.com. Can Israel’s mighty tech industry withstand a wider war?. Its resilience is being tested
#Oct.08.2024 ×

#economist.com. Israel’s invasion of Lebanon may bolster support for Hizbullah. The group is deeply embedded in Lebanese politics and society
#Oct.07.2024 ×

#economist.com. Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?. Missiles are flying over a region that supplies a third of the world’s crude
#Oct.07.2024 ×
Filter: #Oct.14.2024 ×
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