AI data center growth is clashing with U.S. groundwater, as proposed sites over the Ogallala Aquifer raise water security concerns. https://t.co/hzV8TxTub3
The bill for the AI era has officially come due for Apple customers, with the company dramatically raising prices just as it was trying to make products like the Mac more affordable, writes Mark Gurman.
Read the latest edition of the Power On newsletter: https://t.co/Y3oZuMofso
📷️: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
More than 50 per cent of British voters in the 2016 referendum opted to leave the E.U.; an opinion poll this month revealed that only about a third of Britons still think that Brexit was a good idea.
https://t.co/X4j4ek14tg
What really drives leaders to resist remote work isn't productivity. It’s ego.
Our new data: Ordering people in full-time is a power & status move. Bosses want to be worshiped at the office altar.
Policies shouldn’t be vanity projects. Hybrid is better for people & performance.
https://t.co/kOywHTFLoG
Matt Freese, who holds an Ivy League economics degree, came out of practically nowhere to secure the job as the U.S. national team’s starting goalkeeper—and his analytical approach has been integral to his rise.
⚽️ https://t.co/lzJrA4vnlw
France recorded its hottest ever day as the heat wave searing Europe deepened — disrupting schools, transport and tourist sites. Read more: https://t.co/DeK0r1nGAL
📷: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP
Less than two years after winning a huge parliamentary majority at the general election, Keir Starmer has announced his resignation. He will become the fifth consecutive British prime minister not to serve out a full parliamentary term. https://t.co/IexE3NzCVc
Measuring cholesterol levels has long been the main way doctors assess the risk of heart disease. Increasingly, people are opting, too, for a simple, relatively affordable test: a coronary artery calcium scan.
Here’s more to know about the scans: 🔗 https://t.co/lsD6JBhKEJ
I've noticed that one of the most common mistakes ambitious people make is believing that happiness is waiting on the other side of achievement.
In behavioral science, we call this the arrival fallacy. It's the idea that once you reach the next milestone, get the promotion, earn the recognition, or accomplish the goal, you'll finally feel fulfilled.
But satisfaction doesn't come from arriving. It almost always comes from making progress toward something meaningful. That's why goals are important, but they are not the reward. The pursuit is.
SpaceX shares surged 17%, pushing its valuation past Amazon and briefly above Microsoft, making it the fifth most valuable company days after its IPO debut https://t.co/d8lXrNPmro
FDA-cleared blood tests for Alzheimer’s aren’t designed for healthy, symptom-free people, but many people want this information anyway. 🔗 https://t.co/ghsZQftImk
AI music generators are trained on an unfathomable number of songs, Alex Reisner reports. Search for an artist or track in four giant data sets he obtained: https://t.co/ECFf1ZAJDj
SpaceX priced the biggest-ever US initial public offering at $135 per share, making Elon Musk’s rocket and spacecraft manufacturer one of the world’s most valuable companies https://t.co/k7RCanWkNr
From a forgotten match in deepest Brazil to the arrival of global superstars on American shores, the U.S. has grown from soccer backwater into host of the biggest World Cup in history. ⚽️ https://t.co/Sw7UOWMOg0
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government has introduced legislation that would ban youth under the age of 16 from using social media platforms operated by firms such as Meta and X unless the companies meet a set of safety standards https://t.co/6ewQ38obkP