Last year, Insider’s @mattdrange wrote about how his former high school journalism teacher had repeatedly groomed teenage girls for sex as administrators failed to act. But that only scratched the surface of an open wound at Rosemead High. https://t.co/uX4imIQvZG
"Even though living at home as a freshman in college wasn't Ellie's first choice, all of us have welcomed having more time to spend together." https://t.co/AGQfOlK6MY
Who's responsible for making sure workers keep up? Some CEOs say employees need to learn on their own time. Many workers say companies should provide the training. https://t.co/TWxMHzAhNJ
"The conversations you have with yourself have a direct effect on how you perform; your body believes what your brain tells it. If you walk into a room telling yourself, I'm a horrible communicator, your communication skills will reflect that. Your vo... https://t.co/vlHzqifSXV
https://t.co/yWWAdigQhs's chief business officer James Waters describes his use of AI to analyze strategic problems — and how he tracks token spending. https://t.co/EjS2dmm8rl
Is your aversion to phone calls and direct communication impacting your chances at work and your relationships? A conversation coach explains how to improve your talking skills. https://t.co/13LS3JHYHd
"The first thing that you have to do as a founder is you have to go from the technical thing that you know how to do and that you can add value with, to learning how to manage people," Ross said. "For me, that probably cost Groq three to four years." https://t.co/hLO1d9kKCs
John Goldstein, a 75-year-old retiree in Newark, lives frugally yet enjoys flavorful meals by growing his own produce and avoiding expensive purchases like meat and dining out. https://t.co/tjhLiDZA6d
When Business Insider first spoke with Daniel last year, secretly juggling two full-time jobs was relatively straightforward. Today, one employer requires him to come into the office, another tracks how he spends his time, and he's still on track to ma... https://t.co/m5AzfyQ8t5
Former Microsoft CTO Craig Mundie says the race to build AI is moving faster than the effort to govern it — and that gap could define the technology's future