The Brutalist Report - fastcompany
- Payment apps are popular, but here’s why you shouldn’t store money in them [335d]
- Paris announces a $55 million plan to revamp Notre Dame area into a green oasis [335d]
- The U.S. gender wage gap is growing. Here’s why [335d]
- How pop hit ‘OMG’ became the perfect anthem for the Mets [335d]
- The world’s second Sphere is coming to the Middle East [335d]
- Experts weigh in on U.S. retail sales for the holidays [335d]
- What are VTubers? The controversial class of streamers, explained [335d]
- How Tom Holland’s struggle with ‘Dry January’ inspired this new non-alcoholic beer [335d]
- Capital One has a new tool to help keep track of all your subscriptions [335d]
- How Libya and Tuvalu are cashing in on their top-level domain names [335d]
- Listeria fears spread to schools and even more products as the BrucePac meat-and-poultry recall keeps getting worse [335d]
- California’s new minimum wage law will give health care workers a pay bump [335d]
- Is ghosting someone online ever OK? [335d]
- Kellogg’s Froot Loops and other cereals are igniting protests from activists. Here’s why [335d]
- Should I DM the CEO of a company to get a job? [335d]
- Superstudio is a new gen AI editor from the creatives behind Adult Swim and the iPhone [335d]
- The Internet Archive is even more essential than I realized [335d]
- How AI can unlock innovation across our nation’s research institutions [335d]
- By selling copycat weight-loss drugs, WeightWatchers has become a copycat business [335d]
- Why is Apple so bad at marketing its TV shows? [335d]
- Want more engagement on your social media post? Look at the color complexity [335d]
- The weird Dutch trick to building housing across the country [335d]
- What do you get the Trump supporter who has everything? This surreal MAGA hat will do [335d]
- Political assassination attempts are not an effective way to create change, says more than a 100 years’ worth of data [335d]
- Why this children’s book publisher isn’t afraid of book bans [335d]
- What would it take to move away from planned obsolescence? [335d]
- 5 strategies for leading better meetings [335d]
- DoNotPay will now call customer service hotlines for you [335d]
- 3 annoying business clichés you need to ignore [335d]
- How a morning ‘power hour’ can help you find your next job [335d]
- This new bone-like cement could change how we build just about everything [335d]
- Democrats and Republicans have similar demographics and views about parenthood, research shows [335d]
- Why companies still need to invest in people, according to a Columbia business professor [335d]
- Michigan moved fast to protect reproductive rights—twice. But the 2024 election could change it all [335d]
- How Uber and Lyft drivers across the country are banding together to make rideshare jobs better [335d]
- Displaced disaster victims experience anxiety and depression, data shows [335d]
- How Wikipedia is staying relevant in the AI era [335d]
- FEMA’s disaster relief gets political ahead of the election [335d]
- 9 Surprisingly Simple Ways To Get People To Respond To Your Email [335d]
- Why You Can Never Finish Anything And How to Finally Change It [335d]
- ‘We work at Salesforce, of course we’re going to enjoy the free snacks’: Employees are becoming influencers for their own companies [335d]
- ASML stock price plunges after accidental earnings release, taking Nvidia and other AI chipmakers with it [336d]
- Spotify is adding new markets to its music video test [336d]
- Housing data reveals how swing states could flip red or blue in the 2024 election [336d]
- Why Washington state’s landmark climate law may be repealed soon [336d]
- Indigenous groups in Brazil weren’t consulted in major carbon credits deal [336d]
- Delta is redesigning its aircraft cabins for a ‘premium’ feel [336d]
- ‘She was trying to warn us’: Why an old conspiracy theory about Beyoncé and Sia is resurfacing online [336d]
- NASA launches Europa Clipper to Jupiter’s ocean moon. Here’s why [336d]
- New England’s fall foliage is back and drawing leaf-peepers from around the world [336d]
- Walgreens plans to close 1,200 stores, with 500 locations shuttering in the next year [336d]
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