Fox's $22 Billion Roku Bet Is Really a Bet on Who Controls the TV Home Screen
KCRW's Membership Is Up 22%. Here's the Playbook Other Public Stations Should Study.
Higgsfield's Supercomputer 2.0 Runs Your Ad Campaign Without You — Here's What That Actually Costs You
Bending Spoons Files for IPO, Revealing the Acquirer Behind AOL, Vimeo, and Eventbrite
The Milan-based rollup has quietly assembled a portfolio of a billion registered users. Now it wants public capital to keep buying.
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JSON FeedMeta's CTO Admits Morale Is Near an All-Time Low. The Numbers Explain Why.
Andrew Bosworth acknowledged what employees have been posting anonymously for months. The gap between Meta's record profits and its workforce's experience is the real story.
Snap's $2,195 AR Glasses Are a Mission Statement, Not a Mass-Market Product
Evan Spiegel says Specs are central to Snap's identity — but at more than four times the category's projected average selling price, the real test is whether developers and consumers agree.
AWS Is Selling Autonomous AI Agents and the Tools to Watch Them
The same company pitching hands-off enterprise automation is shipping an arsenal of guardrails, rollback tools, and learn-mode controls. That tension is the product.
FERC Votes Unanimously to Fast-Track Grid Access for AI Data Centers
Federal regulators ordered six regional grid operators to speed up power connections for large energy users — and made clear data centers will foot the bill for any infrastructure upgrades.
Technical Literacy Is Eating the MBA's Lunch
Hiring managers and operators say hands-on platform fluency is outpacing classroom credentials. The business case is harder to argue with than the prestige case.
Eight companies just won Fast Company's World Changing Ideas for pushing science and tech past their current limits
From GPS-free navigation tested in Europe's deepest mine to an AI lab that runs hundreds of thousands of experiments autonomously, this year's honorees are building infrastructure for the next decade of innovation.
Latest Business Briefs
llms.txtBending Spoons Files for IPO, Revealing the Acquirer Behind AOL, Vimeo, and Eventbrite
The Milan-based rollup has quietly assembled a portfolio of a billion registered users. Now it wants public capital to keep buying.
Institutional landlords have shelved 6,000 homes. The ban isn't even law yet.
A ResiClub survey of 14 institutional SFR operators finds policy uncertainty alone has already frozen acquisition pipelines — before Congress has passed anything.
Fox's $22 Billion Roku Bet Is Really a Bet on Who Controls the TV Home Screen
The acquisition reframes Roku not as a hardware company that got lucky, but as the most quietly dominant platform in American television — and the one Fox couldn't afford to ignore.
KCRW's Membership Is Up 22%. Here's the Playbook Other Public Stations Should Study.
While NPR affiliates absorb layoffs and budget cuts from the federal funding pullback, the L.A. station is growing revenue, listeners, and live events — by treating itself as a community business, not a radio station.
Higgsfield's Supercomputer 2.0 Runs Your Ad Campaign Without You — Here's What That Actually Costs You
The autonomous marketing platform nearly quadrupled its revenue in five months. The pitch is hands-free execution. The catch is who stays in control.
Trump's New Air Force One Is a Converted Qatari Jet — and That's a Business Story
A foreign-gifted 747 is now the U.S. presidential aircraft. The procurement detour reveals how political timelines, contractor delays, and diplomatic entanglements reshape even the most symbolically loaded government contracts.
SpaceX's Rockets Are Becoming an Air Traffic Problem the FAA Can't Fully Contain
As Starship launches grow more frequent and more ambitious, the FAA's airspace coordination system is straining against its own limits — and leaving Caribbean nations largely outside the process.
The Government Just Pulled an AI Model Mid-Deployment. Every Operator Should Pay Attention.
Anthropic's Fable 5 was live, integrated, and then gone — not because it failed, but because it worked. The precedent changes the risk calculus for anyone building on frontier AI.
Bezos Says AI Creates Labor Scarcity. His Own Company's Layoff Record Says Something Else.
The Amazon founder is pitching a labor-abundance future from his perch at a $41 billion AI startup. The 30,000 Amazon workers cut in the past year complicate the thesis.
Meta's CTO Admits Morale Is Near an All-Time Low. The Numbers Explain Why.
Andrew Bosworth acknowledged what employees have been posting anonymously for months. The gap between Meta's record profits and its workforce's experience is the real story.
Snap's $2,195 AR Glasses Are a Mission Statement, Not a Mass-Market Product
Evan Spiegel says Specs are central to Snap's identity — but at more than four times the category's projected average selling price, the real test is whether developers and consumers agree.
AWS Is Selling Autonomous AI Agents and the Tools to Watch Them
The same company pitching hands-off enterprise automation is shipping an arsenal of guardrails, rollback tools, and learn-mode controls. That tension is the product.
FERC Votes Unanimously to Fast-Track Grid Access for AI Data Centers
Federal regulators ordered six regional grid operators to speed up power connections for large energy users — and made clear data centers will foot the bill for any infrastructure upgrades.
Technical Literacy Is Eating the MBA's Lunch
Hiring managers and operators say hands-on platform fluency is outpacing classroom credentials. The business case is harder to argue with than the prestige case.
Eight companies just won Fast Company's World Changing Ideas for pushing science and tech past their current limits
From GPS-free navigation tested in Europe's deepest mine to an AI lab that runs hundreds of thousands of experiments autonomously, this year's honorees are building infrastructure for the next decade of innovation.
AI Is Now Fighting Hackers, Fixing Clinical Trials, and Beating Search Engines at Their Own Game
The 2026 World Changing Ideas winners in Business Products and Services share one throughline: AI doing work that was previously too slow, too expensive, or too dangerous to automate.
PsiQuantum Is Building the World's First Utility-Scale Quantum Computer in Chicago. Here's What That Actually Means.
A 300,000-square-foot facility on the South Side, $500 million in state funding, and a startup betting everything on photonics. The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park is moving faster than anyone expected.
Anthropic Updates Claude Design to Close the Gap Between Vibe Coders and Brand Standards
After months of real-world use, Anthropic is tightening Claude Design's grip on design systems, editing controls, and token efficiency — a direct response to what designers actually complained about.