It’s a reminder that the surge in migration that picked up during the pandemic is far from over, even if it’s slowed down.
And there’s still plenty of opportunity for cities like Las Vegas to sell themselves to potential new residents. Hosting major events like the Super Bowl can help.
As the iconic plane manufacturer tries to make amends for the disastrous Alaska Airlines blowout last month, it’s becoming increasingly clear its problems run much deeper than loose screws and a blown-out door plug.
Boeing is an example of decades of American corporate philosophy gone awry. Instead of building safer, more perfect products, companies are focused on pleasing shareholders — and Boeing is just the tip of the iceberg.
Apple; Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images; Alyssa Powell/BI
The Vision Pro’s scary side effect
Apple’s newly released mixed-reality headset has the futuristic ability to capture the outside world and reproduce it within the device. It creates the kind of virtual environment that Apple — and competitor Meta — hope consumers will someday want to live in.
But researchers have found that long-term immersion in VR headsets can have some weird, messy results. Widespread VR-dwelling could change the way we perceive the world, ourselves, and reality as a whole.
In a time when Americans are turning away from much of broadcast and cable television, the NFL is thriving. This season it notched the highest average viewership number the league has seen since 2015.
The media landscape has fractured into smaller and smaller niches. But the NFL has managed to transcend politics, age, race, location, and gender — and carved out a unique space in Americans’ hearts and minds.
For years, the cubicle was a symbol of workplace disaffection. They were bland, beige, utilitarian, and ultimately axed in favor of Silicon Valley’s open-concept offices.
But now, as people are called back to the office after a few years of remote work, there’s a spreading nostalgia for the cubes of yesteryear. Workers are yearning for the privacy and focus that boxes once offered, and are calling for the revival of the once-hated cubicle.