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Faulty Towers
Wind turbine breakdowns have bedeviled manufacturers in the US and Europe
Innovation - Methanol Goes Green
An Icelandic company’s head start producing the sustainable fuel is poised to pay off
Sunny With Intermittent Showers
The US solar industry is running into some obstacles
Israel's Tech Investors Take a Stand
Executives at startups and VCs are speaking out against a plan to weaken the judiciary
How to Spot A Recession
Predicting the arrival of a downturn is notoriously difficult
Spinning Profits From Slow Justice
A bet on an airline that went bust four decades ago heads toward a 100 million payoff
Avoiding the Hated Down Round
Struggling private companies are finding creative ways to raise cash without accepting a lower valuation
The Government Goes After Google Again
A suit attempting to break up the company’s ad-tech business may be its most serious legal threat in years
ChatGPT Is Hungry For the Cloud
The computing power needed for modern AI is shaping its technical development and business model
When Quitting Comes With Hurdles
Workers at Concentra must pay up to four months' salary to leave early, part of a trend to restrict employee turnover
Boeing's 737 Max Can't Shake Its Past
Families of those who died in two crashes are challenging the government's immunity deal
Global Domination
China has quietly become a major exporter of autos, passing the US and South Korea
The Cost of Going Off the Cliff
Bloomberg Economics has modeled the effects of a protracted debt ceiling standoff—and they’re horrendous
A Rite for Sore Eyes
Therabody’s new high-tech massager is a balm for screen-time headaches.
Why You'll Want to Extend Your Stay at Extended-Stay Hotels
Traditionally, residence hotels have targeted either the jet-setter—take the $8,000-a-night Hyde Park suite at Mandarin Oriental London—or, as with the $95-a-night Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham in Sterling, Virginia, the budget-conscious business traveler.
American Coyote
When people cross the US-Mexico border hoping to immigrate, they encounter a smuggling network whose operators are often highly vulnerable themselves
The Winklevii Join the Crypto Blame Game
Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss are lashing out. The cryptocurrency entrepreneurs are blaming recent troubles at their company Gemini Trust Co. on a business partner, Barry Silbert, and the Securities and Exchange Commission, which sued Gemini for securities fraud on Jan. 12 (along with Silbert’s Genesis Global Capital).
When It's Miles To Go Before You Sleep
How to get the best rest while you’re on the road
The Good Sheet
Curl up under the covers with some of the coziest materials known to humankind.
Counting Sheep, Losing Sleep
Are we becoming addicted to our trackers?
Fake Meat Losses Its Sizzle
Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods wanted to upend the world’s $1 trillion meat industry. But plant-based meat is turning out to be a flop
Fixing Fertilizer
Agriculture companies are making progress in the search for greener plant foods
When Bigger Batteries Are Better
Dutch startup Zenon says heftier cells can work for industrial storage and price arbitrage
The Greening of a Puddle Jumper
New England’s Cape Air says its short hops are a great place to start electrifying aviation
Talk of Decoupling Is Mostly Just That
The battle between Washington and Beijing over tech curbs hasn't hit trade flows broadly
The Foot Soldiers in Russia's Mobilization Economy
Entrepreneurs are getting creative about filling gaps created by sanctions
Big Diversity Talk Reaps Big Payoffs
Diversity washing attracts investors to companies even if their results lag, study shows
Crypto paradise becomes a nightmare for the Bahamas
FTX found a home in the Bahamas in part because of its streamlined crypto rules
Tech Workers Talk About Getting Laid Off
Job cuts have upended the lives of many people who thought they were headed in the right direction
Carmakers Are Happy to Help Techies Find Work
The industry is hungry for software engineers to help build its next generation of vehicles