
Business, Spoken
2,353 episodes — Page 44 of 48

WoeBot, The Chatbot Therapist, Will See You Now
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Sci-Fi TV Doesn't Have to Be 'Prestige'—It Can Just Be Fun
You live, it’s true, in a Golden Age of Television, and at least some of that gold comes in the form of lucky coins from leprechauns that reanimate unfaithful dead spouses. Which is to say, some of the most premium-est of premium TV right now is genre—science fiction and fantasy. It’s American Gods, Game of Thrones, The Walking Dead, Westworld, The Leftovers. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

What's Wrong with Apple's New Headquarters
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

IBM's Silicon Nanosheets Breakthrough Will Help Push Moore's Law Forward
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Scientist Screwed Up? Send 'Em to Researcher Rehab
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Review: Microsoft Surface Laptop
Microsoft’s new Surface Laptop says nothing about the future of technology. The team in Redmond didn’t concern itself with the way things will be in 2025—which ports users will want, what kind of device they’ll use, how they’ll feel about bezels. Instead, Microsoft built a laptop optimized for 2017. Contrast that approach with Apple’sMacBooks. To trim every millimeter from its laptops, Apple invented a shallower keyboard. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Trump’s Twitter Blocking May Violate First Amendment
President Trump's irate and irrational tweets have already gotten him in plenty of trouble, and will, no doubt, continue to be an issue as he pushes for approval of his controversial travel ban before the Supreme Court. Now, free speech advocates are condemning Trump not just for what he's saying on the platform, but for what he's preventing his constituents from saying to him. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Apple Just Joined Tech’s Great Race to Democratize AI
Apple’s iMac updates and new HomePod speaker drew most of the attention at the company’s World Wide Developers keynote. But tucked away in the middle were a short few minutes in which software chief Craig Federighi casually launched Apple into one of the tech industry’s fiercest competitions– the contest to help developers build the next generation of AI-powered applications. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The End of Net Neutrality Could Shackle the Internet of Things
Net neutrality isn’t the simplest concept to grasp. Explaining it works best via example: Net neutrality means, say, that internet providers like AT&T, Comcast, and Verizon, which also have their own television and streaming video services, can’t create “slow lanes” for competing services. They can’t gum up traffic from sites such as Netflix and Dish’s SlingTV in favor of their own. But net neutrality doesn’t just cover streaming video. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

In a Fake Fact Era, Schools Teach the ABCs of News Literacy
Fourteen-year-old Isabel Catalan stares intently at her laptop as she walks me through a recent assignment one sunny morning a few weeks before summer vacation. The studious eighth grader and I are sitting in a tiny, colorful classroom at Norwood-Fontbonne Academy, a small private elementary school in the tree-lined Philadelphia suburbs, which also happens to be my alma mater. In most ways, Norwood feels a lot like I left it nearly 20 years ago. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Google Is Already Late to China’s AI Revolution
Sitting on a stage in Wuzhen, China, a historic city up the river from Shanghai, Google chairman Eric Schmidt described what he called “the age of intelligence.” But he wasn’t talking about human intelligence. He meant machine intelligence. He trumpeted the rise of deep neural networks and other techniques that allow machines to learn tasks largely on their own, either by finding patterns in vast amounts of data or through their own trial and error. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A Laptop Ban Leaves Everyone Scared and No One Safer
After this weekend’s attacks in London, President Trump became embroiled in a spat with the city’s mayor, where the president criticized British authorities for not taking the threat of terrorism seriously enough. In its crude way, that confrontation underscored a deeper divide between the United States and much of the rest of the world over what taking terrorism seriously means. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Antitrust Watchdogs Eye Big Tech’s Monopoly on Your Data
A couple weeks ago,during an unassuming antitrust conference at Oxford University, a German bureaucrat uttered a few words that should send a chill through Silicon Valley. In front of a crowd of nearly 200 competition law experts—including enforcement agents, scholars, and economic policy-makers from the United States and Europe—Andreas Mundt, president of Germany’s antitrust agency, Bundeskartellamt, said he was “deeply convinced privacy is a competition issue. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

We Asked Lawyers to Vet Trump’s Most Controversial Tweets
Just past midnight on Wednesday morning, the man who gave us the word "bigly" added yet another term to the American lexicon: "covfefe." The president's since-deleted late-night tweet, which read, cryptically, "Despite the constant negative press covfefe," launched a thousand Twitter takes. Some of the jokes were great. Some were so very, very bad. (We're looking at you, Ted Cruz. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Pied Piper’s New Internet Isn’t Just Possible—It’s Almost Here
On HBO’s Silicon Valley, startups promise to “change the world” by tackling silly, often non-existent problems. But this season, the show’s characters are tackling a project that really could. In their latest pivot, Richard Hendricks and the Pied Piper gang are trying to create new internet that cuts out intermediaries like Facebook, Google, and the fictional Hooli. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The GIF Turns 30: How an Ancient Format Changed the Internet
The web’s favorite file format just turned 30. Yep, it turns out the GIF is a millennial, too. At the same time, 30 makes the GIF ancient in web years, which feels a bit weird, given that the proliferation of animated GIFs is a relatively recent phenomenon. Today, Twitter has a GIF button and even Apple added GIF search to its iOS messaging app. Such mainstream approval would have seemed unthinkable even a decade ago, when GIFs had the cultural cachet of blinking text and embedded MIDI files. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Community Zuck Longs to Build Remains a Distant Dream
On February 16, Mark Zuckerberg published “Building Global Community,” a6,000-word open letter directly addressed to Facebook’susers. “To our community,” Zuckerberg begins. “On our journey to connect the world, we often discuss products we’re building and updates on our business. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Meet the Nerds Coding Their Way Through the Afghanistan War
A disembodied voice sounded over a loudspeaker. "Incoming. Take cover," it warned to anyone within earshot. Then, the sirens began to wail. Erin Delaney assumed it was a drill. She peeked down the hallway to see how other people were responding. Then she hit the deck. It was not a drill. The NATO base in Kabul where Delaney had been working for weeks was being attacked. Delaney, 24, had never had any military training. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

This Entrepreneur A/B Tested Her Clothes to Combat Sexism
Kathryn Minshew is a female cofounder and CEO of The Muse, a popular online job search destination for millennials. She doesn’t have a technical degree, although she was a top computer science student who aced the advanced placement exam for computer science when she was in the tenth grade at Thomas Jefferson High, a prestigious math and science magnet school in northern Virginia. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Telco-Backed Politician Wants to Restore Privacy Rules She Helped Kill
Last Thursday Republicans proposed a new law that would require companies from Comcast and Verizon to Facebook and Google to get your permission before selling your internet browsing history. Sounds familiar? Probably, because last year the Federal Communications Commission passed a sweeping set of privacy rules that did much the same thing, rules that Republicans voted to scrap just two months ago. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Can the American Heartland Remake Itself in the Image of Silicon Valley? One Startup Finds Out
Ross Diedrich had gone pale and raw-boned. The CEO of a year-old startup in Denver, he'd stay at his office until the middle of the night, go home and sleep for about five hours, then chug a spinach smoothie and start again. He was just 27 years old, but he felt wrung out. Now he was standing in front of six angel investors, wearing a blazer over a T-shirt printed with the word covered—the name of his startup—and regretting he hadn't spent more time practicing for this moment. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Can the American Heartland Remake Itself in the Image of Silicon Valley? One Startup Finds Out
Ross Diedrich had gone pale and raw-boned. The CEO of a year-old startup in Denver, he’d stay at his office until the middle of the night, go home and sleep for about five hours, then chug a spinach smoothie and start again. He was just 27 years old, but he felt wrung out. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Get Ready for the Next Big Privacy Backlash Against Facebook
Data mining is such a prosaic part of our online lives that it’s hard to sustain consumer interest in it, much less outrage. The modern condition means constantly clicking against our better judgement. We go to bed anxious about the surveillance apparatus lurking just beneath our social media feeds, then wake up to mindlessly scroll, Like, Heart, Wow, and Fave another day. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Sundar Pichai Sees Google’s Future in the Smartest Cloud
Two days before delivering the keynote at Google I/O, the company’s annual State of the Union address, Sundar Pichai is worried about losing his voice. Sitting at the coffee table inside his remarkably spartan office at company headquarters, the Google CEO speaks softly, even by his standards. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Hear Me Out: Let’s Elect an AI as President
Is it possible that someday we will elect an AI president? Given some of the recent occupants of the White House, many might consider it an upgrade. After all, humans are prone to making decisions based on ego, anger, and the need for self-aggrandizement, not the common good. An artificially intelligent president could be trained to maximize happiness for the most people without infringing on civil liberties. It might even learn that it's a good idea to tweet less—or not at all. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Silicon Valley Rebrands Itself as Good for the Rest of America
“Should I tellthe story about the killer robots?” Micah Weinberg said. “I love telling this story. It’s such a good story.” A group of roughly 50 people listened raptly as Weinberg, president of a think tank called the Bay Area Council Economic Institute, addressed a public-policy luncheon in San Carlos, California, on Thursday afternoon. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Even if Apple Breaks $1 Trillion, It Won’t Stay on Top Forever
Apple just became the first US company to surpass $800 billion in market capitalization. Speculation quickly followed that Apple would soon become the first $1 trillion company, with a rumored $1,000 iPhone 8 coming at year’s end. The company’s share price has been on a tear since the beginning of the year, and sales of the iPhone 7 have been strong in part because of safety issues surrounding rival Samsung devices. Apple retains an enviable brand image and a devoted consumer base. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Maybe the Internet Isn’t Tearing Us Apart After All
Vikingmaiden88 is twenty-six years old. She enjoys reading history and writing poetry. Her signature quote is from Shakespeare. I gleaned all this from her profile and posts on Stormfront.org, America's most popular online hate site. I also learned that Vikingmaiden88 has enjoyed the content on the site of the newspaper I work for, the New York Times. She wrote an enthusiastic post about a particular Times feature. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Magic Leap Bias Suit: Sexism As a Sign of Failure
Magic Leap, the secretive augmented reality tech startup that’s valued at $4.5 billion (and reportedly bores Beyoncé), settled a sex discrimination lawsuit this week. The plaintiff, Tannen Campbell, a former vice-president of strategic marketing, was hired to make the company’s product more appealing to women. Campbell filed a notice of settlement Monday in federal court in Florida, Magic Leap’s home state, and the terms of the settlement are confidential. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Snap Blows First Earnings—But That’s Not the Whole Story
Today Snap reported its first earnings as a public company, and it bombed. Snap’s stock market debut three months ago was the most valuable tech IPO in the US in two years, and certainly the most talked-about. Snap, after all, provides one of the few significant alternatives to the two giants of online advertising, Facebook and Google. If Snap can eke out some space in a field long dominated by this duopoly, that could mean more meaningful competition. ‘Snap is a niche platform. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Etsy Needs to Preserve Its Values to Preserve Its Value
For Etsy, the internet's best-known marketplace for all things artisanal, the past week has served up a heaping portion of unpleasant corporate reality. After revealing aloss of nearly half-a-million dollars in the first quarter of 2017, Etsy said it would replace longtime chair and CEO Chad Dickerson. The company cut 8 percent of its workforce and said it wouldn't provide guidance on future earnings until August, when it hoped to have a better grip on its longer-term prospects. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

How One Scrappy Startup Survived the Early Bitcoin Wars
The girls were dancing on a neon tank, wearing sequined bikinis lit up by red and green laser light. A strobing fixed-wing aircraft passed overhead like the acid-trip kissing cousin of a Mitsubishi A6M Zero, with more sequined women dangling from it, trapeze-style. Flashing robots had preceded them — wheeling through the room, pumping their fists at the crowd — while the audience, seated on tiers of glittery red plastic swivel chairs, waved glow sticks. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Blame the Fyre Festival Fiasco on the Plague of Celebrity Influencers
It was like a nightmare crossover between Gossip Girl and Black Mirror. Socialites, models, and celebrities, promised extravagant beachside benders, flocked to the Bahamas only to find feral dogs, luggage gone AWOL, and accommodations resembling FEMA camps. Social media feeds exploded with tales of wealthy millennials stranded on an island with little food or water. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tom Hanks and Jack Dorsey Tumble Into The Circle’s Endless Irony
During a brief break in the online broadcast, Tom Hanks leaned toward Jack Dorsey. “So, has this been good for Twitter or bad?” he asked. Hanks was only semi-serious, but the Twitter CEO didn’t have an answer. Which is fair. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Airbnb’s San Francisco Deal Puts Storyline Over Bottom Line
Airbnb is trying to change the narrative. For so long, the nearly nine-year-old home-sharing platform pushed for growth by barging into new markets and new cities around the world, regulations be damned. So the news that the company agreed this week to settle its lawsuit against the City of San Francisco seems jarring. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Look to Zuck’s F8, Not Trump’s 100 Days, to See the Shape of the Future
The Circle, a film adaptation of the best-selling novel by David Eggers about a mega-Silicon Valley company that has sinister plans to control the world, opened recently to tepid reviews and unimpressive box office. That shouldn’t obscure the fact that the issues it attempts to address—and which the novel brilliantly took on—are ones that need to be dealt with, urgently. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Here’s What Comes Next in the Fight to Save Net Neutrality
The GOP-led Federal Communications Commission this week released the first details of its long-anticipated plan to roll-back Obama-era net neutrality protections. The good news for net neutrality advocates: You can already voice your official displeasure on the FCC’s proposal. The bad news: It’s quite possible no one will listen. The FCC’s Republican commissioners never supported the net neutrality rules, and they’re not likely to change their minds. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Upworthy’s Quest to Engineer Optimism for an Anxious Age
The world finds itself in an age saturated with anxiety—at least, that’s the sense created by the daily deluge of news portraying a grim present of economic hardship, global tensions, terrorism, and political upheaval. The five-year-old site Upworthy doesn’t want you to see the world that way. At one time, if Upworthy was known at all, it wasn’t for its mission, but for its attention-gathering headlines. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Hate the News? Wikipedia’s Co-Founder Wants You to Edit It
You read the news. But if Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales' hunch is right, you'll want to edit it, too. Wales is raising money to bring a new model of ad-free news creation to the web: one that would mix professional journalists with volunteer editors. Wales, like so many other idealists who believe in a better public discourse, wants to fix the fake news problem he sees as driven by a clickbait economy where accuracy comes second to intrigue. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Facebook’s Race to Link Your Brain to a Computer Might Be Unwinnable
“What if you could type directly from your brain?” Regina Dugan said, as the same words appeared on the towering screen behind her, one digital character at a time, a cursor leading the way. “It sounds impossible,” she continued, taking another measured step across the stage. “But it’s closer than you may realize.” Dugan once oversaw Darpa, the visionary research arm of the US Department of Defense. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Trump’s Wall Is Worthless if He Doesn’t Back It Up With Tech
If Congress were to fail to pass a spending bill before the end of the day Friday, the government could shut down. That’s why President Trump just blinked. He shelved a plan to demand that funding for a border wall be included in that bill after both Democrats and Republicans voiced fierce opposition. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Race To Build An AI Chip For Everything Just Got Real
Yann LeCun once built an AI chip called ANNA. But he was 25 years ahead of his time. The year was 1992, and LeCun was a researcher at Bell Labs, the iconic R&D lab outside New York City. He and several other researchers designed this chip to run deep neural networks—complex mathematical systems that can learn tasks on their own by analyzing vast amounts of data—but ANNA never reached the mass market. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Hidden Laborers Training AI to Keep Ads Off Hateful YouTube Videos
Every day across the nation, people doing work for Google log in to their computers and start watching YouTube. They look for violence in videos. They seek out hateful language in video titles.They decide whether to classify clips as “offensive” or “sensitive.” They are Google’s so-called “ads quality raters,” temporary workers hired by outside agencies to render judgments machines still can’t make all on their own. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

A Chip Revolution Will Bring Better VR Sooner Than You Think
David Kosslyn and Ian Thompson are the founders of a virtual reality company called Angle Technologies. Two years into this stealth project, backed by $8 million in funding, they won’t say much about the virtual world they’re building—at least not publicly. But they will say that they’re building it in a way that alters the relationship between computer hardware and software. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Anger Isn’t Enough, So the #Resistance Is Weaponizing Data
If Jon Ossoff, a Democrat, wins today’s special election in Georgia’s 6th congressional district—a seat Republicans have held since 1979—it won’t be because he’s young. It won’t be because he’s idealistic, camera-friendly, or Star Wars-savvy. Mostly, it will be because Ossoff is lucky enough to be the first Democrat to stand a real chance of starting to claw back the ground ceded to Republicans on Capitol Hill. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Want Real Choice in Broadband? Make These Three Things Happen
Regulators are now off the backs of big internet providers. Thanks to a resolution signed by President Trump earlier this month, consumer-friendly privacy rules passed by the Obama-era Federal Communications Commission won’t take effect. Rules designed to protect net neutrality—the idea that internet providers shouldn’t be able to give certain content preferential treatment—seem likely to fall next. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Don’t Despair: Big Ideas Can Still Change The World
In the late summer of 1954, a brilliant young psychologist was reading the newspaper when his eye fell on a strange headline on the back page: prophecy from planet clarion call to city: flee that flood. it’ll swamp us on dec 21, outer space tells suburbanite. His interest piqued, the psychologist, whose name was Leon Festinger, read on. “Lake City will be destroyed by a flood from Great Lake just before dawn, Dec. 21. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Training for the Day a Tweet Dictates Where to Send SWAT
Emergency responders in northern Texas watch as an imaginary crisis takes over their social media feeds. A mass shooting has broken out at a music festival, they learn, and a terrorist organization is taking credit. The shooters livestreamed the entire grisly scene, and news outlets are already picking up the story. Word of the tragedy spreads like a virus online, riddled with misinformation and panicked confusion. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Stronger Privacy Laws Could Save Advertising From Itself
Online advertising is terrible. Ads clutter your screen, slow down your computer, and drain your batteries. Publishers saddle pages with tracking technology that vacuums up your data so they can, ostensibly, serve you more relevant ads (though this practice really just leads to serious privacy concerns). Sometimes ads even try to install malware on your computer. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tech Alone Won’t Be Enough to Reboot Progressive Politics
Ravi Gupta is standing with both hands resting on the lip of a lucite podium. Some 600 audience members, including his mother, are staring intently back at him. Few of them have ever worked in politics before, but they’re all here to hear the former Obama administration staffer tell them how they can help save the progressive cause. He just has one problem: He forgot his laptop at the airport. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices