
Business, Spoken
2,353 episodes — Page 46 of 48

The TV Ad Isn’t Going Anywhere—It’s Going Everywhere
You’re inching home alongside four lanes of fellow commuters when a digital billboard blinks to a video ad for the latest model of the car you’re driving. Oh yeah, you think, my lease is up next month. Fifteen minutes later, you’re home. You grab your laptop and sink into your couch. You check Facebook and distractedly tune into a new Facebook Original Series. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Apps Make Pestering Congress So Easy That It Can’t Keep Up
Donald Trump is now president, and Americans are flooding Congress with pleas and protestations. They’re anxious about the fate Obamacare, the future of the environment, and the president’s cabinet nominations. How are they expressing their anger, fears, and hopes? Email. Lots of email. Take Pennsylvania Democratic senator Bob Casey. He reportedly received 50,000 letters and emails opposing the nomination of Betsy DeVos for secretary of education. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Race to Pass Obama’s Last Law and Save Tech in DC
It was 10:15 am on Inauguration Day, and John Paul Farmer was beginning to lose hope. The former Obama White House staffer had spent the last night at his sister’s apartment in Washington DC, working the phones and emailing any sentient being he’d met during his years in Washington. Farmer was trying to find someone, anyone, who could get the Tested Ability to Leverage Exceptional Talent Act—the Talent Act, for short—to President Barack Obama. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Author of Trump’s Favorite Voter Fraud Study Says Everyone’s Wrong
Jesse Richman used to be one of those researchers who only dreamed his work might someday capture national attention—maybe even inspire some sort of systemic change. On Ratemyprofessor.com, his students describe him as tough but fair, a “genius” who was liberal with extra credit projects and went out of his way to offer help. In 2014, Richman’s world changed when he co-authored a paper on voter fraud that instantly caught fire. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Artificial Intelligence Is About to Conquer Poker, But Not Without Human Help
Kim is a high-stakes poker player who specializes in no-limit Texas Hold ‘Em. The 28-year-old Korean-American typically matches wits with other top players on high-stakes internet sites or at the big Las Vegas casinos. But this month, he’s in Pittsburgh, playing poker against an artificially intelligent machine designed by two computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Fake Think Tanks Fuel Fake News—And the President’s Tweets
Fake news isn’t just Macedonian teenagers or internet trolls.A longstanding network of bogus “think tanks” raise disinformation to a pseudoscience, and their studies’ pull quotes and flashy stats become the “evidence” driving viral, fact-free stories. Not to mention President Trump’s tweets. These organizations have always existed: they’re old-school propagandists with new-school, tech-savvy reach. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Women’s March Defines Protest in the Facebook Age
A rushing river of protesters flooded downtown Washington, DC, today, pink hats stretching as far as I could see. But it’s thesigns that stayed with me. “I’m With Her” and “Love Trumps Hate” posters from Hillary Clinton’s campaign. Signs mocking President Trump: “Keep your tiny hands off my rights” and “Can’t build the wall. Hands too small. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Now You Can Save the Democratic Party for the Low, Low Price of $4.68 a Month
On the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration, Democrats are lost. The Democratic National Committee has not elected a new leader. Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton supporters are still blaming each other for her loss. The party holds no branch of the federal government and fewer than half of state legislatures. What in mid-2016 looked like a fractured Republican party is increasingly uniting behind its new leader. The Democratic Party looks like its falling apart. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

One Indian State’s Grand Plan to Get 23M People Online
The trench running along the road linking Kodicherla and Penjarla in southern India is just 5 feet deep and about half as wide. Yet it carries the promise of a better life for the people of those villages, and all of Telangana. Within the ditch lie two pipes, a large black one carrying fresh water and smaller blue one containing a fiber optic broadband cable. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Microsoft Thinks Machines Can Learn to Converse by Making Chat a Game
Microsoft is buying a deep learning startup based in Montreal, a global hub for deep learning research. But two years ago, this startup wasn’t based in Montreal, and it had nothing to do with deep learning. Which just goes to show: striking it big in the world of tech is all about being in the right place at the right time with the right idea. Sam Pasupalak and Kaheer Suleman founded Maluuba in 2011 as students at the University of Waterloo, about 400 miles from Montreal. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tech’s Favorite School Faces Its Biggest Test: the Real World
On lengths of yarn stretched between chairs, sixth-grade math students were placing small yellow squares of paper, making number lines—including everything from fractions to negative decimals—in a classroom at Walsh Middle School. Working in teams one recent morning, they paper-clipped the squares along the yarn like little pieces of mathematical laundry. Their teacher, Michele O’Connor, had assigned the number lines in previous years, but this year was different. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Move Over, Coders—Physicists Will Soon Rule Silicon Valley
At least, that’s what Oscar Boykin says. He majored in physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology and in 2002 he finished a physics PhD at UCLA. But four years ago, physicists at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland discovered the Higgs boson, a subatomic particle first predicted in the 1960s. As Boykin points out, everyone expected it. The Higgs didn’t mess with the theoretical models of the universe. It didn’t change anything or give physcists anything new to strive for. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tesla Is Snatching Apple’s Stars to Make Itself the New Apple
If you don’t follow the ins and outs of Silicon Valley personnel moves, you might have missed the news. Even if you saw it, it may not have made much sense. Chris Lattner is leaving Apple for Tesla? Chris who? Lattner doesn’t enjoythe name recognition of a Tim Cook or a Jony Ive. But he’s a rock star among software engineers. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Quantum Computing Is Real, and D-Wave Just Open-Sourced It
Quantum computing is real. But it’s also hard. So hard that only a few developers, usually trained in quantum physics, advanced mathematics, or most likely both, can actually work with the few quantum computers that exist. Now D-Wave, the Canadian company behind the quantum computer that Google and NASA have been testing since 2013, wants to make quantum computing a bit easier through the power of open source software. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Why Trello, a Simple To-Do App, Is Worth $425 Million
Atlassian co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes describes Trello as a simple online application. But simple doesn’t have to mean cheap: His company just agreed to acquire the web-based project management app for $425 million—a ridiculous-sounding amount of money that may well be worth paying. “Simple products can be deceptive in their simplicity,” Cannon-Brookes says. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Defeat NIMBYs With pCell’s Wireless Antenna Disguised as a Wire
Cellular antennas often wear disguises. Chances are, your smartphone has at some point connected to an antenna that looks a lot like a pine tree, a palm tree, or even a cactus. But in typical fashion, serial Silicon Valley inventor Steve Perlman aims to push this idea much further. He and his company, Artemis Networks, just unveiled a cellular antenna disguised as a cable. Yes, it’s wireless technology that looks like a wire. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The iPhone Remade Apple 10 Years Ago. Now It’s Slowing Apple Down
The very first iPhone, announced ten years ago today, was not exactly a surprise. By early 2007, Apple fanboyism was rampant and rabid. In the run-up to Steve Jobs’ now famous Macworld keynote, blogs—remember those?—were all abuzz. Sites like Gizmodo and Engadget feverishly published rumors of the as-yet-unnamed phone’s specs and obsessed over every possible detail. Apple fans mocked up concept illustrations. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Bitcoin Will Never Be a Currency—It’s Something Way Weirder
The value of bitcoin surged past $1,000 this week, the first time it has reached such heights since late 2013. But don’t let that big number fool you: this strange and controversial technology is no closer to becoming a mainstream currency. Even Olaf Carlson-Wee, the first employee at Coinbase, the country’s most important bitcoin company, will tell you that bitcoin will never be a substitute for the dollar. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The White House’s Techies Are Leaving Trump a Must-Do List
‘Tis the season to say goodbye. Next week, it will be President Barack Obama, who plans to deliver his presidential farewell address in Chicago on Tuesday. Today, it’s his science and technology team, which has just published an exit memo celebrating its accomplishments over the last eight years. The Office of Science and Technology Policy also lays out a checklist for the incoming Trump administration. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Microsoft’s Old-School Database Was the Surprise Software Hit of the Year
Don’t call it a comeback, but Microsoft’s database software may be seeing a resurgence. According to research conducted by the Austrian consulting company Solid IT, Microsoft SQL Server’s popularity grew faster than any other database product the company tracked on its DB-Engines site during 2016. That’s good news for Microsoft because, despite holding tight to the number three spot in the rankings for the past few years, SQL Server’s popularity had been waning. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

2016 Was the Year Silicon Valley’s Hype Machine Sputtered
Fourwords sum up the Silicon Valley hype machine at the end of 2016: “squirrels and sea monkeys.” That was the repeated responsefrom Magic Leap founder Rony Abovitz when Reed Albergotti ofThe Informationasked about the technology behind the startup’s augmented-reality glasses. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Year in Housing: The Middle Class Can’t Afford to Live in Cities Anymore
In the center of Boston rises the small neighborhood of Fort Hill, on top of which sits Highland Park, designed in the 1700s by Frederick Olmsted. Patriots stored gunpowder here during the Revolutionary War, and a tower fit for Repunzel commemorates their efforts. The abolitionist writer William Lloyd Garrison fought against slavery from a house on this hill. And now the battle for urban housing affordability rages on these streets. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

This Was the Year Tech Stocks Became Sure Bets
2016 was the year tech got “fangs.” Well, not literally. FANGs wasa term coined by CNBC business guru Jim Cramer in 2015 to describe the high-performing stocks of the massively successful tech companies Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, and Google (now called Alphabet). Today, it’s not these particular companies that are technically at the top of the Wall Street leaderboard—that distinction falls to Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Facebook. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The Cloud Needs to Get a Whole Lot Greener in 2017
Streaming music and movies over the internet may seem more eco-friendly than stocking up on CDs and DVDs. After all, you’re saving the plastic needed to make the physical media, the trees needed to print the liner notes, and the gasoline needed to ship all those discs across the country. But there’s a hidden cost to online streaming: the coal needed to power the computer data centers that deliver all that content. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Overstock Begins Trading Its Shares Via the Bitcoin Blockchain
Online retailer Overstock.com has became the first publicly traded company to issue stock over the internet, distributing more than 126,000 company shares via technology based on the bitcoin blockchain. Through a subsidiary called tØ, the Salt Lake City-based Overstock has spent the past two years building the technology that facilitates this new way of trading financial securities. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tech’s Alcohol-Soaked Culture Isn’t a Party for Everybody
It’s office holiday party season again, and as usual that means alcohol. Lots and lots of alcohol. For many employees, the holidays are the one time of year that it’s appropriate to have a drink at work. But for tech workers, the annual Christmas party is just another boozy day in the office. Kegerators, or at least well-stocked beer fridges, are standard fixtures at tech companies, right up there with ping-pong tables and beanbag chairs. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Facebook Finally Gets Real About Fighting Fake News
After coming under heavy public criticism for not taking full responsibility for how it may have affected the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, Facebook has finally laid out how it plans to crack down on fake news. The social network’s corrective updates are starting to roll out right now, and while they won’t solve the problem overnight, they’re an important first step. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Amazon and Netflix Look to Their Own Shows As the Key to World Domination
This week, Amazon Video, the commerce giant’s answer to Netflix, invaded 200 countries. That expansion, too, was itself a sort of response: Netflix had pulled a similar globe-spanning stunt in January. Both moves were audacious, expansive, and potentially highly profitable. An neither would have been remotely possible had each company not spent the last several years investing heavily original content. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Tech’s Biggest Showdown Is Unfolding in Your Living Room
Microsoft is joining Google and Amazon in the race for your home. This week, at an event in China, the venerable tech giant trumpeted the arrival of Project Evo, a sweeping plan to build hardware devices that work a lot like Google Home or the Amazon Echo. But this race is much bigger than some gadgets that sit on your coffee table. It’s a race not only for the hearts and minds of consumers, but for a world of business customers, too. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

How Simple Software Could Help Prevent Sexual Assault
Bill Cosby has been accused of drugging and raping dozens of women over several decades. Roger Ailes is accused of harassing multiple women as far back as the 1960s. And then there’s all those Catholic priests. Indeed, when sexual predators, especially those in positions of power, get away with such crimes once, they often do it again and again until an overwhelming preponderance of accusations, evidence, and outrage brings them down. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Only Amazon Could Make a Checkout-Free Grocery Store a Reality
On Monday, Amazon took the wraps off Amazon Go, a real-world grocery store that comes with a twist: there’s no checkout process. You just grab the stuff you want and walk out; the order posts to your Amazon account afterwards. There are no cashiers, no lines, no fumbling for a credit card. And while experts agree that Go looks very much like the future of retail, it’s less clear whether Amazon has all of the pieces in place. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Stellar Emerges From Shadow of Bitcoin to Find a Home Overseas
LeEco is like the Netflix of China—except it also sells phones, televisions, and cars. Now, it’s moving into the US after acquiring the stateside television maker Vizio. Unlike some Chinese tech giants that seem happy to focus on a domestic market approaching 1.4 billion, LeEco has international ambitions. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The ‘Uber for X’ Fad Will Pass Because Only Uber Is Uber
“Uber for X” has been the headline of more than four hundred news articles. Thousands of would-be entrepreneurs used the phrase to describe their companies in their pitch decks. On one site alone—AngelList, where startups can court angel investors and employees—526 companies included “Uber for” in their listings. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Trump Can’t Deliver the Rust Belt Jobs He Promised Because Work Has Changed
On Election Night, voters in northeastern Ohio’s Trumbull and Ashtabula counties made Sean O’Brien—a three-term Democratic state representative—their state senator. They also helped make Donald Trump president. In 2012, 60 percent of Trumbull’s largely white, working class electorate voted for Barack Obama. In 2016, they flipped their support to the populist GOP candidate who offered his own promises for change. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Uber Buys a Mysterious Startup to Make Itself an AI Company
Uber has acquired Geometric Intelligence, a two-year-old artificial intelligence startup that vows to surpass the deep learning systems under development at internet giants like Google and Facebook. But as this tiny AI lab slips into Uber’s increasingly vast and ambitious operation, the startup is still tight-lipped on what its technology actually looks like. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

In OpenAI’s Universe, Computers Learn to Use Apps Like Humans Do
OpenAI, the billion-dollar San Francisco artificial intelligence lab backed by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, just unveiled a new virtual world. It’s called Universe, and it’s a virtual world like no other. This isn’t a digital playground for humans. It’s a school for artificial intelligence. It’s a place where AI can learn to do just about anything. Other AI labs have built similar worlds where AI agents can learn on their own. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Trump Taps IBM and GM Chiefs in First-Ever Sign He Gets Tech Matters
For all his talk about bringing jobs back to the United States, President-elect Donald Trump has said virtually nothing about preparing Americans for the increasingly tech-driven jobs of the future. Even as he rails against trade’s impact on industries like manufacturing, he’s been mostly silent about the impact of automation. During the campaign, he never tried to court the Silicon Valley vote the way Hillary Clinton and many of his primary opponents did. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Rejoice! You Can Download Netflix Shows Now For an Offline Binge Fix
Attention all Netflix users: you can now download shows and movies for offline viewing. This is not a drill. Want to binge Stranger Things or Orange Is the New Black, on an airplane or on the road heading home for the holidays? Go wild. Want to watch The Imitation Game on a two-hour subway ride? Knock yourself out. To get offline downloads, just update your iOS or Android app. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Google’s AI Reads Retinas to Prevent Blindness in Diabetics
Google’s artificial intelligence can play the ancient game of Go better than any human. It can identify faces, recognize spoken words, and pull answers to your questions from the web. But the promise is that this same kind of technology will soon handle far more serious work than playing games and feeding smartphone apps. One day, it could help care for the human body. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

So 2016 Was Not the Year Messaging Changed Your Life
This was supposed to be the year that texting wasn’t just texting anymore. After big announcements from Facebook, Google, and others, Americans were going to use messaging apps for so much more than chatting with friends. You were going to seamlessly interact with a world of online businesses. You were going to send questions to search engines and book tables at restaurants. You were going to get stuff done without ever opening another app. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Facebook’s Stumbles Expose Flaws in Its Plan to Rule Advertising
The internet was supposed to mean a whole new world for the business of advertising. Gobs of data let advertisers become wildly efficient in who they target and how they measure results. Consumers also ostensibly win: If you’re in the market want a quality winter coat, the thinking goes, you’re not going to be annoyed if you see an ad for one. In this new world, Facebook is on top. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Facebook Shouldn’t Bother Policing Fake News—It Should Go Local Instead
Since the election, Facebook has faced growing pressure to police hoaxes and misleading content. And with good reason: around 44 percent of US adults get at least some of their news through Facebook, and fake news often spreads more quickly through social media than real news. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Oracle Just Bought Dyn, the Company That Brought Down the Internet
Last month, the entire internet went down for a few hours. At least that’s what one of the biggest denial-of-service attacks in recent memory felt like to a lot of people. Sites from Netflix, Spotify, and Reddit to The New York Times and, yes, even WIRED went dark. The massive outage was the result of an attack on an Internet infrastructure company called Dyn. You’d think that finding yourself at the center of such a destructive online maelstrom wouldn’t be much of a sales pitch. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Your Filter Bubble is Destroying Democracy
On November 7, 2016, the day before the US election, I compared the number of social media followers, website performance, and Google search statistics of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. I was shocked when the data revealed the extent of Trump’s popularity. He had more followers across all social platforms and his posts had much higher engagement rates. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Google, Facebook, and Microsoft Are Remaking Themselves Around AI
Fei-Fei Li is a big deal in the world of AI. As the director of the Artificial Intelligence and Vision labs at Stanford University, she oversaw the creation of ImageNet, a vast database of images designed to accelerate the development of AI that can “see. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

The EU’s Android Antitrust Complaints Are Contrived
Earlier this month Google filed its response to the European Commission’s Android antitrust complaint, which alleges that Google thwarts its competitors in search, mobile apps, and mobile devices by limiting their access to Android users through self-serving licensing terms. But the EC’s objections, rooted in an outdated understanding of marketplace dynamics, are a contrivance. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

OpenAI Joins Microsoft on the Cloud’s Next Big Front: Chips
To build OpenAI—a new artificial intelligence lab that seeks to openly share its research with the world at large—Elon Musk and Sam Altman recruited several top researchers from inside Google and Facebook. But if this unusual project is going to push AI research to new heights, it will need more than talent. It will needs enormous amounts of computing power. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

HeartMob’s Volunteers Crack the Trollish Eggs of Twitter
Julie Lalonde knows all too well what it’s like to be harassed on social media. Lalonde is an Ottawa-based women’s rights activist intimately familiar with the deluge of abuse a single tweet can trigger. She’s endured everything from whack-a-mole trolls impersonating her onlineto enduring a coordinated campaign of abuse against women who dared to comment on Canada’s first Twitter harassment criminal case. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

How Pollsters Missed the ‘Bowling Alone’ Voters That Handed Trump the Presidency
Howard County, Indiana—home to the city of Kokomo—has long been a center for the automotive industry. Or at least it was until that industry and others began to shift overseas in recent decades. By 2008, when Chrysler, the town’s largest employer, teetered on extinction, Forbes named Kokomo the third-fastest dying city in America; during the financial collapse of 2009, fully 40 percent of its home sales were foreclosures. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Allen Institute for AI Eyes the Future of Scientific Search
Google changed the world with its PageRank algorithm, creating a new kind of internet search engine that could instantly sift through the world’s online information and, in many cases, show us just what we wanted to see. But that was a long time ago. As the volume of online documents continues to increase, we need still newer ways of finding what we want. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices