Editorial** WARNING: Contains Nudity ** Marilyn Monroe?s Pucci dress sells for $325k at auction that nets total $4million as Monroe and Hugh Hefner memorabilia goes under hammer
EditorialEXCLUSIVE: Researchers reveal what offices will look like in 2050 ? including holographic calls, sensor-controlled desks and AI personal assistants
EditorialTech’s most powerful elite seem to be embracing a new tone lately. It is more openly defiant, combative and a turnaround from just a few years ago, when the industry was put on its heels by exposés about its “bro” culture. (Cari Vander Yacht/The New York Times)
EditorialMembers of the Targeted Observation by Radars and UAS of Supercells research group from Texas Tech follow a storm near Sturgis, S.D. on June 13, 2022. (Erinn Springer/The New York Times)
EditorialNora Hamada, whose business for training recruiters, Recruit Rise, has shifted focus away from high-growth start-ups, at home in Portland, Ore., Aug. 29, 2022. (George Wylesol/The New York Times)
EditorialCompanies developing computer-piloted car technology shouldn’t be in a race, sometimes it’s better to be safe than first. (Charles Desmarais/The New York Times)
EditorialThe march of technology has come with this puzzling reality: Hardly any technologies of the iPhone era have been an unqualified success. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
EditorialTech workers took out loans based on the value of their start-up stock in recent years; that may come back to haunt them. (George Wylesol/The New York Times)
EditorialWeb 3 Pitch Fest Powered by Extreme Tech Challenge (XTC) and CoinDesk, Consensus 2022 by CoinDesk, Austin Convention Center, Austin, Texas, USA - 11 Jun 2022
EditorialIt happens like clockwork. Companies, including Apple this week, introduce new options to make their gadgets feel new and improved. And like clockwork, a vast majority of people won’t use these features. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
EditorialJim Lyski, an executive vice president for CarMax, at the auto reseller?s location in Richmond, Va., May 15, 2022. (Timo Lenzen/The New York Times)
EditorialInnovation is essential and tough to sustain now that technology is a mammoth industry. But the fixation on an individual’s ingenuity above all other abilities is a selective memory of tech history. (Jack Snelling/The New York Times)
EditorialFederal privacy bills, security legislation and antitrust laws to address the power of the tech giants have all failed to advance in Congress, despite hand wringing and shows of bipartisan support. (Matt Chase/The New York Times)
EditorialApple’s “CODA” won the Oscar for best picture. Cool. But what happens when Big Tech stops throwing money around? (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
EditorialMany international businesses in tech and other industries are stopping work in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, but it’s not clear how long the corporate solidarity to isolate Russia will last. (Ruru Kuo/The New York Times)
EditorialThe international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
EditorialThe international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
EditorialTechnology is so ingrained in our lives now that many of the company quirks that felt adorable in 2000 now seem like artifice. Exhibit One: “Metamates.” (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)