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How Putin and Xi both bent their nations to their will to become presidents for life
The leaders of Russia and China have achieved absolute power over their countries, and are now bonding over their shared ambition to topple the US.
My dad is billionaire Steve Ballmer. Here's what it was like growing up rich — and being kind of ashamed of it.
Ex-Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's son has mixed feelings about generational wealth. He used to be ashamed of his family's net worth; now he embraces it.
The Fed still probably isn't ready to give Americans the interest rate cuts they're hoping for
The Federal Reserve is likely to continue holding interest rates steady this week, but a cut could come later in the year.
A glimpse into Sam Altman's 2-hour-long bid to look like the saner, less chaotic foil to Elon Musk
Altman gave a wide-ranging interview to podcaster Lex Fridman, where he talked about his sudden firing last year and Musk's lawsuit against him.
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I've made these simple changes in my life so that I can retire at 40 and move to the Philippines
Brandon Turrell first came across the Financial Independence, Retire Early movement — better known as the FIRE movement — in 2012.
A Lady Gaga Google Search shows how AI is upending the world's most profitable online business. 'Site owners are terrified.'
A BI analysis of Google's new generative AI search results over several months shows how much the business of online search is about to change.
South Koreans are dealing with burnout and loneliness by getting pet rocks
Millennials in South Korea are using pet rocks to help with feelings of burnout and isolation. The trend started as a gag gift in the US in the 1970s.
My 11-year-old has a phone. I only agreed to it as long as I could see his location.
Her son started asking for a phone in 5th grade because all his friends had one. She finally agreed, with the condition that she could see his location.