Articles - Page 26 of 216

11 min read

OpenAI is offering a $445,000 research role focused on self-improving AI systems, and the job listing has generated serious attention well beyond Silicon Valley. Not because the salary is extraordinary by OpenAI standards – it isn’t – but because of the candid, oddly philosophical language the company used to describe who it’s looking for. The...

9 min read

The rally in Suffern, New York on the evening of May 22, 2026 was billed as an economics event. The banner said “Fighting For American Workers.” The stated purpose was to stump for a vulnerable House Republican ahead of November’s midterms and tout the administration’s record on tax cuts and cost-of-living relief. What it became,...

14 min read

When a sitting president’s capacity to govern becomes a matter of formal medical record, something has shifted in the national conversation that can’t easily be walked back. Doctors putting their names to a public declaration about a president’s mental state is not the kind of thing that fades into the news cycle. It forces two...

12 min read Money

If you’re finishing a degree, weighing a big move, or wondering whether starting over somewhere new could actually change your professional arc, the 2026 data has something useful to say. It’s not what most people expect. For years, the received wisdom was that ambitious people move to New York, LA, or maybe San Francisco –...

10 min read Money

It’s a peculiar kind of argument – one billionaire telling another billionaire that they really should be paying more in taxes. Not in a sotto voce, between-courses, isn’t-that-interesting way. But publicly, loudly, in op-eds and ballot campaigns and congressional testimony, with the kind of conviction that tends to make other billionaires visibly uncomfortable at dinner....

17 min read

Most of us spend a lot of time learning to spot the warning signs. The controlling texts. The hot-and-cold behavior. The way someone manages to make every disagreement about your reaction rather than their action. We’ve become fluent in red flags, and honestly, that fluency has served us well. But there’s a quieter literacy that...

8 min read

Cats don’t tend to announce when something is wrong. You go to fill the bowl and realize you haven’t seen them since yesterday morning. You check the usual spots, the sunny patch on the sofa, the top of the wardrobe, behind the washing machine. Nothing. Most of the time they do come back. But some...

8 min read

You close the last tab of a video call, open a new document, and start typing. Thirty seconds later, there’s a weight on your wrists. A chin on the keyboard. A tail draped across the trackpad with what can only be described as deliberate calm. Your cat, who has been asleep in another room for...