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CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer!

S10
Tackling deepfakes 'has turned into an arms race'    

The battle against fake images, video and audio is becoming ever harder as the tech improves.

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S1
You're more likely to make more money if you're an older sibling--and now researchers think they know why - Fortune (No paywall)    

In sibling birth order, who’s the winner? The debate between pressured-but-successful older children or free-spirited but overlooked younger siblings has consumed many over the years, even leading to the rift between psychology founder Sigmund Freud (a firstborn child) and his middle-child colleague Alfred Adler. When it comes to corporate success, though, the data is unquestioned: Older children have it made.Older kids, on average, have slightly higher IQs than their younger siblings, do better in school, and tend to earn more money as adults, as abundant research has shown. A CareerBuilder survey found that older children were more likely to achieve six-figure salaries, while the oft-overlooked middle children are most likely to be in entry-level jobs earning $35,000 or less. 

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S2
6 Books for Adults Living With A.D.H.D.    

Staying focused in a world of distractions can be incredibly challenging. But for people living with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder — a neurodevelopmental disorder often marked by difficulty maintaining attention, disorganization, hyperactivity and impulsivity — it can be even harder. Adults are diagnosed less often than children, but A.D.H.D. can still create problems at work and in friendships and romantic relationships.This book, first published in 2010, is full of information and practical tools from Dr. Barkley, “one of the leading, if not the leading expert on A.D.H.D. in the world,” Dr. Saline said. It’s a “combo workbook/info book, which is great for people to get a better sense of who they are,” she said.

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S3
Swiss Watches: Market Share by Brand in 2023    

In 2023, the Swiss watch industry achieved record sales totaling CHF 26.7 billion ($30 billion). The “Big Four” watch brands—Rolex, Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, and Richard Mille—achieved a combined 43.9% market share last year, compared to a pre-Covid 2019 market share of 36.9%.In conclusion, premium watches priced over CHF 25,000 ($28,000) drove 69% of the market’s growth in 2023, and constituted 44% of the total value of Swiss watch exports. Despite this significant value contribution, this segment represents only 2.5% of the total volume in terms of units sold.

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S4
Is the World Prepared for More Terrorism? - Foreign Policy (No paywall)    

Russia is mourning the loss of at least 139 people after the deadliest act of terrorism on its soil in years. Last Friday, gunmen opened fire inside a packed suburban concert hall outside Moscow and also set the building ablaze. Within hours, the Islamic State—the terrorist organization also known as ISIS—claimed responsibility for the attack. U.S. intelligence sources indicated the attackers were likely from an ISIS offshoot, the Islamic State in Khorasan, which has been active in Afghanistan.

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S5
How BYD grew from battery maker to electric vehicle juggernaut, overtaking Tesla    

In the U.S., Tesla may be at the forefront of the electric vehicle revolution, but abroad, the carmaker has some serious competition. In China, the world's largest EV market, Tesla has been losing ground to domestic automakers who are increasingly building better cars at unbeatable prices, and chief among them is Warren Buffett-backed BYD."They are one of the top companies in the world building lithium-iron phosphate batteries," Sam Abuelsamid, principal analyst at Guidehouse Insights, told CNBC. He also explained the advantages over lithium-ion batteries, saying they are long-lasting and "cost about 30-40% less per kilowatt hour to manufacture."

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S6
Why Some Songs Make Everyone Want to Dance - Scientific American (No paywall)    

In a series of experiments with more than 60 participants, cognitive neuroscientist Benjamin Morillon and his team from Aix-Marseille University in France uncovered how syncopation relates to the groove experience. In one study, they played 12 different melodies. The main beat was always two hertz, or roughly two events per second. But the melody’s rhythmic shifts varied so that each tune was played with three different degrees of syncopation. Participants then rated how much they wanted to dance to each track.As Morillon and his colleagues reported in the journal Science Advances, a medium degree of syncopation triggered the strongest desire to move to the music. By contrast, neither a very high nor low degree of syncopation had that same result. In other words, people didn’t particularly want to dance to an absolutely predictable rhythm or a highly surprising one.

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S7
A Drug Half as Good as Ozempic for One-30th the Price - The Atlantic (No paywall)    

“In my lifetime, I never dreamed that we would be talking about medicines that are providing hope for people like me,” Oprah Winfrey says at the top of her recent prime-time special on obesity. The program, called Shame, Blame and the Weight Loss Revolution, is very clear on which medicines she means. At one point, Oprah stares into the camera and carefully pronounces their brand names for the audience: “Ozempic and Wegovy,” she says. “Mounjaro and Zepbound.” The class of drugs to which these four belong, called GLP-1 receptor agonists, is the reason for the special.For a brief and telling moment, though, Oprah’s story of the revolution falters. It happens midway through the program, when she’s just brought on two obesity doctors, W. Scott Butsch and Amanda Velazquez, to talk about the GLP-1 wonder drugs. “Were you all surprised in your practices when people started losing weight?” she asks. Butsch gets a little tongue-tied: “Yeah, I mean, I think we have—we’ve already been using other medications for the last 10, 20 years,” he says. “But these were just a little bit more effective.”

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S8
Why the Baltimore Bridge Collapsed So Quickly - WIRED (No paywall)    

Just shy of half past 1 in the morning, the MV Dali, a giant container ship, was sailing gently out of the port of Baltimore when something went terribly wrong. Suddenly, lights all over the 300-meter-long vessel went out. They flicked on again a moment later, but the ship then began to veer to the right, toward one of the massive pylon-like supports on the Francis Scott Key truss bridge—a huge mass of steel and concrete that spans the Patapsco River.Now, a major US port is in disarray, and several people who were working on the bridge at the time of its collapse are missing. A rescue operation is underway. President Biden has called the disaster a “terrible accident.” Ship traffic is currently stuck on either side of the crash site, and a major roadway through Baltimore has been cut off.

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S9
Could AI take the grind out of accountancy?    

AI could mean fewer accountancy jobs but is also taking over some of the more mundane tasks.

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S11
Why hydrogen is losing the race to power cleaner cars - MIT Technology Review (No paywall)    

Hydrogen fuel cells work by combining hydrogen and oxygen in chemical reactions, generating electricity that can power vehicles. These cars are frequently touted as a climate-friendly transportation option, in a sector where more choices are desperately needed. Transportation is one of the world’s biggest problems when it comes to climate change—the sector accounts for roughly a quarter of global emissions. There are still barriers to adoption of electric vehicles as fossil-fuel alternatives, with many consumers worried about range, charging time, and a shortage of chargers. A decade ago, the race to introduce a popular zero-emissions vehicle was anyone’s to win. “Go back to the 2010s, and the two technologies—electric and fuel cell—were very much talked about in the same breath,” says Colin McKerracher, head of the transportation team at BloombergNEF.

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S12
How Adobe's bet on non-exploitative AI is paying off - MIT Technology Review (No paywall)    

Since the beginning of the generative AI boom, there has been a fight over how large AI models are trained. In one camp sit tech companies such as OpenAI that have claimed it is “impossible” to train AI without hoovering the internet of copyrighted data. And in the other camp are artists who argue that AI companies have taken their intellectual property without consent and compensation. Adobe is pretty unusual in that it sides with the latter group, with an  approach that stands out as an example of how generative AI products can be built without scraping copyrighted data from the internet. Adobe released its image-generating model Firefly, which is integrated into its popular photo editing tool Photoshop, one year ago.

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S13
How One Leader Overcame Career-Ending Adversity    

In the spring of 2021, Raymond Jefferson (MBA 2000) applied for a job in President Joseph Biden’s administration. Ten years earlier, false allegations had been used to force him to resign from his prior U.S. government position as assistant secretary of labor for veterans’ employment and training in the U.S. Department of Labor. Jefferson filed a federal lawsuit against the U.S. government to clear his name and used his entire life savings to pursue the case for eight years. Why, after such a traumatic and humiliating experience, would Jefferson want to work in government again?Harvard Business School senior lecturer Anthony Mayo traces Jefferson’s personal and professional journey from upstate New York to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and eventually to President Obama’s administration. Mayo also discusses how Jefferson faced adversity at several junctures in his life, and how resilience and vulnerability shaped his leadership style in the case, “Raymond Jefferson: Trial by Fire.”

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S14
When Attending Industry Events, Avoid These Legal Risks - Harvard Business Review (No paywall)    

It’s common to run into competitors at conferences and trade fairs. That’s great for some things, like identifying potential clients and suppliers, benchmarking best practices, or gathering new insights. But it could also be dangerous when it comes to the accidental disclosure of sensitive information, along with myriad other fair-competition risks. Price fixing or monopolistic practices surrounding a product, service, acquisition, or pricing structure are all red flags for trouble and can pose significant regulatory and reputational peril to leaders, teams, and organizations.

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S15
Inside looksmaxxing, the extreme cosmetic social media trend    

Online communities that present a dangerous view of male beauty are growing in popularity. When does a quest for self-improvement become something darker?

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S16
There is a perfect time to shower – and it’s not when you think    

Thanks to data-driven obsessives online, I have discovered that there is an optimal time at which to do everything. Exercising in the afternoon, for example, may reduce the risks of early death more than a morning or evening workout. Delaying your morning coffee until two hours after waking improves cognition and energy, according to Andrew Huberman, a controversial neurobiologist and podcaster who has developed a cult following for his health and fitness "protocols". As for the best time to have a shower? I'm glad you asked. I have done extensive research on the matter - and it's complicated.Like the orientation of toilet paper, shower times are surprisingly divisive. One group swears you need a morning shower to make the most of your day. The evening team, on the other hand, holds that anyone who doesn't wash before bed is a grimy heathen whose sheets are besmirched by filth. Some people - compromisers - suggest you can get the best of both worlds by abluting twice a day. An equally passionate camp warns that this will dry out your skin and hike up your water bill. According to one poll, there is a gendered aspect to this divide: men are more likely to wash in the morning than women.

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S17
The Trump machine: the inner circle preparing for a second term - FT (No paywall)    

In 2016, Donald Trump was the ultimate political outsider. If he wins this year’s election, he will be backed by a group of experienced former officials eager to apply his ideas

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S18
Europe's economy is under attack from all sides - The Economist (No paywall)    

A decade ago Xi Jinping was welcomed to Duisburg in Germany’s Ruhr valley. He praised the region as a hub for Chinese investment; greeted a train that had spent a fortnight travelling from Chongqing, via Russia, to Europe’s industrial belt; and enjoyed an orchestral performance of traditional mining songs. More recently, another Chinese arrival in Germany received a frostier reception. In February a ship called BYD Explorer No. 1 unloaded 3,000 or so electric cars made by BYD, a Chinese electric-vehicle (EV) firm. As the ship’s name suggests, it is likely to be the first of many. Little surprise it has prompted worries about the future of Germany’s hallowed carmakers.China is churning out cars, as its leaders funnel cash and loans to high-tech industry in an attempt to revive the country’s moribund economy. Its manufacturing trade surplus has risen to a record high, and is set to rise higher still. As a consequence European leaders are fearful of an influx of advanced, cheap Chinese goods. On March 5th the European Commission decided it had sufficient evidence to declare that China had unfairly subsidised its EV makers, paving the way for the introduction of tariffs. Ursula von der Leyen, the commission’s president, has warned China not to “race to the bottom” on green tech. Britain has begun a probe into the country’s excavators. Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, will host Mr Xi in May. He will, according to diplomats, deliver “firm messages” on trade.

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S19
Can Learning a New Language Stave Off Dementia? - The New York Times    

Research suggests that bilingual people enjoy some cognitive benefits later in life, but it probably requires more than a few Spanish lessons in your 60s.

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S20
Accelerated Learning: Learn Faster and Remember More    

Learning is the act of incorporating new facts, concepts, and abilities into our brains. We start learning in the womb and we never stop; we are always developing new competencies. Every new bit of knowledge we acquire builds on what we already know and gives us a fuller, richer picture of the world. And the more developed our understanding of the world is, the easier it is for us to adapt and pivot when our circumstances change.We know from biology that organisms that can adapt to their constantly changing environment survive and thrive. Those that can’t eventually go extinct. The same is true for us in our life and work. We all know the person at work that hasn’t adapted to the changing times. Their unwillingness to stretch themselves and learn something new makes it seem like they are moving backwards.

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S21
My Mother's Death Blew Up My Life. Opening a Book and Wine Store Helped My Grief - The Cut (No paywall)    

In January of 2020, I started a new job. Senior copywriter for a large big-box home-goods retailer — in charge of all print media, and most importantly, the mailing of the store’s extremely beloved coupons. “Do you like it?” friends asked over $17 drinks and $15 fries at a bar where we swapped petty grievances about New York City life. “Yeah, sure,” I said. It wasn’t what I thought I’d be doing when I got my M.F.A. in fiction, wrote a novel, graduated, shelved it, began another. It was better than the prior one, but still just another step up the rung of a career ladder I never intended to climb, yet did, hand over reluctant hand, year after year, in order to pay my bills. I had a solid circle of friends, a consistent fuck buddy, a small savings account, and — finally, after a pay raise and a breakup — had made my apartment of eight years all mine, no roommate.This might have been my life forever. But on the 15th of that month, my mom asked my brother and I to get on a joint phone call, something she had never done, to discuss some recent health issues of hers; ulcers, we thought. I took the elevator downstairs to my office’s personality-devoid marble lobby for privacy. Four minutes later, she delivered the news: stage-four pancreatic cancer. The doctors gave her a year to live.

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S22
How drone combat in Ukraine is changing warfare    

The tiny, inexpensive FPV (first-person view) drone has proved to be one of the most potent weapons in this war, where conventional warplanes are relatively rare because of a dense concentration of anti-aircraft systems near front lines. FPVs - originally designed for civilian racers - are controlled by pilots on the ground and often crashed into targets, laden with explosives.Drones have been used in warfare for decades – pilotless, radio-controlled aircraft were tested as far back as World War One. But the war in Ukraine has seen an explosion in the scale with which they're deployed. They have transformed from performing specialized functions to becoming one of the most important and widely used weapons on the battlefield.

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S23
Mayo Clinic's Healthy Model for AI Success | Thomas H. Davenport and Randy Bean    

The spring 2024 issue's special report looks at how to take advantage of market opportunities in the digital space, and provides advice on building culture and friendships at work; maximizing the benefits of LLMs, corporate venture capital initiatives, and innovation contests; and scaling automation and digital health platform.The spring 2024 issue's special report looks at how to take advantage of market opportunities in the digital space, and provides advice on building culture and friendships at work; maximizing the benefits of LLMs, corporate venture capital initiatives, and innovation contests; and scaling automation and digital health platform.In 2022, we argued in the MIT Sloan Management Review AI in Action series that Mayo Clinic was probably the most aggressive adopter of AI among U.S. health care providers. Today, it's time to review some of the factors that have made this health system successful with AI and its underlying components. One key: Mayo Clinic staff members see the data and AI team as enablers, not gatekeepers.

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S24
25 Years Later, Star Wars Canon Just Finally Solved a Weird Jedi Mystery     

If the Jedi were guardians of peace and justice in the Republic, why was the Republic struggling? Since Obi-Wan Kenobi spoke his wistful words about the state of the galaxy “before the dark times, before the Empire,” Star Wars canon has gradually clarified the vagaries of the Republic and its fall.In theory, the three prequels — The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, and Revenge of the Sith — fully explain how the Republic turned into the Empire. And yet, when The Phantom Menace begins, galaxy-wide corruption and poverty are already the status quo. Now, a new novel by genre legend John Jackson Miller called The Living Force is filling in key details, giving the prequel era the clarity it’s needed for a very long time.

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