Andreessen Horowitz cofounder Ben Horowitz thought that “blowing sunshine” was the right way to handle pressure — here’s how he corrected his mistake.
Search Results
You searched for: D
Without a solid understanding of the factors that affect the transfer of learning, the gulf between training and job performance is difficult to bridge.
You’re a moody person. You have to be — because understanding moods philosophically can be crucial to your work-life.
Follow the money and you’ll follow history.
If measuring eLearning ROI is so important, why aren’t more organizations doing it?
Just by observing the tiny amount of deuterium left over from the Big Bang, we can determine that dark matter and dark energy must exist.
Why the road to self-driving vehicles is paved with smarter “dumb” cars.
Everything we observe beyond our Local Group is speeding away from us, omnidirectionally. If the Universe is expanding, where is the center?
Throughout the world, traditional political organizations are increasingly seen as dysfunctional. But can democracies live without them?
“Isn’t it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?”
Just because you can’t experience it doesn’t mean it’s not real.
The brain-computer interface will be tested in a six-year trial in patients with quadriplegia.
The tech world’s fixation on artificial intelligence has spawned beliefs and rituals that resemble religion — complete with digital deities, moral codes, and threats of damnation.
There are two methods to measure the expansion rate of the Universe. The results do not agree with each other, and this is a big problem.
Science writer Matt Ridley joins us to discuss how “Darwin’s strangest idea” makes us all a bit feather-brained (in a good way).
When you enter someone’s home, you learn how life is lived elsewhere.
The first human trial of base editing delivered strong results along with some safety concerns.
Finding life beyond our Solar System requires understanding its host planet.
The sharpest optical images, for now, come from the Hubble Space Telescope. A ground-based technique can make images over 100 times sharper.
Gravitational waves are the last signatures that are emitted by merging black holes. What happens when these two phenomena meet in space?
In our Universe, matter is made of particles, while antimatter is made of antiparticles. But sometimes, the physical lines get real blurry.
A single knife is sometimes worth more than a thousand armies.
Research suggests that to maintain a healthy brain, we should tend our gut microbiome.
“Values emphasizing tolerance and self-expression have diverged most sharply, especially between high-income Western countries and the rest of the world.”
Life arose on Earth very early on. After a few billion years, here we are: intelligent and technologically advanced. Where’s everyone else?
Dark matter doesn’t absorb or emit light, but it gravitates. Instead of something exotic and novel, could it just be dark, normal matter?
The Grammy-nominated artist reflects on a life of heartbreak and a future full of hope.
▸
10 min
—
with
Do you always act professionally in the workplace? Depends what you mean by “professional.”
With “Karla’s Choice,” Nick Harkaway had an impossible mission: maintain his father’s legacy while staying true to his voice.