Showing results for: group (page 556)
Walmart taps VR to train its employees
Lauren Barack
Virtual reality helps get workers up to speed faster, says the big box store
Tech billionaires keep buying publications. Here’s what that means for the future of journalism
Nicole Karlis
Marc Benioff bought Time magazine — continuing a recent trend of techies sinking their talons into media
Devin Nunes wants Trump to declassify more documents pertaining to the Russia probe
Matthew Rozsa
Rep. Devin Nunes is egging on Trump to declassify more documents about the ongoing Russia probe
Same-sex suburban couples are changing the equality fight
Clayton Howard
LGBTQ couples moving away from older cities defies the perceived connection between heterosexual families
Digitizing the vast “dark data” in museum fossil collections
Charles Marshall
With a lot not on display, museums may not even know all that’s in their vast holdings
Watching “Atypical” with autism: Still flawed, but season 2 shows growth
Matthew Rozsa
The show's depiction of Sam is still problematic. But there's a lot to identify with in this new season
Are today’s white kids less racist than their grandparents?
Margaret Hagerman
Is there any reason to believe that each new generation of white people will be more tolerant than previous ones?
How does estrogen affect auto-immune conditions?
Sayantan Chakraborty
A new study might finally explain why women are more likely to develop the disorders
America’s political pollsters could be missing the X factor in the 2018 elections — “hidden voters”
Steven Rosenfeld
Pollsters look for reliable voters, but that has overlooked this year’s key blocs of new and infrequent voters
Trump-era politics are affecting worker morale — and what managers can do about it
Wayne Hochwarter
Midterm elections are expected to stress a lot of Americans out in every part of their lives, work included
Breast cancer survivors have a bigger problem after treatment: The cost
Ann Pietrangelo
Even with insurance, many breast cancer survivors struggle with financial burden after treatment
Inside the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre
Simon Reeve
Shortly after 4 a.m. on Sept. 5, 1972, a small gang of shadowy figures arrived outside the Olympic Village
Donald Trump’s self-preserving War on Justice
Terry H. Schwadron
Fearing what the Russia conspiracy probe has uncovered, he’s ordered the Department to release secret documents
Is Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski edging closer to voting “no” on Trump nominee Brett Kavanaugh?
Shira Tarlo
Alaska's governor and lieutenant governor both voiced their opposition to Kavanaugh, mounting pressure on Murkowski
Authorities can deny visa, green card applications without giving applicants chance to fix errors
Kavitha Surana
The policy change is another brick in Trump’s “invisible wall” to make legal immigration as difficult as possible
Amazon’s terrifying new product lineup lets you fully Black Mirror-ify your home
Nicole Karlis
Amazon’s device head David Limp announced 70 new devices to help cede more of your life to the tech giant
Creepy stories from Kavanaugh’s Yale days further taint SCOTUS nominee’s public image
Matthew Rozsa
New stories are emerging about Kavanaugh's Yale fraternity and his unseemly expectations for female clerks
Trump’s secretary of state is still supporting Saudi Arabia’s war against Yemen
Matthew Rozsa
Mike Pompeo is continuing to support Saudi Arabia after being warned that $2 billion in weapons sales were at stake
DDT banned for decades may still be affecting autism risk
Jamie Reno
Scientists say the pesticide banned in the 1970s is still in our ecosystem
Ron DeSantis, GOP nominee for governor of Florida, is once again caught up in a racial controversy
Matthew Chapman
The number of racial controversies DeSantis has had to respond to has grown rapidly. Here is a list
YouTubers at the mercy of the algorithm: “The idea is to post content, not have an interesting idea”
Gary M. Kramer
Salon talks to filmmaker Dominic Gagnon, who watched more than 400 hours of vlogger footage to make his new doc
Alexander Hamilton was preoccupied with the threat that a presidency like Trump’s posed for America
Thom Hartmann
This isn’t the first time our democracy has faced the founder’s nightmare — but it is the most dangerous
Right to remain Anonymous: Scholar who decoded “Primary Colors” unmasks author of Times op-ed
Don Foster
Professor who outed Joe Klein in 1996: Detailed analysis narrows the list of administration suspects — down to one
Page: 556