For the first generation raised on social media, hyper-visibility hasn’t produced openness – it’s produced caution. Pseudonyms, burner e-mail accounts and curated selves are becoming survival tactics ...
Google's WebMCP protocol lets AI agents execute structured actions on websites via browser APIs. Is this the next frontier of ...
Accelerate your tech game Paid Content How the New Space Race Will Drive Innovation How the metaverse will change the future of work and society Managing the ...
By age 2, most kids know how to play pretend. They turn their bedrooms into faraway castles and hold make-believe tea parties ...
The IRS has released Form 4547, allowing parents to register eligible children for Trump Accounts when filing 2025 tax returns. Here’s how the election works, who qualifies, and what happens next. Tax ...
Experts offered a variety of suggestions, including paring your list of goals, making saving automatic and avoiding spending temptations like marketing emails. By Ann Carrns This is the time of year ...
New year, new me. This is my year. My 2026 rebrand. By now, New Year's resolutions have become an annual meme, embodying the exhaustion people feel from having to reinvent themselves repeatedly.
The original idea appeared to be using one button (as in the fastener used on clothing) to meditate on the passage of time each day of the year, a trend that popped up on TikTok in late 2025. TikTok ...
Plus a new desktop app, free to Plaud hardware owners, for recording meeting audio. Plus a new desktop app, free to Plaud hardware owners, for recording meeting audio. is a news editor with over a ...
Toward the end of the year, many of us commit to ambitious, concrete goals like cutting your screen time in half or running three miles every morning. That approach often backfires, according to ...
It’s that time — December’s waning days, when we prepare to turn the calendar page. Many Americans take stock, review goals accomplished and unmet, ponder hopes and plans. How’s our health? What’s up ...
“Button, button; who’s got the button?” was an old kid’s game. Years ago, finding mussels in the Minnesota River to make buttons was no game. It was serious business. Robert Douglas is a professor ...