Business, Spoken

WIRED
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Nov 21, 2018 • 5min

Rural Americans Are Rebooting the Spirit of the Internet

Back in the early 1930s, farmers couldn’t get wired. The big-city electric utilities claimed that delivering power to customers spread out in rural areas wasn’t profitable. So eventually the locals rolled up their sleeves and did it themselves. They formed electric co-ops and strung their own damn wires, aided by cheap federal loans. Today there are nearly 900 rural co-ops still providing their communities with electricity. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 21, 2018 • 7min

We Made Our Own Artificial Intelligence Art, and So Can You

On the 3:13 pm train out of San Jose on a recent Friday, I hunched over a Macbook, brow furrowed. Hundreds of miles north in a Google datacenter in Oregon, a virtual computer sprang to life. I was soon looking at the yawning blackness of a Linux command line—my new AI art studio. Some hours of Googling, mistyped commands, and muttered curses later, I was cranking out eerie portraits. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 20, 2018 • 7min

How a Teenager's Code Spawned a $432,500 Piece of Art

One Thursday last month, 19-year-old Robbie Barrat woke to a fusillade of messages on his phone. “I was half asleep but saw they all contained the same number,” he says. “Then I fell back asleep for a few hours. I didn’t really want to believe. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 20, 2018 • 8min

The Promise of (Practically) ‘Serverless Computing’

The definition of cloud computing may be nebulous, but its promise is clear. Instead of filling a warehouse with servers and paying people to manage them, a company can pay a cloud computing provider to provide computing resources on demand and pay only for what it actually uses. This prospect lured organizations ranging from startups to massive corporations to stodgy government agencies onto cloud offerings from Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and others. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 19, 2018 • 6min

'He Who Must Not Be Named': What Alex Jones and Voldemort Have in Common

When Alex Jones crashed the congressional hearings looking into big tech platforms back in September, Lord Voldemort kept coming to my mind. Even if you haven’t read the Harry Potter books, you probably know that almost no one in the wizarding world will speak this archvillain’s name aloud; he is referred to only as “he who must not be named” or “you know who. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 19, 2018 • 4min

What Diane Greene's Departure Means for Google Cloud

Google parent Alphabet generated 86 percent of its revenue from advertising last year. On Friday the woman leading its best shot at building a second big revenue stream said she is moving on. Diane Greene, a storied cloud computing entrepreneur and executive, has been leading Google’s cloud computing division since early 2016. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 16, 2018 • 16min

6 Questions After The New York Times' Facebook Bombshell

On Wednesday afternoon, The New York Times published a blockbuster—five byline, 50 source, 5,000 word—report on the failures of Facebook’s management team during the past three years. It begins with Sheryl Sandberg yelling at one of her employees; it ends with her hand-written stage directions, captured by a Times photographer, as she sat before the Senate: “Slow, Pause, Determined. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 15, 2018 • 7min

Why Amazon’s Search for a Second Headquarters Backfired

Amazon announced Tuesday that the 14-month public bidding war for its so-called second headquarters was coming to an end. After reviewing 238 proposals from cities across North America, the company says it will build two large regional offices in Queens, New York and Arlington, Virginia as well as a smaller campus in Nashville, Tennessee. The search was largely a success for CEO Jeff Bezos, who can use valuable data from the losing cities to inform Amazon’s business and future expansion. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 14, 2018 • 8min

Facing UK Regulation, Big Tech Sends a Lobbyist to London

The tech industry already spends tens of millions of dollars every year lobbying in Washington for federal regulations that will benefit their businesses---or, better yet, for no regulations at all. But while lawmakers on Capitol Hill have spent the last two years handwaving and making empty threats against Big Tech, regulators in the UK have been getting to work, strengthening their data privacy laws and taking steps toward more restrictions around content online. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Nov 14, 2018 • 9min

Amazon’s HQ2 Hunger Games Are Over, and Jeff Bezos Won

After a 14-month search, Amazon announced Tuesday that it will open a pair of regional offices in two major metropolitan areas where it already has a presence: the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, New York, and Arlington, Virginia, just outside Washington D.C. The decision comes after over 230 cities submitted bids to be home of the Seattle-based company’s highly-anticipated second headquarters, which originally promised to employ 50,000 white collar workers. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

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