Sunday, March 26, 2023

Esteemed Harvard Business Professor Explains the Happy Accident of How She Landed at Harvard. It's a Lesson for Every Leader



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S17
Sorry, Star Trek Fans: This Sci-fi Exoplanet Doesn't Actually Exist

Fans of Star Trek were over the Moon when, in 2018, astronomers with the Dharma Planet Survey (DPS) announced the possible detection of 40 Eridani b, an extrasolar planet in the star system 40 Eridani. Located just 16.3 light-years away, this triple-star system happens to be where the planet Vulcan was located in the popular franchise.

Based on radial velocity measurements of the system’s primary star (40 Eridani A), the discovery team estimated that “Vulcan” was a rocky planet several times the mass of Earth (a Super-Earth) with an orbital period of 42 days or so.

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Warren Buffett Says He Hires People With

Warren Buffett warns leaders to not neglect this very important business virtue.

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Here's an Almost Foolproof Way to Get People to Do What You Want, According to a Leadership Professor

Want to influence people's behavior? Keep this hard-wired human trait in mind.

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20 Years Ago, An All-Star Cast Made an Awesomely Stupid Sci-fi Disaster Movie

If nothing else, this sci-fi flick can teach young actors how to keep a straight face no matter what.

Some of the best disaster movies make little scientific sense. Will a team of oil workers save us from certain destruction, or will a basic computer virus bring down an alien fleet that traveled across the universe? But few apocalypses test an audience’s suspension of disbelief like The Core, Jon Amiel’s wacky, illogical journey to the center of the earth.

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S34
4 Key Management Lessons You Can Learn From Family Businesses

Forget Succession -- family-run companies offer valuable insights on issues from governance to workplace dynamics.

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You Need to Play the Best Metroidvania on Xbox Game Pass ASAP

Love changes things. Maybe not overtly, but when we feel love for a franchise or artist or trend it takes away our objectivity. So whether a thing is true or not, our love sees it a certain way. We feel it. But how to express it? How can we create something that shows what we love to the world in a way that lets everyone see what we see? It’s a tall order, but Dead Cells has done it.

Dead Cells is without question among the best metroidvania/roguelite experiences of this generation. Developed by Motion Twin, it hooked players with innovative mechanics and a retro vibe. Now it’s partnered with Konami to release the Return to Castlevania DLC, but it's more than cosmetics. From the music and style to the items and enemies, Dead Cells: Return to Castlevania shows a love and understanding of this legendary franchise that makes it a must-play for fans.

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S18
The Western U.S. Had a Remarkably Wet Winter -- Can It Solve the Drought?

After three years of extreme drought, the Western U.S. finally gets a break. Mountain ranges are covered in deep snow, and water reservoirs in many areas are filling up following a series of atmospheric rivers that brought record rain and snowfall to large parts of the region.

Many people are looking at the snow and water levels and asking: Is the drought finally over?

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MacBook Pro Users Swear by This Streamlined Mouse -- & It's Just $12 on Amazon

With all due respect to Apple trackpads, there are times when a mouse can offer more comfort and precision while working from your laptop. With customization features that will help improve your workflow, the best mice for MacBook Pros feel good in your hand and sync seamlessly with your device using Bluetooth technology.

All the mice below feature Bluetooth technology, which can offer seamless connection for MacBook Pros. Some options also have the option to connect via a USB receiver (aka a “dongle”) that plugs into a USB-A port; this method is typically associated with a faster connection between devices, which is more important for precise tasks like gaming. But recent MacBook Pro models only have USB-C ports, which means you may need a dedicated adapter to connect via a dongle.

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S20
One of the World's Most Popular Beverages Could Make the Water Crisis Worse

The fast-growing bottled water industry impacts the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) in many ways.

Bottled water is one of the world’s most popular beverages, and its industry is making the most of it. Since the millennium, the world has advanced significantly towards safe water for all. In 2020, 74 percent of humanity had access to safe water. This is 10 percent more than two decades ago. But that still leaves two billion people without access to safe drinking water.

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How to Overcome Your Fear of Making Mistakes

No one can reduce mistakes to zero, but you can learn to harness your drive to prevent them and channel it into better decision making. Here is how to become a more effective worrier: don’t be afraid or ashamed of your fear, use emotional agility to label your feelings and act on your values, focus on perfecting your processes not outcomes, broaden your thinking, recognize the value of leisure time, and avoid judgment-clouding noise.

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Case Study: What Does Diversity Mean in a Global Organization?

One big agenda item would be Alex’s decision on a key hire for Juno’s Asia operations. The person would be the second-in-command, reporting to the head of the unit, John Chang, and would help oversee Juno’s mainland-China manufacturing along with sales to Asian distributors, which had risen in recent years to meet the demand for Western entertainment. It was a critical role, and the plan was to find someone with experience in the region and the potential to grow the business who could eventually succeed John and take his board seat. Ideally the person would also diversify Juno’s leadership ranks—which, to Alex’s chagrin, were still mostly white and male.

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S3
Labor very likely to win majority in NSW election

Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

With 36% of enrolled voters counted in today’s New South Wales state election, the Poll Bludger’s results currently have Labor leading in 53 of the 93 seats, the Coalition in 27, the Greens in three and independents in ten. Called seats are 43 Labor, 20 Coalition, two Greens and six independents.

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S10
'Yellowjackets' First Big Season 2 Needle-Drop Foreshadows Its Greatest Conflict

Yellowjackets, TV’s greatest soccer-girls-gone-feral thriller, doesn’t waste time beating itself to its own punch. Episode 1 of Season 2, entitled “Friends, Romans, and Countrymen” concludes with a glaring clue about the show’s juiciest mystery. And it all starts with the doomed (and frozen) Jackie Taylor, and ends with an ominous needle drop.

The last we see of Jackie Taylor (Ella Purnell), the formerly alive Yellowjackets team captain and It Girl (back in New Jersey, anyway), is in Yellowjackets’ wallop of a Season 1 finale, covered in snow and completely iced over. Jackie is found, with an eerie, peaceful, angelic expression on her blue face, by the rest of the Yellowjackets, who stare in utter shock as Shauna’s (Sophie Nélisse) animalistic wails echo across the Canadian wilderness. Shauna cries with a spine-tingling ferocity, sobbing because she feels at fault for Jackie’s death. After all, it was a blowout fight between Shauna and Jackie about their codependent and toxic BFF dynamic — and, well, the baby-sized elephant in the room — that prompted Jackie to sit out in the cold and eventually die there.

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S36
5 Ways to Prepare Your Business Team to Tackle Any Market Change

To survive and thrive in business today, you need every team member engaged and working together.

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The fight to expose corporations' real impact on the climate

Say you are a maker of computer graphics cards, under pressure from investors questioning your green credentials. You know what to do. You email your various departments, asking them to tally up their carbon emissions and the energy they consume. Simple enough. You write a report pledging a more sustainable future, in which your trucks are electrified and solar panels adorn your offices.

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S28
Does Your Health Insurance Cover Mental Health?

Mental health care that’s expensive to the point of being inaccessible has been an issue for a long time, but it has taken on new urgency during the Covid-19 pandemic. For many people, waiting for insurance companies to get it together is not an option right now. Luckily, you may not have to wait. There are steps you can take to better manage these costs.

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S8
How Republicans Are Handling Trump's Possible Indictment

Sometimes a fire drill can reveal useful information about how people might react in the event of a real emergency. At around 7:30 A.M. on Saturday, March 18th, Donald Trump pulled an alarm when he told his followers on Truth Social that he expected to be arrested the following Tuesday. He was wrong—the week passed with nary a mug shot. Still, Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan District Attorney, is reportedly close to bringing an indictment against him, on charges related to a payment, in 2016, of a hundred and thirty thousand dollars to Stephanie Clifford, the adult-film actor known as Stormy Daniels. And Trump's post did set off a scramble.

Just after 11 A.M. that Saturday, Kevin McCarthy, the Speaker of the House, denounced the anticipated indictment on both Twitter and Truth Social, calling it an "outrageous abuse of power." He said that he was "directing relevant committees" to investigate whether Bragg might be using federal funds to "subvert our democracy." At around 1 P.M., the chair of the House Judiciary Committee, Jim Jordan, posted, "God Bless President Trump. Real America knows this is all a sham." On Monday, Jordan and the Republican chairs of two other committees—James Comer, of Oversight, and Bryan Steil, of House Administration—sent a letter to Bragg requesting his testimony and all "documents and communications" on the matter. Bragg's office pushed back, and by the end of the week there was talk of subpoenas.

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S22
The Power of Small Wins

What is the best way to motivate employees to do creative work? Help them take a step forward every day. In an analysis of knowledge workers’ diaries, the authors found that nothing contributed more to a positive inner work life (the mix of emotions, motivations, and perceptions that is critical to performance) than making progress in meaningful work. If a person is motivated and happy at the end of the workday, it’s a good bet that he or she achieved something, however small. If the person drags out of the office disengaged and joyless, a setback is likely to blame.

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Are you a chronic overthinker? Here's how you can stop it, according to experts

If you can't stop thinking about every situation relentlessly, then chances are you're a chronic overthinker. Simply put, overthinking can best be described as your mind running endlessly on a hamster wheel, with nowhere to go—other than the worst possible situations, of course. And it's definitely not a skill to be proud of. Sleepless nights, obsessing over every detail, anxiousness, and restlessness, all come as part and parcel of being a chronic overthinker. It's an endless loop that snowballs and can get rather detrimental, especially if not cared for. 

Experts give us insight into what causes the human brain to go into overdrive and overanalyze, and how to curb it. 

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View from The Hill: Dutton saddles up for Aston race amid Victorian Liberal infighting

Byelections for leaders are rather like steeplechases for horses: there is always the risk of serious injury.

Ahead of the 2018 super-Saturday contests, Bill Shorten had an impatient Anthony Albanese shaping up for a tilt in the event of a tumble. Shorten triumphed.

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4 Years Ago, 'Elden Ring's Developer Released the Perfect Ninja Game

From the first Demon Souls to 2022’s Elden Ring, FromSoftware is known for one thing above all else: difficulty. The studio makes games that are tough as nails and incredibly unforgiving, at least on the surface. While Elden Ring is already one of the most important games of the decade, and arguably the studio’s best game, it is not a perfect game. However, From Software achieved perfection four years ago when it released Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice.

Souls games aren’t hard. That’s right, I said it! Ok, but seriously, the cloud that surrounds FromSoftware’s catalog of games is blown way out of proportion. Every FromSoftware game is built to be broken by the player in whatever way they choose and includes massive freedom to do this. This is all because of the key mechanic of upgrading your individual character throughout a playthrough, be it increasing vitality or endurance you can choose how you improve.

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How a NASA Drone Could Find Traces of Life on Saturn's Weirdest Moon

Titan, the second largest moon in our Solar System, is the only known moon with an atmosphere.

The highly-anticipated Dragonfly robotic rotorcraft mission to Saturn’s moon Titan is scheduled to launch in 2027. When it arrives in the mid-2030s, it will hover and zoom around in the thick atmosphere of Titan, sampling the air and imaging the landscape. What could be more exciting than that!?

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A Photographic Mission to Make an Amazonian Tribe Known

In 1971, on assignment for a Brazilian magazine, the photographer and activist Claudia Andujar rode a small Cessna 185 to the remote Catrimani Mission, in the northern Amazon, and was guided into the rain forest in search of the Yanomami people. A famously isolated, “unacculturated” tribe—who, until a few decades prior, had almost no contact with outsiders—the Yanomami had become the object of intense anthropological investigation. Andujar (née Haas) had been raised in a half-Jewish family in what is now Romania, and had fled to Switzerland during the Second World War. She’d immigrated to New York City, where she studied humanities at Hunter College, before settling in São Paulo, in 1955. As a photojournalist, she had spent time documenting another Amazonian tribe, the Xikrin, but in the Yanomami she found not just a photo subject but a lifework. The year after her initial trip, using funding from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, she returned to the tribe for a more extended stay, during which she produced some of the most revealing images of Indigenous life ever recorded.

Andujar employed idiosyncratic aesthetic sleights of hand to imbue her pictures with an otherworldliness. She shot through Vaseline-coated lens filters, giving some pictures a fuzzy, dreamlike feel, and deployed ultra-low-light infrared film, which lent an ethereal glow to some of her black-and-white pictures and acid hues to some of her color work. Her images—a selection of which are currently on view in New York City at the Shed, as a part of an exhibition titled “The Yanomami Struggle”—show members of the tribe on arduous hunts, bagging a monkey and a large black bird, whose wings one young woman spreads wide for the camera. For a collection of striking chiaroscuro portraits in the group’s yano, or common house, Andujar allotted a whole roll of precious film per sitting. Perhaps her most remarkable images are a series of frenetic flash photographs of reahu ceremonies—large, intercommunity feasts memorializing the recently deceased, during which men initiate contact with spirits, or xapiri, by way of a powerful psychedelic powder called yãkoana, which they blow up one another’s noses with a length of hollow reed.

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You've Probably Never Heard of These Random, Clever Things That Are So Damn Useful & Have Near-Perfect Reviews

There’s nothing quite like the thrill of picking up an item that you never knew existed but instantly fixes little headaches, covers eyesores, and makes household tasks easier — and that joy is exactly why these products all have tons of five-star ratings and glowing reviews. Whether you’re looking for clever home improvement products or even things that make hosting easier, this list has everything you didn’t know that you needed. But make sure to act fast: These random-but-beloved products are all so budget-friendly that they won’t stay in stock for long.

Keep your phone, remote, and drink close with this sofa arm table that slides over the arm of a chair or couch to create a sturdy, stable surface. There’s no assembly required and reviewers report it works well for couch arms that run six to eight inches in width.

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Why "Should" Is Not Good For You

If your brain cascades into a series of “I shoulds,” leaving you too overwhelmed to initiate any items on your to-do list, know that you’re not alone. The word “should” implies that you have an obligation to complete an action and that there will be a consequence if you fail to do so. Sometimes this may be true, but it’s ultimately demotivating. Research shows that we’re more likely to be productive when we find work meaningful — not when we are driven by a fear of punishment.

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Why Getting Someone's Name Right Matters

Names are our identities. Often, they are deeply rooted in our social and cultural beliefs. Yet, historically, many people have anglicized their names to “fit in,” appear more mainstream, or gain social and cultural advantages in countries with dominant Anglo cultures. But names are more than monikers. Casually anglicizing names is not only disrespectful of people’s cultural heritage and traditions — it is also disrespectful of them. Here’s how to get better at pronouncing names.

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An Upcoming Space Mission Could Find a Holy Grail Planet

Alpha Centauri is our closest stellar neighbor, a binary star system located just 4.376 light-years away.

Alpha Centauri is our closest stellar neighbor, a binary star system located just 4.376 light-years away. Despite its proximity, repeated astronomical surveys have failed to find hard evidence of extrasolar planets in this system. Part of the problem is that the system consists of two stars orbiting each other, which makes detecting exoplanets through the two most popular methods very challenging. In 2019, Breakthrough Initiatives announced they were backing a new project to find exoplanets next door — the Telescope for Orbit Locus Interferometric Monitoring of our Astronomical Neighbourhood (TOLIMAN, after the star’s ancient name in Arabic).

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Australia is now almost entirely held by Labor - but that doesn't necessarily make life easier for leaders

When Dominic Perrottet gave a gracious concession speech after his defeat in the New South Wales election on Saturday night, it was hard to avoid favourable comparison with the United States. There was no sign of rancour or hyper-partisanship. He praised Labor’s Chris Minns for a clean campaign. He predicted Minns would be a “fine” premier, urging people to “get behind him”.

But in one respect, our politics do look more American: Australia now has “red” and “blue” states, although we reverse their political colour scheme. The maps have already begun to appear on social media. The Australian mainland, with its five states and two territories, is now “red”. Only little Tasmania remains “blue”, looking like an antipodean Taiwan, with the sole surviving Liberal government in the country.

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Earthquake Debris Could Create an Environmental Catastrophe in Türkiye and Syria

After recent earthquakes, Türkiye and Syria continue to grapple with a mass of rubble that could pollute, poison and alter the lives of everyone around it

The earthquake that has destroyed parts of Türkiye and Syria is a tragedy for millions of families, including my own. One of the worst hit regions—around the ancient city of Antioch—is where my father’s family has lived for generations. This disaster has killed thousands of people and affected millions of others. Now that the last presumed survivors have been found, the region faces many other problems, including enormous amounts of debris from collapsed buildings, roads, and the like. This material is estimated to weigh up to 210 million tons—enough to cover Washington, D.C. four feet deep, or build a mound as tall as Mount Erciyes, a large volcano in Türkiye.

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S12
'John Wick 4's Coolest Cinematic Trick Borrows From a Classic Film Legend

Early in the John Wick: Chapter 4, our titular hero (Keanu Reeves) is still hiding within the Bowery King's lair. As he bloodies his knuckles punching at a wooden block in a room filled with candles, the Bowery King (Laurence Fishburne) enters holding a new slick black suit for Wick. He hands the suit over, pulls out a match, strikes it, and then blows it out. The film then cuts to an orange desert horizon. This is a clear — and striking — homage by editor Nathan Orloff to one of the most famous jump cuts in cinema history.

In David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia, when Army officer T.E. Lawrence (Peter O'Toole) is given an assignment in the desert, he strikes a match to light a cigarette for British diplomat Mr. Dryden (Claude Rains), holding it until it nearly burns his fingers. He then blows it out and the film cuts to the orange horizon of the desert and holds there as the sun rises. In the original script, this cut was written as a dissolve, but editor Anne V. Coates has said in interviews that she was inspired to cut directly by the films of French New Wave directors like Jean-Luc Godard and Claude Chabrol. Steven Spielberg would later cite seeing this cut as one of the most significant moments in his journey towards becoming a filmmaker.

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Characters from "Succession" as Members of an Improv Team

Considers himself an improv visionary. Fired one coach who gave him the note "People don't understand what you're doing." Tries to control group scenes but gets visibly frustrated because no one ever acts how he wants them to. Often calls the woman in the scene a "bitch," but thinks he's doing it in an ironic way. Makes his assistant, Jess, tape every show, and then has her e-mail the large video files to Rava and the kids.

Commits fully to his characters, once to the point where he started crying real tears, making everyone extremely uncomfortable. Very good at playing his own initiated premises, but shuts down when his scene partner's choice surprises him. Makes the effort to put the team on a group text but thinks that means he is the de-facto leader. Will do a line of coke before shows.

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Reaction to bronze sculpture of Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston hasn't been good - and that's not bad for art that shatters conventions

As an acclaimed photographer and conceptual artist, Hank Willis Thomas has grown accustomed to criticisms of his unconventional art and concepts of identity.

But even Thomas had never experienced anything like the reaction to his latest sculpture, designed to commemorate the lives of Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr., two of the most revered civil rights leaders in modern American history.

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S38
Why Capital Investment in Equipment Doesn't Hurt Employment

A new study co-authored by Wharton’s Daniel G. Garrett shows that giving businesses tax breaks for investment in new equipment doesn’t lead them to replace workers with machines.

A new paper by experts at Wharton and elsewhere has set to rest “widespread concerns” that increased capital investment in equipment is at the cost of worker employment. In the study of tax incentives that boost capital investment in equipment at U.S. firms between 1997 and 2011, the experts found that such investment resulted in matching employment growth, although it did not stimulate wage or productivity growth.

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S59
Super Mario Bros: The ultimate video game icon

Back in the mid-1980s, I was thrilled to unwrap a hi-tech gift for my ninth birthday: a handheld Game + Watch version of the arcade hit Donkey Kong. I played the game obsessively, captivated by its split screen liquid-crystal display, and the simple expressiveness of its hero character: a plucky monochrome figure called Mario, who would scale a construction site to rescue a captive princess. Mario had three lives in this platform game, but an apparently infinite appeal beyond it.

- The 1991 video game that packs a punch - The music most embedded in our psyches? - How gaming became a form of meditation

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S54
In the Age of Ozempic, What's the Point of Working Out?

In the summer of 2015, one of my best friends died at work. Shannon was 38, childless, single and thriving, and working as an executive at a global public-relations firm, where she handled a major client. She was set to take a family vacation—treating her nephews to a Disney trip or some such—when her boss sent down an edict that no one on her account was allowed to take time off. Saying no to your boss is hard, but disappointing your nephews is even harder, so Shannon stood her ground and refused to cancel her trip.

She then proceeded—in a conference room—to have a panic attack about how the decision might affect her career. The panic attack triggered a heart attack; the heart attack revealed a preexisting tear in a heart valve; the tear led to internal bleeding that, after a two-week-long coma, led to her death. You can see why, though it isn’t technically true, I say that Shannon “died at work.” You can also see how my 36-year-old self—also single, also childless, also stuck in a successful but frustrating career and in need of some time off—–was very messed up by this. Everyone who knew Shannon was. As the bench in Prospect Park we dedicated to our friend says: Shannon, she gave a lovely light.

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Research: How Cultural Differences Can Impact Global Teams

Diversity can be both a benefit and a challenge to virtual teams, especially those which are global. The authors unpack their recent research on how diversity works in remote teams, concluding that benefits and drawbacks can be explained by how teams manage the two facets of diversity: personal and contextual. They find that contextual diversity is key to aiding creativity, decision-making, and problem-solving, while personal diversity does not. In their study, teams with higher contextual diversity produced higher-quality consulting reports, and their solutions were more creative and innovative. When it comes to the quality of work, teams that were higher on contextual diversity performed better. Therefore, the potential challenges caused by personal diversity should be anticipated and managed, but the benefits of contextual diversity are likely to outweigh such challenges.

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S55
The Emotional Range of Tattoos

This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.

Tattoos were once a sign of outsider status. But that’s changed in the 21st century: “My doctor has both of his arms totally sleeved. I have a friend that’s a corporate lawyer, and she’s working on her body suit,” a tattoo artist told the editor Adrienne Green in 2016.

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3D-printing the brain's blood vessels with silicone could improve and personalize neurosurgery -

Many neurosurgeons practice each surgery before they get into the operating room based on models of what they know about the patient’s brain. But the current models neurosurgeons use for training don’t mimic real blood vessels well. They provide unrealistic tactile feedback, lack small but important structural details and often exclude entire anatomical components that determine how each procedure will be performed. Realistic and personalized replicas of patient brains during pre-surgery simulations could reduce error in real surgical procedures.

3D printing, however, could make replicas with the soft feel and the structural accuracy surgeons need.

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Lichens and the Meaning of Life

“When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe,” the great naturalist John Muir wrote in the middle of the nineteenth century. “We forget that nature itself is one vast miracle transcending the reality of night and nothingness,” the great naturalist Loren Eiseley wrote a century later as he considered the meaning of life. “We forget that each one of us in his personal life repeats that miracle.”

Because of this delicate interconnectedness of life across time, space, and being, any littlest fragment of the universe can become a lens on the miraculous whole. Sometimes, it is the humblest life-forms that best intimate the majesty of life itself.

Lichens — which are not to be confused with mosses — are some of Earth’s oldest life-forms: emissaries of the ocean gone terrestrial. For epochs, their exact nature was a mystery — until an improbable revolutionary illuminated that they are, in fact, part algae.

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40 years ago 'A Nation at Risk' warned of a 'rising tide of mediocrity' in US schools - has anything changed?

The National Commission on Excellence in Education’s release of a report titled “A Nation at Risk” in 1983 was a pivotal point in the history of American education. The report used dire language, lamenting that “the educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people.”

Using Cold War language, the report also famously stated: “If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.”

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S66
How 'misogyny influencers' cater to young men's anxieties

Parents, teachers and politicians are worried about the appeal of so-called “online misogyny influencers” to boys and young men.

These influencers post content to thousands of followers in videos and podcasts, offering advice about relationships, mental health and wellbeing, and achieving material success and status. They are believed to be having a negative effect on young men’s attitudes, beliefs and expectations, including about gender roles and relationships between men and women.

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S67
How do superconductors work? A physicist explains what it means to have resistance-free electricity

The modern world runs on electricity, and wires are what carry that electricity to every light, television, heating system, cellphone and computer on the planet. Unfortunately, on average, about 5% of the power generated at a coal or solar power plant is lost as the electricity is transmitted from the plant to its final destination. This amounts to a US$6 billion loss annually in the U.S. alone.

To see why these recent advances are so exciting and what impact they may have on the world, it’s important to understand how superconducting materials work.

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S43
The Best MacBook Accessories

The MacBook is a powerful machine. Whether you're using a MacBook Air for web browsing and sending emails or a MacBook Pro for graphics-intensive projects like video editing and 3D design, Apple's laptops can handle a wide range of activities. But to enhance your experience, I suggest throwing some accessories into the mix.

Regardless of your MacBook of choice or the work you're using it for, a slew of peripherals can pair with your computer, like laptop stands, keyboards, charging bricks, and external displays. We've tested dozens over the past year, and these are the best MacBook accessories to streamline your workflow and unlock your machine's full potential. This is by no means an exhaustive list, as there are an innumerable number of accessories, so we'll always be on the hunt for more to test. Check out our Best Work-From-Home Gear guide for other recommendations.

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S56
The Problem With How the West Is Supporting Ukraine

Wars are won or lost well behind the front lines. Allies should arm Ukrainians accordingly.

For the past four months, people around the world have witnessed the macabre process of Russian forces making repeated assaults near the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut for only the tiniest of gains. By some counts, Russia has lost about five of its soldiers for every Ukrainian soldier lost—to say nothing of massive equipment losses. Although in theory a country can win a war by using its military forces to make forward assaults against an enemy’s forces, that’s just not a smart way to fight. Military technology long ago evolved to arm both sides in conflicts with extremely lethal weaponry, and any army that tries to approach this machinery head-on is likely to suffer major, and in some cases horrific, losses.

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S64
Plastic fibres stunt growth in mussels by more than a third - here's why this is a concern

Plastic pollution poses a threat to marine wildlife. The plastic bags, bottles and straws that we see strewn across beaches have long been identified as a danger. But tiny fragments of plastic – called microplastics – that are less than 5mm in size are also a major source.

Microfibres are the most common type of microplastic and account for up to 91% of the microplastics that float around our seas. These minuscule fibres are shed from textiles as a result of the wearing and washing of clothes, and from the weathering and abrasion of marine equipment.

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S52
Rick Steves's Advice for Vacationers in Europe This Summer

The TV host and travel guide reflects on how travel has—and hasn’t—changed since COVID.

When the Washington State–based travel guide and TV host Rick Steves decided to return to Europe in early 2022, he wasn’t sure how many of his favorite local spots had survived two years of pandemic life. Steves, who has hosted Rick Steves’ Europe for the past two decades and operates tours aimed at introducing American travelers to the continent, was pleasantly surprised by what he found: Many of his beloved places—the kind of mom-and-pop places that have been owned by the same families for generations—had made it through, and the streets were alive anew. “They’re kissing cheeks with a vengeance in Paris right now,” he told me. “And I’m really thankful for that.”

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S65
Why elite athletes should develop mindfulness to up their game

Athletes at the very highest level of their sport face the challenge of performing consistently under pressure amid many potential distractions, including performance anxiety, crowd behaviour, their own and others’ expectations, and the responses of their opponents.

The performance of players in the 2023 Australian Open, for example, demonstrated the psychological factors needed to succeed at elite-level tennis.

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S53
Indicting a Former President Should Always Have Been Fair Game

If a grand jury does indict Donald Trump, it will finally confirm, as the Founders expected, that ordinary citizens have the power to treat former commanders in chief like anyone else.

No former president of the United States has ever been indicted at either the federal or state level. That more-than-two-centuries-old record, if you want to call it that, looks like it could soon be broken—something that should have happened a long time ago.

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S42
India Shut Down Cell Service for 27 Million During a Manhunt

A US House of Representatives hearing this week about the social media app TikTok did little to clarify lawmaker's specific concerns about the potential national security risks associated with the wildly popular app, but it did vividly underscore the country’s lack of federal data privacy legislation. WIRED also discovered that TikTok paid for influencers popular on its platform to attend a DC rally in support of the service ahead of the hearing. 

Meanwhile, as a possible indictment of former US president Donald Trump looms in New York state, internet users began generating AI images of Trump being arrested, but there are ways to tell that they're fake. WIRED examined the increasingly aggressive and desperate tactics of Iran's government-backed hackers amid mass protest and unrest in the country. Citizen sleuths around the world are using open source intelligence to separate fact from fiction in the mystery of who sabotaged the Nord Stream pipeline. And vulnerabilities keep showing up in ultra-popular photo cropping tools, exposing a host of cropped images all over the world where some or all of the original image can be recovered.

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S60
Soaring interest rates contributed to recent bank failures - and there could be more to come

US bank regulators closed Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) on March 10 2023, after it suffered US$42 billion (£35 billion) of deposit withdrawals in a 24-hour period. This was the largest bank failure since the 2008 global financial crisis and was not supposed to happen again.

Since the 2008 crisis, international bank regulations have been greatly tightened and, among other measures, banks now have more capital to absorb losses and protect themselves from insolvency. Yet, even though SVB’s capital was above the minimum level required by regulators, this was not enough to keep it alive.

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S58
Soutzoukakia: The Greek meatballs packed with history

Soutzoukakia are more than their literal translation: meatballs. They are undeniably rich and comforting, laced with hints of red wine, cumin and garlic and swathed in a hearty tomato sauce. It's a dish packed with flavour as well as history. The origins of soutzoukakia trace back to the Greek population of the early 20th Century Empire. This is a dish that was created by a minority population and survived atrocities, thanks to the hundreds of thousands of survivors who carried the recipe with them from Turkey to Greece.

Carolina Doriti, brings its history and recipe together in her new cookbook, Salt of the Earth: Secrets and Stories from a Greek Kitchen (March 2023). Born-and-raised in Athens, Doriti has spent most of her life in the Greek capital. She started cooking at a young age, with food playing an integral part in her life. She began cooking professionally in 2005 and has since worked as a private chef, recipe developer, food journalist and restaurant consultant. She's also the culinary producer of the celebrated Greek American chef, Diane Kochilas' PBS program, My Greek Table.

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S51
"Yellowjackets" Understands the Horror of Toxic Best Friends

In the show’s second season, bonds formed in adolescence continue to bless and poison the present.

This article contains spoilers for the entire first season as well as the second-season premiere of Yellowjackets.

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S49
Garmin's Forerunner 955 review: Still king for runners and cyclists

The Forerunner 955 continues that tradition. It sits atop the Forerunner series as the most feature-packed watch in the bunch, and this year it gains some modern touches like a touchscreen and daily exercise readiness assessments (à la Fitbit's Daily Readiness feature, but free to users), while introducing new features not present on any other Garmin watch. That includes the higher-end Fenix series of watches, from which the Forerunner 955 is also starting to steal some cues, like solar-charging options and multi-band GPS.

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S41
'Destiny 2: Lightfall' Is Destiny at Its Best--Most of the Time

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From the very beginning, Destiny has been a puzzle box. You can't take it in all at once. There's always something obscured, something moving behind the scenes. You'll figure out one thing, and another piece of the box opens into new puzzles—new stories to experience, new powers to chase, new weapons to build. That's Destiny at its best, and that's what Lightfall and the Season of Defiance deliver from start to finish—for the most part.

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S61
Misophonia: nearly one in five UK adults have the condition causing extreme reactions to certain sounds

Many of us have sounds that we find to be annoying. But for some people, certain sounds actually trigger extreme reactions. It’s a disorder known as misophonia, where sounds like chewing, sniffing and pen clicking can cause intense emotional reactions – and sometimes even physical reactions, such as an elevated heart rate and spike in blood pressure.

As it turns out, this condition is more common than many realise, as our recent study showed. We estimate that nearly one in five adults in the UK may have misophonia.

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S39
The 38 Best Movies on Netflix This Week

Netflix has plenty of movies to watch, but it's a real mixed bag. Sometimes finding the right film at the right time can seem like an impossible task. Fret not, we’re here to help. Below is a list of some of our favorite films currently on the streaming service—from dramas to comedies to thrillers.

If you decide you're in more of a TV mood, head over to our collection of the best TV series on Netflix. Want more? Check out our lists of the best sci-fi movies, best movies on Amazon Prime, and the best flicks on Disney+.

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S57
How to Survive Hopelessness

Dougal Robertson (January 29, 1924–September 22, 1991) was still a teenager, the youngest of a Scottish music teacher’s eight children, when he joined the British Merchant Navy. After a Japanese attack on a steamship during WWII killed his wife and young son, he left the navy and moved to Hong Kong, where he eventually met and married a nurse.

Together, they began a new life as dairy farmers in the English countryside, on a farm without electricity or running water. Eventually, they had a daughter, then a son, then a pair of twins.

After nearly two decades on the farm, the family had an unorthodox idea for how to best educate their children, how to show them what a vast and wondrous place the world is, full of all kinds of different people and all kinds of different ways of living: They sold everything they had, bought a schooner, and set out to sail around the world, departing on January 27, 1971.

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S44
It's Never Been Easier to Make an Adventure Game

Visit WIRED Photo for our unfiltered take on photography, photographers, and photographic journalism wrd.cm/1IEnjUH

Slide: 1 / of 1.Caption: Caption: New tools like Adventure Game Studio are responsible for a thriving indie scene for the genre. Courtesy of Julia Minamata

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S48
There is now a blood test for anxiety disorders

Based on preliminary research, a new blood test for anxiety may be able to help doctors diagnose patients and find effective treatments for them. But some experts believe it needs to be independently confirmed by further research.

Anxiety 101: While everyone occasionally experiences worry or dread due to an upcoming event, such as an important test, people with anxiety disorders experience those feelings persistently and often without any specific threat looming.

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S40
13 Great Deals on TVs, Headphones, and Office Gear

I live in Portland, Oregon, where we've had one of the dreariest, wettest winters on record. This week saw our first warm temperatures in months, which means it's time for a good spring cleaning. If you, like me, found some holes in your technological arsenal (and a bag full of hand-me-downs to donate to charities like Free Geek), now is a good time to check out these deals. We found discounts on TVs, soundbars, and home office gear, not to mention a MacBook Air deal.

There are several other spring sales happening now and we've rounded them up, from deals on camera backpacks and smartphones to sex toys and smart home gadgets.

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S46
The wild psychedelic origins of indigenous mystical rites -- as revealed by archaeology

We’ll never know when and where humans first discovered the mind-altering power of psychedelics. But it seems fair to state three things about our relationship with visionary drugs: it’s incalculably old, globally pervasive, and rich with meaning. Our ancestors likely began their long journey with naturally occurring psychotropic substances tens or even hundreds of thousands of years ago.

The nascent field of archaeochemistry has convincingly demonstrated Neanderthal use of psychoactive plants like yarrow and chamomile going back 50,000 years. Anthropologist Scott M. Fitzpatrick envisions the early hunter-gatherers of our own species encountering, consuming and experimenting “with a wide array of plants” and fungi — just like their Neanderthal cousins.

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S63
Succession planning: not all family businesses feud - here's how they help younger generations take over

Director, Centre for Family Business, Department of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, Lancaster University

When the world’s richest and most powerful families deal with the tricky task of succession planning, it can attract a lot of interest. Think of news reports from the Murdoch’s media empire or, more recently, luxury goods company LVMH. Even fictional clans such as the Roys of TV show Succession attract massive global audiences with tales of dysfunction as members battle for control of the family firm.

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S47
AI isn't close to becoming sentient - the real danger lies in how easily we anthropomorphize it

ChatGPT and similar large language models can produce compelling, humanlike answers to an endless array of questions – from queries about the best Italian restaurant in town to explaining competing theories about the nature of evil.

The technology’s uncanny writing ability has surfaced some old questions – until recently relegated to the realm of science fiction – about the possibility of machines becoming conscious, self-aware or sentient. 

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S62
Naked women have long been seen as a threat - today's puritanism is just the latest cycle of western history

In the middle of the fourth century BC, an ancient Greek woman named Phryne cast off her clothes and walked naked into the sea at the Festival of Poseidon. While it earned her a job as nude model for one of Greece’s top artists, it also landed her in court on the charge of impiety, for which the punishment was death.

Today Greece plays host to many a scantily clad holidaymaker, and with the sexual revolution behind us, many would like to think that women are free to do whatever they like with their own bodies.

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S45
4 ways to identify high-conflict people before it's too late

Some people seem predisposed to cause chaos and conflict in their lives. Their every discussion regresses into an argument. Everywhere they go, something goes wrong and someone else is to blame. And they can’t let anything go, seeing even the smallest mistake as an affront to their worthiness.

These are some of the signs of what lawyer and therapist Bill Eddy calls “high-conflict people,” and chances are you’ve encountered one before. They could be that coworker whose ego you have to tiptoe around at the office, the family member who adds drama to every holiday visit, or the friend who reacts explosively to the mere suggestion that they’ve misremembered some trivial fact.

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