At the annual Alfred E. Smith charity dinner, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump had a chance to poke fun at each other for a good cause. ————————————————– Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs Follow BI on Facebook: http://bit.ly/1W9Lk0n Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/ ————————————————– Business Insider is the fastest growing business news site in the US. Our
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High-hanging fruit?: Feeding cities with vertical farming By 2050, 68% of the global population is expected to live in cities and eat 80% of the food produced. Unless we find a way to grow food within or near cities, the ecological footprint of feeding the masses could be devastating. Meet the cities and companies thinking
Coal, nuclear, natural gas, renewables, and oil are all going head-to-head for dominance of the energy market – will we see a shift in the balance of power next year? Bloomberg looks at energy trends to watch in 2016.
The Edge, in Amsterdam, is officially the greenest office building in the world. It’s also the testing ground for a radical, highly connected new way of working, where employees have no set workspaces and can dial in their individual climate and lighting preferences via an app. Businessweek’s Tom Randall got a first-hand look at the
The FT’s head of Lex Jonathan Guthrie takes a high-speed tour of Mayfair, the City of London and Canary Wharf to see how leaving the EU will affect the capital’s financial landmarks. See if you get the FT for free as a student (http://ft.com/schoolsarefree) or start a £1 trial: https://subs.ft.com/spa3_trial?segmentId=3d4ba81b-96bb-cef0-9ece-29efd6ef2132 ► Check out our Community
The unmistakable sound of the gong has held spiritual significance in Southeast Asia for centuries. Hand-beaten from sheet materials, the labor-intensive shaping and delicate paintwork result in beautiful percussive instruments. Souvenir gongs can be bought for just a few dollars, but large, finely tuned gongs made from the best materials can fetch tens of thousands
Frankincense and myrrh are perhaps best known for their biblical connotations. But this tree sap has been prized across the world for over 6,000 years. These fragrant incense pieces come from the Burseraceae family of trees and are found across the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. But despite recent attempts to protect these
One die-hard Tolkien fan built his own Hobbit house to store his collectibles in southern Penn.
Pink Himalayan salt is used in speciality foods, spa treatments, and even home design. 100 grams of it can cost $5 to $8, up to 20 times more than generic table salt. So, why is it so expensive? Special Thanks to: MORE SO EXPENSIVE CONTENT: Why Mānuka Honey Is So Expensive | So Expensive Why
CNN’s Rachel Crane gets an exclusive look inside Virgin Galactic as the team attempts to become the first private company to send an astronaut to space. Richard Branson says he’s “pretty confident” that Virgin Galactic will be the first private company to have astronauts in space. The risks are high but the company’s engineers are
In May, 2010, from his bedroom in London, Navinder Sarao, helped cause panic in U.S. markets. Bloomberg’s Liam Vaughan tells the story of The Flash Crash Trader, also known as The Hound of Hounslow. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-02-10/how-the-flash-crash-trader-s-50-million-fortune-vanished #BWStorylines #Businessweek #BloombergQuicktake ——– Like this video? Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1 QuickTake Originals is Bloomberg’s official premium video channel. We bring you
Moxie Marlinspike won’t tell you his name or where he’s from, but everyone from U.S. Intelligence officials to Edward Snowden looks to what he’ll say on one topic: encryption. The technology has come under scrutiny as terrorists are increasingly using it as a way to shield their plans from law enforcement. Laurie Segall reports.
A tuna once sold for $1.8 million, but you can get cans of tuna fish for less than $2 at the grocery store. So, what’s the difference? Bluefin tuna can be very expensive depending on where you buy it and which part of the fish you are eating. We spoke with the chef at Shoji
Rogan art has been passed down in the Khatri family for eight generations. Now, with no tourists visiting due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the business has slowed, and the survival of this centuries-old craft is under threat. For more, visit: https://www.instagram.com/jabbar_rogan/ http://www.roganartnirona.com/ MORE BUSINESS VIDEOS: How 3 Million Grocery Items Are Delivered To Homes Every
MoviePass lets theater-goers pay $10 a month to see almost unlimited movies in theaters. What’s the catch? CEO Mitch Lowe tells CNNMoney’s Frank Pallotta that it’s all about data.
Read ‘Why bond yields are so low’ : http://on.ft.com/2e9kOE0 Negative yielding bonds are bonds which have a negative interest rate. It means that when a person buys those bonds, instead of generating profit, they lose money. Why would anyone buy such bonds then? Some institutions are forced legally, others are betting and hope to make
At 86 years old, Giorgos Hatziparaskos is one of the last bakers in Greece making phyllo pastry by hand. With the help of his wife and son, he keeps the business going thanks to tourists visiting the Greek island of Crete. MORE BUSINESS INSIDER VIDEOS: How Millions Of Pounds Of Coffee Are Processed At Hawaiian
Air traffic controllers at Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport are in charge of 909,431 takeoffs and landings at the world’s busiest airport (in a normal year). But the job isn’t easy. Not only are lives on the line, but any mistake at Atlanta could cause a ripple effect of delays across the country and the world.
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Singapore Airlines relaunched the longest flight in the world, connecting Newark Liberty International Airport with its home base at Changi Airport in Singapore. Singapore had operated the route — which covers about 10,000 miles and can last up to 19 hours — until 2013. MORE AVIATION CONTENT: How Emirates Makes 225,000 In-Flight Meals A Day
A typical teaspoon of agricultural soil contains more than a billion living organisms. This biodiversity plays a key role in the ability of soil to support plant life, including agricultural crops, although identifying and counting soil microbes is an incredibly difficult task. But as the FT’s science editor Clive Cookson explains, new molecular fingerprinting technology
China’s regulators put a stop to what would have been the biggest listing in history at the last minute angering both the company and investors looking to buy Ant shares. The FT’s Asia markets correspondent Hudson Lockett explains why they did it. See if you get the FT for free as a student (http://ft.com/schoolsarefree) or
Mercedes Ruehl, Asian technology correspondent, explains why the boom in Asian financial technology is facing its first serious setback as businesses focused on providing services to the vast number of people in the region without bank accounts struggle to cope with the fallout from coronavirus. See if you get the FT for free as a
Lotus silk is one of the rarest fabrics in the world. Produced only in small scale across Cambodia, Myanmar, and more recently Vietnam, this natural fibre is only extracted by a few skilled craftspeople across the world. But making this “silk” isn’t easy. Extracting enough lotus silk for one scarf can take two months, and
Fifty years ago, a helicopter company called New York Airways whisked passengers from the rooftop of the iconic Pan Am Building in midtown Manhattan to any city airport in just 10 minutes. A fatal accident in 1977 brought that era to an end. 40 years later, E-VTOL technology could open a new chapter in short-distance
Zak Williams, son of Robin Williams, is co-teaching a financial literacy class at San Quentin State Prison with an inmate who goes by ‘Wall Street’
Starting in mid-September, Ocean Spray farmers across the Northeast start hustling to harvest 100 billion cranberries in just six weeks. But just as harvest was beginning this year, a TikTok featuring a bottle of Ocean Spray Cran-raspberry juice went viral. Soon, retailers struggled to keep cranberry juice on shelves as millions recreated the video. For
Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman has put on another bet that companies will struggle to pay their debts, months after he cashed in a $2.6bn profit. Read more at https://on.ft.com/35nmmVb See if you get the FT for free as a student (http://ft.com/schoolsarefree) or start a £1 trial: https://subs.ft.com/spa3_trial?segmentId=3d4ba81b-96bb-cef0-9ece-29efd6ef2132 ► Check out our Community tab for
Tim Ferriss reveals what he’s learned about the routines and day to day lives of billionaires and business titans.
Ben Bland, Indonesia correspondent, explains one of the world’s most complicated elections as the country prepares to elect both chambers of its legislature and a new president. For more video content from the Financial Times, visit http://www.FT.com/video Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube; http://goo.gl/vUQx5k Twitter https://twitter.com/ftvideo Facebook https://www.facebook.com/financialtimes
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