Transcription app Otter wants to make meetings more useful

Otter, the AI-powered meeting transcription service, is rolling out a set of new features designed to boost collaboration even after meetings are over. The company’s Otter Assistant can already find meeting invitations in your Google or Outlook calendar, automatically join meetings on platforms such as Zoom and Microsoft Teams, and transcribe them for you—even when you can’t attend the meetings yourself. Now, a new newsfeed-style view integrates calendar information directly

What web3 means for the future of work

On the internet, no one knows you’re a dog. But what about at work?  Running a people business is anything but dull.  And when you employ enough people—especially in a remote-first, distributed company—you’re guaranteed to run into interesting questions about identity.  With new paradigms of distributed computing and cryptographic identifiers erupting around us with blockchains, NFTs, and web3, I’m left wondering: Is there a better way than how w

Can blockchain tech help farmers get climate insurance?

Climate change is creating a nightmare scenario for subsistence farmers around the world. Subsistence farms are typically small operations, often less than 2 hectares, with outsize importance to the families that operate them, and to the surrounding community that relies on the crops. As of 2013, nearly 2 billion people on the planet relied on small-scale subsistence farms for survival. But those farms are in trouble: Rising CO2 levels have increased the likelihood and severity of extreme weathe

How data could help predict COVID outbreaks

It’s an unfortunate but ever-present truth: The realities of COVID-19 are still far from over. In fact, cases are actually on the rise again—concurrent with easing U.S. restrictions, quarantine fatigue, waning vaccine efficacy and the increasing (yet misguided) belief that the pandemic is behind us. Now, with recent reports showcasing rising infections and hospitalizations in Europe, as well as new media coverage highlighting renewed lockdowns in China, it’s clear that we, a

NFT bloat results in a lot of dead mints, says new blockchain data

NFTs couldn’t have gotten much frothier last year, and recent data suggests the bubbly is still flowing—despite, perhaps, fizzling, too. That’s as a third of NFTs minted since January 2021 ended up a “dead collection, with little or no trade activity post-minting,” reports blockchain analytics firm Nansen, which surveyed roughly 8,400 collections composed of more than 19 million NFTs on the Ethereum blockchain. Meanwhile, another third of NFTs are trading

Why CNN+ isn’t really for cord cutters

The main thing to know about CNN+, which launches on March 29 after a hype cycle that began last summer, is that it’s entirely different from the CNN cable channel. For $6 per month or $60 per year, CNN+ offers none of CNN’s live or primetime programming. Instead, new shows from stars, such as Anderson Cooper and Don Lemon, distinguish the nascent streamer from what’s on CNN proper. Lemon, for instance, will host a talk show instead of his usual nightly newscast; Jake Tapper

Will SpaceX, Blue Origin, or Virgin Galactic ever be affordable?

Remarkable engineering progress has made space tourism a practical pastime for billionaires. But it’s too early to say whether it will ever become a financially feasible endeavor for mere millionaires—much less anybody with a net worth below seven figures. The next small step in a journey that began with American businessman Dennis Tito’s 2001 flight to the International Space Station on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft (for which he paid a reported $20 million) certainly doesn&#x

5 free fitness and nutrition apps for getting into shape for spring

My friend Dave just finished an Ironman triathlon, which is something he and I definitely don’t have in common and almost certainly never will. And fit though he may be, he said something to me once that I’ll never forget: “I know I’m going to gain, like, 15 pounds over the winter. I just accept it and then I work it off in the spring.” I always thought that was an excellent attitude. Instead of beating yourself up for putting on a few pounds during the winter

Older Americans are given the wrong idea about online safety

Recently, the U.S. Social Security Administration sent out an email to subscribers of its official blog explaining how to access social security statements online. Most people know to be suspicious of seemingly official emails with links to websites asking for credentials. But for older adults who are wary of the prevalence of scams targeting their demographic, such an email can be particularly alarming since they have been told that the SSA never sends emails. From our resea

How to leave things on a positive note when an employee quits

If there’s one thing that never gets easier as a leader, it’s saying goodbye to a valuable team member. Employees leave for all kinds of reasons, but as a CEO, it’s easy to feel like you’ve failed somehow. So, how should you feel when they come back? The corporate world is dealing with a new phenomenon right now—boomerang employees. About 4.5 million U.S. employees quit in November 2021 alone, and people who made big decisions in that sweeping resignation wave


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