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The Entry-Level Job Market: Challenges and Student Perspectives
OpinionbloombergYahoo7d ago2 sources

The Entry-Level Job Market: Challenges and Student Perspectives

An opinion piece suggests that college students who exert minimal effort often blame higher education when they struggle to find jobs, advocating for a proactive approach, while another article highlights that a challenging entry-level job market poses a problem for everyone.

Querbeat Concert Electrifies Frankfurt's Zoom Club
Culturefaz10d ago

Querbeat Concert Electrifies Frankfurt's Zoom Club

The band Querbeat transformed Frankfurt's Zoom club into a euphoric, continuous loop, blending carnival, festival, and workout vibes with bass, guitars, and clear announcements, creating moments reminiscent of a fever dream.

Tech leaders predict end of five-day workweek due to AI
TechnologyTimes of India10d ago

Tech leaders predict end of five-day workweek due to AI

Zoom CEO Eric Yuan predicts the five-day workweek is nearing its end, envisioning a future where AI agents handle routine tasks, potentially leading to a three-day workweek within five years. This aligns with sentiments from other tech leaders like OpenAI's Sam Altman.

Journalist Attacked in Serbia While Reporting
Worldn1-serbia20d ago

Journalist Attacked in Serbia While Reporting

Darko Gligorijević, a journalist for the Zoomer portal, was attacked by unknown individuals who obstructed his work and attempted to seize his phone while he was reporting from Bajina Bašta, Serbia.

Roboterbiber rettet die Umwelt
Technology1mo ago

Roboterbiber rettet die Umwelt

Nach einer Reihe von Fortsetzungen – darunter „Alles steht Kopf 2“ und der Kinohit „Zoomania 2“ – bringt Pixar mit „Hoppers“ wieder ein Original heraus.

Analyst Ratings and Price Target Changes for Various Companies
FinanceYahoo1mo ago

Analyst Ratings and Price Target Changes for Various Companies

Multiple financial institutions have updated their ratings and price targets for various companies, including Wells Fargo raising Globe Life (GL) target, Bank of America downgrading Fox (FOX), KeyBanc raising Zoom (ZM) target, H.C. Wainwright raising United Therapeutics (UTHR) target, Bernstein upgrading Newmont (NEM), analysts maintaining a hold on PepsiCo (PEP), Truist raising BILL Holdings (BILL) target, Barclays reiterating a buy on Charles Schwab (SCHW), Barclays upgrading Etsy (ETSY) and Truist raising its target, Goldman Sachs cutting Pinterest (PINS) target and RBC downgrading shares, Wells Fargo maintaining a hold on Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), UBS upgrading Southwest Airlines (LUV), Stifel raising Triple Flag Precious Metals (TFPM) target, Barclays raising Phillips 66 (PSX) target, and Veritas downgrading Suncor Energy (SU).

‘Zootopia 2’ At $424.2M Surpasses ‘A Minecraft Movie’ As Highest Grossing 2025 Domestic Release
Culturevarietyhollywood-reporterdeadline1mo ago3 sources

‘Zootopia 2’ At $424.2M Surpasses ‘A Minecraft Movie’ As Highest Grossing 2025 Domestic Release

Disney is doing cartwheels over Zootopia 2 becoming the highest-grossing domestic release of 2025, besting A Minecraft Movie, with $424.2M at the domestic box office and $1.85B worldwide ($1.425B international) and counting. Both movies took about the same time to reach their final box office figures — about three months. Zootopia 2 pulled off the feat in […]

NCT’s Jeno, Jaemin ready to show ‘both sides’
CultureKorea Herald1mo ago

NCT’s Jeno, Jaemin ready to show ‘both sides’

Jeno and Jaemin of NCT are unveiling their first album as a duo subunit on Monday. As the album title “Both Sides” suggests, they will be zooming in on their differences while demonstrating their chemistry as a pair based on the history they share as teammates of the same age. The EP consists of six tracks, including the titular track, a hip-hop dance tune. “Many may have been expecting a ‘bold and strong’ concept for us two as a subunit. But we chose this because it has a novel ambience we have

Singapore busker ‘stunned like a vegetable’ after ex-PM Lee spotted at performance
CultureSCMP1mo ago

Singapore busker ‘stunned like a vegetable’ after ex-PM Lee spotted at performance

Singapore street performer Bryan Wong may have performed all around the world, but few gigs can compare to the one where Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong randomly turned up in the audience. The 29-year-old acrobatics artist was performing his Circles In Circus act at Rainforest Wild Asia when he spotted Lee and his wife, Ho Ching, watching from the crowd. In a video later posted to social media, Wong zoomed in to Lee’s face, joking: “Sir, I’m sorry, I’m going to zoom in to your face, thank you...

'Dress for the job you want' is dead. Now, it's 'dress for the job you want to keep.'
CultureBusiness Insider2mo ago

'Dress for the job you want' is dead. Now, it's 'dress for the job you want to keep.'

Brands like Toteme are becoming more popular as investment dressing resurges. Edward Berthelot/Getty Images Workwear is recalibrating to styles that balance comfort with a more polished look. The tightening job market and return-to-office mandates have chipped away at pandemic casualness. Employees may also be using more polished workwear to create a boundary between work and home. Dress for the job you want to… keep? In a job market where power has shifted toward employers, at least one thing remains within an employee's control: how they choose to show up to work. With layoffs and slow hiring shaping the labor market and RTO mandates pulling employees back into offices, experts say workers are dressing more carefully to project competence. In periods of uncertainty, clothing is less about comfort and self-expression, and more about job security, Lizzy Bowring, a creative strategist and trend forecaster, told Business Insider. "Dressing smarter serves as career risk management," she said. The business casual era gave way to full-on casual Business casual had an era — a long one. Over the past 30 years, suits and ties have given way to blazers and sweaters in many white-collar industries. By the early 2000s, the casual look was ubiquitous in tech. Think Mark Zuckerberg's signature gray T-shirt, hoodie, and jeans. Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg delivers the opening keynote address at the f8 Developer Conference April 21, 2010 Justin Sullivan/Getty Images When the pandemic hit, casual dressing went from trend to default. There was no need to dress up for your living room. But times are different now. Workers are being called back into the office, and the franzied "Great Resignation" period post-pandemic, when employers were scrambling to retain staff and thrust into bidding wars to scoop up talent, is well behind us. The balance of power has shifted from employee to employer. US businesses are hiring at one of the slowest rates since 2013, and the early impact of AI is beginning to show up. Last month saw more layoffs than any January since 2009, as big companies like Amazon and Citi announced plans to cut thousands of jobs. Because of this, "employees are becoming more conscious of how they present themselves, not because they're being told to, but because uncertainty changes behaviour," Frances Li, founder and director of Biscuit Recruitment, a boutique recruitment agency based in London and New York, told Business Insider. Recalibration, not return An example of a more tailored silhouette is the oversized blazer, pictured here on content creator and writer Alba Garavito Torre. Edward Berthelot/Getty Images Still, experts say we aren't seeing a full return to suits and straight-cut dresses. Trend forecaster Lizzy Bowring describes this as an "'intentional recalibration' — blending comfort with sharper silhouettes, structured tailoring and more deliberate styling." The jacket you once wore over a T-shirt to look smarter for a Zoom meeting is now shifting to a more tailored look, said Bowring. Think oversized blazers and fitted dresses. Fashion's messaging is reflecting this. There's a focus on tailoring and silhouette-forming pieces across luxury brands like Prada, Saint Laurent, and Bottega Veneta, she said. A model walks the runway at Bottega Veneta's Spring/Summer 2026 fashion show at Milan Fashion Week in September. Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images Economic uncertainty has also revived interest in investment dressing: wardrobe staples that work in the office and beyond, cut with precision and built to last. Brands like The Row and Toteme have gained cultural relevance by positioning their pieces as investments, reinforcing the appeal of clothing "that communicates stability, longevity and professional credibility," Bowring added. TikTok content about what to wear to the office and why it matters has also grown in popularity. Younger members of Gen Z, entering office settings for the first time, are questioning how to balance their personal style with work-appropriate attire. Grace McCarrick, a content creator who delivers soft skills training to companies such as Uber and Spotify, said her TikTok videos on being intentional with your appearance at work have been some of her most viral — garnering hundreds of thousands of views. @graceforpersonalityhires The cheat no one is telling you about- you don’t have to look super polished if you look rich. In the north east, the look tends to be a bit dull lol but do what feels right for you ♬ original sound - grace mccarrick "It is so complicated to move up and get noticed in the workforce today," she said. The idea of 'dressing for success' is one of the only levers you can control to help you progress at work, she added. "People who put in the effort stand out like neon signs. They've upped their charisma factor by simply not being as schlubby as everyone else. They could be the most awkward person, but because they look good in a sea of wrinkled khakis with black sneaker 'dress shoes,' they're magnetic," she said. Setting boundaries Formal dress is also a way for employees to clearly distinguish between work and home life. "Work wear cues a performance state, whereas home wear signals a relaxation state," Hajo Adam, an organizational psychologist and professor at the University of Bath, told Business Insider. This separation might help people to actually switch off when work finishes. So, once the clock strikes 5 p.m. — go ahead, loosen up, and hang up your blazer, whether your desk is in the office or in your living room. Read the original article on Business Insider

AC Immune Stock Jumps Nearly 15%
FinanceYahoo12d ago

AC Immune Stock Jumps Nearly 15%

AC Immune stock experienced a significant increase of almost 15% today, though the specific reason for the surge was not fully detailed in the report.

Trump Delays Iran Strikes Amid Exchange of Threats; Iran Denies Talks
WorldbloombergwsjFT+51le-mondeThe GuardianNPRAl Jazeeranrkcnbcnostagesschau+43 more28d ago54 sources

Trump Delays Iran Strikes Amid Exchange of Threats; Iran Denies Talks

U.S. President Donald Trump announced a delay in military attacks on Iranian power plants, citing 'very intense negotiations' and claiming a 'regime change' in Iran, with a potential deal in five days. This comes amidst an exchange of threats between Trump and Tehran, as Iranian media and officials strongly deny any ongoing talks with the United States, asserting that Trump backed down after Iranian warnings.

Μέγκαν Μαρκλ: Ο παιδικός τρόπος που φέρεται να αντέδρασε στις «προσβλητικές» συναντήσεις με το Netflix
Culturenewsbeast1mo ago

Μέγκαν Μαρκλ: Ο παιδικός τρόπος που φέρεται να αντέδρασε στις «προσβλητικές» συναντήσεις με το Netflix

Η Μέγκαν Μαρκλ φέρεται να «εξαφανιζόταν» κατά τη διάρκεια των συναντήσεων μέσω Zoom με το Netflix, όταν ενοχλούνταν από κάποιο σχόλιο ή κατάσταση, όπως αναφέρει η Page Six.

BlackLine Stock Rises Over 7%
BusinessYahoo1mo ago

BlackLine Stock Rises Over 7%

BlackLine stock experienced a significant surge, climbing more than 7% today, with analysts attributing the rise to various market factors.

Samsung Electro-Mechanics brings 200MP continuous zoom to Xiaomi flagship
WorldKorea Herald1mo ago

Samsung Electro-Mechanics brings 200MP continuous zoom to Xiaomi flagship

Samsung Electro-Mechanics has begun mass production of a 200-megapixel continuous optical zoom camera module, with the technology debuting in Xiaomi’s latest flagship smartphone, according to the company’s 2025 business report released Tuesday. The Korean electronic components manufacturer said the module supports continuous optical zoom from 3.2x to 4.3x. The design allows a smartphone camera to maintain true optical image quality while zooming across a range rather than switching between fixed

Miami is not the next Silicon Valley. It's something much weirder.
BusinessBusiness Insider2mo ago

Miami is not the next Silicon Valley. It's something much weirder.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Getty Images; Rebecca Zisser/BI Tech's elite are taking their talents to South Beach — again. In January, David Sacks, the venture capitalist and crypto and AI czar, proclaimed that Miami will soon replace New York City as America's financial capital. Stripe's Patrick Collison has been marveling at the city's "boomtown" vibes. With California flirting with a one-time tax on billionaires, said billionaires like Larry Page, Sergey Brin, and Mark Zuckerberg are buying oceanfront mansions. And on Tuesday, Palantir announced that it's moving its headquarters from Denver to Miami. Is Miami the next Silicon Valley? We've been here before. The pandemic sent waves of coastal workers to the city, turning it into a Zoomtown full of online venture capitalists like Keith Rabois and Delian Asparouhov, bitcoin bull runners, and purveyors of the finest NFTs. Billboards went up in San Francisco featuring a mock tweet from then-Miami mayor Francis Suarez: "Thinking about moving to Miami? DM me." Here's the thing: It's easy to fall for Miami when a big chunk of the workforce is stuck at home and online. Five years later, it's a lot harder to build companies there. "Miami is great three months out of the year," says one prominent venture capitalist who moved to the city during the pandemic but is now returning to an established hub. While the Floridian tax benefits are real, the investor has found that the social scene hollows out in the summer as residents leave, making it "hard to build roots or have reliable friends." More critically for the startup ecosystem, the scene lacked the "hustle" of San Francisco or New York. Silicon Valley practically runs on a conveyor belt from Stanford and Caltech to Y Combinator's Dogpatch offices. The machine turns students into founders, builders into companies, and companies into the next wave of founders. Miami, meanwhile, lacks a major university to pipe in tech talent. Instead, the investor says, the city tends to attract people who have already "made it." Miami and Fort Lauderdale-based startups raised $3 billion in 2025. Bay Area-based startups raised $177 billion. The Miami market, while busy, significantly lags behind the major hubs. Startups in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale metro raised about $3 billion in 2025, per PitchBook, down from $8.6 billion in 2022, when money and crypto sloshed about. The Bay Area, by contrast, still grabs 52% of the nation's venture funding, with $177 billion in capital pouring in last year. Alligators may be all around in Miami, but unicorns are hard to find. In January, Cast AI, a startup that helps companies cut cloud costs, crossed the $1 billion valuation mark, becoming the region's first homegrown unicorn in years. Before that, Adam Neumann, the ousted WeWork cofounder, debuted his Miami residential real-estate venture, Flow, at a $1 billion valuation in 2022. Even Garry Tan, the Y Combinator president and gadfly who's usually first in line to dunk on San Francisco's politics, has been blunt about where the breeding grounds are best. Tan recently said on X that the accelerator still hasn't opened offices outside the Bay Area because founders are simply more likely to build unicorns there. According to a Business Insider analysis of Crunchbase data, of the at least 97 new unicorns that investors minted in 2025, 43 of them were based in the Bay Area. But those who dismiss the city entirely miss the point. Miami isn't the next San Francisco. It's establishing itself as something else. Patrick Murphy, a former Florida congressman and entrepreneur, says that Miami's tech scene is growing, it's just being built in "reverse order." Silicon Valley, he says, emerged from an if you build it, they will come approach: Engineers built great companies first, which eventually created fortunes that cycled back into the community to fund the next generation of companies. Miami, however, has a more if you come, they will build it tact. It's attracted the "wealth achievers" first — the family offices, private equity names, and already-successful founders who emigrated for lifestyle reasons. Finance heavyweights like Citadel and Thoma Bravo arrived early. Vanguard, one of the world's largest asset managers, is eyeing an expansion in Miami as it targets more Latin American wealth. The city is now importing the machinery that follows them. Legal, accounting, and consulting firms are opening local offices to stay close to clients — and scoop up star talent that no longer needs to live near HQ. This dynamic has established Miami as a "control center" for decision-makers, Murphy argues, but not yet the "factory floor" where the actual work gets done. Murphy says that despite running a successful construction-tech startup, Togal.AI, his engineering team has been offshore from the beginning because the local talent pool simply "didn't exist" when he started in 2019. "If you go to Miami, you're not going to see dozens of engineers at a Starbucks cranking away," he says. "That's not here yet." Still, Miami's flood of wealth is creating demand for startups built on the city's local economy, especially in property tech and fintech, Murphy says. Togal.AI's annual recurring revenue has grown 1,000% over the past two years, Murphy says, and is now raising fresh venture funding in order to hire dozens of new employees this year. Palantir's move immediately became a kind of Rorschach test for Miami's future. "Florida is the new crypto," one user wrote on X. Maya Bakhai, a Fort Lauderdale resident and founder of the early-stage venture firm Spice Capital, tells me that the city will flourish alongside "net new" industries that are still taking shape and where the center of gravity isn't locked in yet. Crypto firms like MoonPay and QuickNode still treat South Florida as a home base, she notes. A new space-tech accelerator backed by the state is trying to persuade founders to stick around by pairing them with funders. Bakhai's bigger bet is that just as New York became the hub for e-commerce, Miami could become the place where creator businesses get built. Research out of the University of Hong Kong found Miami has more top influencers per capita than New York or Los Angeles. And then there's Palantir, the strongest signal flare yet that tech is taking America's Playground seriously. It's hard to know what the data giant's HQ move will mean in practice — Palantir hasn't said how many employees it plans to relocate, or whether it will offer moving packages to lure talent south. The company did not respond to an email request for comment. If Palantir does move a meaningful slice of its workforce, it would give Miami something it's been short on: a marquee tech employer that can recruit and keep technical workers on the ground year-round. On X, Palantir's move immediately became a kind of Rorschach test for Miami's future. ""Florida is the future," cheered Andreessen Horowitz investor Katherine Boyle. Others were less convinced. "Florida is the new crypto," one user wrote. "For the next 20 years, nothing will change, but they will always tell you 'big things are happening in Florida.'" Turning Miami into Silicon Beach is a long game, Bakhai argues. It won't be built by the billionaires buying houses to snowbird in today, she argues, but by the young strivers arriving for their first serious jobs — the entry-level analysts heading to Citadel and the junior lawyers starting at firms like Orrick. For the first time, she says, ambitious graduates can launch careers in Miami instead of treating New York or San Francisco as the default. The payoff, she says, comes years later, when they eventually spin off to start their own companies. Until then, Miami remains largely a playground for the "made it" crowd, waiting in the sun for the builders to come. Melia Russell is a reporter with Business Insider, covering the intersection of law and technology. Read the original article on Business Insider

After painful lessons as a child star, JoJo Siwa is reclaiming her multimillion-dollar brand.
CultureBusiness Insider1mo ago

After painful lessons as a child star, JoJo Siwa is reclaiming her multimillion-dollar brand.

Success looks a lot different for JoJo Siwa now than it did when she was a kid. Cate Hellman for BI When I first wrote about YouTube megastar JoJo Siwa, she was 16 and had just bought a house in Los Angeles, complete with a rainbow-colored bed and a duvet cover with her face on it. Her technicolor world looks very different now. So do the questions. When Siwa joins our Zoom call, I hardly recognize her. Gone are the bright rainbow clothes and the side ponytail anchored by the trademark bow t...

"Pressure Is Enormous": Nestle CEO Faces Mounting Scrutiny Amid Infant Formula Crisis
Businesszerohedge2mo ago

"Pressure Is Enormous": Nestle CEO Faces Mounting Scrutiny Amid Infant Formula Crisis

"Pressure Is Enormous": Nestle CEO Faces Mounting Scrutiny Amid Infant Formula Crisis Nestlé SA CEO Philipp Navratil is feeling the heat after the world's largest food company recently carried out the biggest recall in its history, pulling infant formula off supermarket shelves after a contaminated ingredient was discovered early last month. Shares have taken a beating, and scrutiny of the recall is intensifying, with prosecutors in Europe opening an investigation. Navratil and his management team are expected to present a turnaround plan for the Swiss foodmaker on Thursday, following the early January recall of its infant formulas. Multiple production sites were found to have cereulide, a toxin that can cause nausea and vomiting. French authorities have received complaints from eight consumers who say their children vomited after consuming Nestlé baby formula, prompting Paris prosecutors to open investigations. In the UK, there have also been 36 reports of suspected food poisoning linked to baby formula consumption. BBC News provided more color to those investigations: Prosecutors in Paris will seek to establish whether the baby formula producers are liable for distributing a tainted product. It will be co-ordinated with local probes into whether there was a causal link between the contaminated formula and the deaths of three babies in France. Nestlé and France's health ministry have stressed there was as-yet no evidence to indicate such a link. In Switzerland, the food giant's shares are little changed year to date, with uncertainty surrounding the baby formula debacle still hanging over sentiment. Zooming out, the stock has retraced to 2018-19 levels. Vontobel analyst Jean-Philippe Bertschy told clients, "The pressure is enormous ... and full-year results have become almost anecdotal, as investors are now squarely focused on the robustness of quality controls in the infant nutrition case and on the strategic update pledged by the new management team." Investors' attention now shifts to Thursday, when the Swiss giant reports full-year results and is expected to unveil its turnaround plan. Bloomberg noted, "Thursday's strategy update may include a reorganization to streamline businesses. Navratil has signaled that he wants to focus on four core divisions — pet care, coffee, nutrition and health, and food and snacking — while centralizing functions such as marketing, an area the company did not invest enough in during years of short-term margin expansion." Vontobel's Bertschy said, "It will be crucial that we receive an update on some of the under-performing units, how they want to reduce the net debt level and how they plan to accelerate the free cash flow. The market will look for a precise roadmap rather than another broad reassurance – a plan that is clearly underpinned by concrete actions, milestones and measurable commitments." Tyler Durden Wed, 02/18/2026 - 08:05