Business

Interior of The Classroom at Wagner Park Pavilion in Battery Park City, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows with views of the New York Harbor and Statue of Liberty.

New York just opened a harbor-view community space that feels too good to be public, and the sunset backdrop may be the least surprising part

April 1, 2026 at 10:35 AM
An aerial view of the 1,200-acre Huddleston family farm in Mason County, Kentucky, the site of a contested $26 million data center proposal.

A Kentucky woman rejected $26 million to let an AI company build a data center on her farm, and the standoff is becoming bigger than one sale

April 1, 2026 at 7:45 AM
A CTA Red Line train pulling into a station in Chicago, representing the transit projects currently facing a federal funding dispute.

Trump froze $2 billion tied to Chicago’s Red Line, and the fight is turning transit money into a bigger test of how far politics can reach infrastructure

March 31, 2026 at 3:45 PM
A close-up of a man's arm featuring various tattoos, representing the central piece of evidence in the Neiyerver Adrián Leon Rengel wrongful deportation lawsuit.

He says the U.S. saw gang signs in his tattoos and sent him to CECOT, and now one Venezuelan is turning that deportation into a high-stakes legal fight

March 31, 2026 at 9:30 AM
A comparative data visualization or map showing inbound and outbound tax migration trends between Oklahoma and Kansas based on the latest IRS statistics.

Oklahoma’s growth may be coming from economic freedom, not subsidy schemes, and the new IRS numbers are opening a bigger fight over what really works

March 30, 2026 at 3:45 PM
An aerial view of a massive data center complex in rural Morrow County, Oregon, highlighting the physical scale of the cloud infrastructure.

Amazon paid an Oregon official’s company more than $100 million while chasing data center deals, and the figure is opening a darker question about who really benefited

March 30, 2026 at 6:00 AM
A conservation officer inspecting hunting equipment near Larder Lake, Ontario, representing the enforcement of moose tagging regulations.

A court handed down a lifetime hunting ban in a moose case, turning one illegal kill into the kind of warning every hunter is meant to hear

March 29, 2026 at 2:30 PM
A high-tech automated assembly line for photovoltaic solar cells, representing the manufacturing equipment Tesla is sourcing from China.

Elon Musk is chasing Chinese solar power for America while Africa braces for higher panel costs, exposing who still pays when Beijing changes the rules

March 28, 2026 at 6:05 PM
A Dubai Air Wing Boeing 747-400 freighter on a runway, used for the international transport of Godolphin racehorses.

Dubai’s ruler has a Boeing 747 not for royals but for racehorses, and its quiet run to Miami reveals the flying machine behind a global empire

March 27, 2026 at 7:45 AM
An industrial drainage pipe discharging dark wastewater into a roadside ditch near the Tesla lithium refinery in Robstown, Texas.

South Texas officials say they had no idea Tesla was sending lithium refinery wastewater into a local ditch, and now a pipe in plain sight is raising bigger questions than the permit itself

March 26, 2026 at 12:30 PM
A compact, white solar-powered emergency sleeping pod situated in a Guernsey car park to provide short-term shelter for the homeless.

These homeless sleeping pods have already been used for 71 nights in Guernsey, and the cases inside show how even people with a car, a couch or a job can suddenly fall out of the housing market

March 26, 2026 at 7:45 AM
A close-up of a Micron high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chip used in AI data centers, reflecting the company's 2026 revenue surge.

Micron beat revenue expectations thanks to the AI boom, but Wall Street still punished the company and the reason reveals what investors now fear most

March 24, 2026 at 3:45 PM
A sleek, modern smartphone concept displaying a voice-activated Amazon Alexa AI interface on a high-resolution edge-to-edge screen.

Amazon is planning a smartphone comeback more than a decade after the Fire Phone flop, and this time the company believes AI can succeed where hardware once failed

March 24, 2026 at 12:30 PM
An automated Amazon "Proteus" mobile robot navigating a fulfillment center floor near stacked yellow storage bins.

Amazon is cutting more jobs, this time in its robotics unit, and the message behind the move is bigger than a simple round of layoffs

March 24, 2026 at 7:45 AM
A row of self-checkout kiosks at a major retail store with a digital sign displaying a 15-item maximum limit.

Say goodbye to unlimited self-checkout: Walmart, Target, and other chains may be forced to limit purchases to 15 items and bring back many more workers to the registers

March 23, 2026 at 6:30 PM
A high-tech semiconductor cleanroom at a Samsung electronics facility, where advanced AI memory and logic chips are manufactured.

Samsung is preparing to spend more than $73 billion in 2026 to lead the AI chip race, and the company is betting that this is the moment to strike back against its biggest rivals

March 23, 2026 at 3:45 PM
A high-tech data center interior featuring racks of Nvidia Blackwell GPUs and networking gear used by Amazon Web Services.

Nvidia will sell 1 million AI chips to Amazon before the end of 2027, and the scale of the deal shows how brutally the fight for cloud dominance is accelerating

March 23, 2026 at 10:35 AM
An advanced automated factory floor featuring robotic arms and AI-integrated assembly lines for semiconductor and aerospace parts.

Jeff Bezos aims to raise $100 billion to buy factories and rebuild them with AI, and the move could quietly reshape American manufacturing faster than anyone expected

March 23, 2026 at 7:45 AM
A variety of Walmart Great Value brand grocery products, including milk, cereal, and snacks, displayed on a wooden table.

What Walmart sells as ‘Great Value’ isn’t always what shoppers think: famous food brands are hiding behind the retailer’s cheapest labels, and almost no one notices on the shelf

March 22, 2026 at 12:30 PM
A close-up of red and green salsa containers at a Los Tacos No. 1 self-service condiment bar in New York City.

A man demanded $100,000 after trying an extremely spicy sauce at a New York taqueria, but a judge dismissed the case and turned the city’s hottest condiment into a legal warning

March 22, 2026 at 9:30 AM
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