MIT Technology Review’s most popular stories of 2025
This New Type Tech Job Can Pay Up To $335,000 A Year — Even Without An Engineering Degree
How to Create a Thriving Workplace by Leading With Authenticity
Crypto market cap unaffected on the week amid more US lawsuits
If you thought last week was crazy with the SEC clamping down on major crypto companies like Coinbase and Tron, you should buckle up for this week’s news.
Crypto market cap unaffected on the week amid more US lawsuits by Jacquelyn Melinek originally published on TechCrunch
I played the anime dating sim that does your taxes for you
Yes, there is an anime dating sim that does your taxes, and it actually works. Tax Heaven 3000 is a game produced by MSCHF, the venture-funded creative studio behind projects like Push Party, the Lil Nas X blood shoes, the big red Astro Boy boots and Dead Startup Toys. Basically, they just make a bunch […]
I played the anime dating sim that does your taxes for you by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch
Netflix’s ad-supported plan comes to Apple TV after months of delay
When Netflix launched its ad-supported plan four months ago, there were a few devices that the plan didn’t support—Apple TV being one of them. Starting this week, the cheaper tier is available in the Netflix tvOS app. A Reddit user that goes by websgeisti noticed the update yesterday. The user noted that Netflix’s Basic with […]
Netflix’s ad-supported plan comes to Apple TV after months of delay by Lauren Forristal originally published on TechCrunch
How NFT Marketplaces Will Onboard the Next Mass Wave of Users to Crypto
Yeah, of course, YC’s winter class is oozing with AI companies
While some startups are reinventing the wheel, most are looking to build nuanced use cases of AI. It would be weirder if they weren’t.
Yeah, of course, YC’s winter class is oozing with AI companies by Rebecca Szkutak originally published on TechCrunch
Asking the right dumb questions
You’ll have to forgive the truncated newsletter this week. Turns out I brought more back from Chicago than a couple of robot stress balls (the one piece of swag I will gladly accept). I was telling someone ahead of the ProMat trip that I’ve returned to 2019 travel levels this year. One bit I’d forgotten […]
Asking the right dumb questions by Brian Heater originally published on TechCrunch