Hereโs what wild single-stock price swings may signal for your index fund
Also in Weekend Reads: The latest on SpaceX and other IPOs, a raw deal for Alphabetโs non-Berkshire shareholders and advice from the Moneyist.
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ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
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Also in Weekend Reads: The latest on SpaceX and other IPOs, a raw deal for Alphabetโs non-Berkshire shareholders and advice from the Moneyist.
Suzy Welch, author and NYU Stern School of Business professor, says without the right talent or attitude, itโs hard to turn a passion into a career.
AI sycophancy is rising. It could be that AI sycophancy also prods users into seeking AI mental health advice, which can be good or bad. An AI Insider analysis and scoop.
Prudie says: โthatโs why Iโm writing an advice column rather than running a private practice.โ
A cardiologist outlines the best approach to finding a doctor โ and the questions to ask yourself when you do.
Advice on what to do when your toddler is too rough with the family pet. Plus, learning to ride a bike, and making new friends.
The musician shared the secret behind his 31-year marriage to his wife Kari
College seniors have been donning their cap and gowns to mark the end of one chapter and the beginning of another. They're facing a daunting future, with a rapidly transforming job market thanks to artificial intelligence, global unrest and more. It was against this backdrop that graduation speakers took to the stage to give their best advice. Here are some notable speeches you might have missed.
Moments before Santiago Campos took the stage at the News & Documentary Emmy Awards in New York City to accept a CBS News-funded scholarship in front of some of the most powerful people in TV news, veteran โ60 Minutesโ correspondent Scott Pelley took the time to offer the high school senior some advice.
New graduatesโ careers are unfolding in an era when AI is not optional. The most successful engineers treat artificial intelligence as leverage, not competition. Here are seven tips to help keep young professionals in demand no matter how quickly the fieldโs tools evolve. 1. Master the fundamentals first. AI tools can help you code, but you still need strong fundamentals in: Data structures and algorithms for problem-solving. Operating systems, databases, and networking for system-level understanding. Core programming languages such as C++, Java, and Python. AI can autocomplete syntax, but if you donโt understand how things work under the hood, youโre likely to struggle to debug or optimize. 2. Learn how to work with AI, not against it. The best engineers will not try to out-code AI. Instead, they will learn to: Write clear prompts to generate better code snippets. Review and debug AI-generated code for accuracy, performance, and security. Use AI for productivity boosts while still exercising judgment. Think of AI as a teammate. The real skill is knowing when to trust it and when not to. 3. Build projects that showcase end-to-end thinking. Employers increasingly look for engineers who can design and build systems, not just solve problems. Create projects that show you can: Define requirements clearly. Use AI tools responsibly within the workflow. Deliver a product that scales and is maintainable. 4. Sharpen your system design skills early. Even junior engineers are now asked questions about basic system design with AI. Expect to explain to prospective employers: How you would responsibly integrate AI into a system. How to design fallbacks when AI fails. How to ensure scalability and reliability. 5. Develop strong communication skills. Todayโs engineers donโt just code in isolation. You will be expected to: Explain design choices to teammates and stakeholders. Document decisions clearly. Collaborate effectively in cross-functional teams. This is one area where AI cannot replace you. Clear communication is a career accelerant. 6. Stay curious and keep learning. The tech industry moves fast, and AI is accelerating that pace. Cultivate habits such as: Following industry news, blogs, and open-source projects. Experimenting with new AI tools, frameworks, and libraries. Engaging in communities such as GitHub, IEEE Collabratec, LinkedIn, and Medium. Employers value engineers who keep themselves sharp and relevant. 7. Think beyond coding. AI will increasingly handle routine coding tasks. The differentiators for you will be: Problem-framing: Can you take a vague idea and turn it into a solution? Architectural judgment: Can you design systems that scale and last? Ethical awareness: Can you spot risks in AI use and address them responsibly? For more career advice, subscribe to the IEEE Spectrum Career Alert Newsletter. The biweekly newsletter features the latest information on jobs, education, management, and the engineering workplace.
"Start your job search with small businesses," Billionaire Mark Cuban tells job seekers.
Andy Hill, who quit his job in 2020, says you don't need as much as you think to be financially independent. Here's his advice for FIRE seekers.
Mo Gawdat, who predicts that AI would erase 30% of certain job sectors will be gone by 2028, said he has tips for job seekers to survive the AI era.
As teens, brothers Arturo and Roy Ambriz, both filmmakers who had taken courses on makeup and special effects, and who hail from Mexico City, took a chance. They cold-emailed Guillermo Del Toro and included images of their work asking the Academy Award-winning director for professional advice.
People are using ordinary AI chatbots to get mental health advice, which can be lousy guidance. You can double-check by using purpose-built AI. An AI Insider scoop.
Nearly 1 in 5 adolescents and young adults are turning to AI chatbots for advice when theyโre sad, angry, nervous or stressed, according to a new study.
For years, the playbook was clear: don't stay too long, always negotiate your next move, loyalty is for suckers. It hits different in "low-hire, low-fire."
In the 1990s, I asked Milton Friedman how I should approach charitable giving. His answer was to invest in school choice, a concept he had invented decades earlier. At the time, school choice barely existed. Now, itโs exploding. Friedmanโs advice was right on โ my bet has paid off. Now, it is time for all of [โฆ]
These three expected deals will define 2026 and maybe even 2027. Here's my advice on how to play them.
Editorโs note, May 31, 8 am ET: Weโre bringing you some of our best-loved Your Mileage May Vary columns while Sigal Samuel is on parental leave. The one below originally published on October 6, 2024. This unconventional advice column offers you a unique framework for thinking through moral dilemmas. Itโs based on value pluralism โ [โฆ]