Special
With just over three years until the opening match, and with more than 1 million foreign fans expected, the smallest country to host a FIFA World Cup might struggle to find enough rooms
Some of the most fascinating topics covered this week are: Economy (Ray Dalio on America's capitalist system), Technology ( A cybersecurity firm's sharp rise and stunning collapse; Quantum computing takes flight), Science (Humans would get new powers to alter the genome!), Investing (Jim Simons learnt the task of the game — beating the market) and Astronomy (Prepping for a flood of heavenly bodies)
Reed Hastings, the chief executive of Netflix, seemed most at ease when talking about his new competitors, Apple TV Plus and Disney Plus, launched this month. The battle, he says, isn't as much against each other as it is against regular TV
On Thursday, the Harvard School of Public Health announced an ambitious women's health study that aims to enroll 1 million women over a decade. This is the third large-scale study that Apple has partnered with, developing research tools using iPhones and apps
The Common Man creator's sketches will be auctioned alongside rare works by Gaitonde, Sabavala, Souza and Sher-Gil on November 15 in Mumbai
Millions of workers and small-business owners work with startups like Oyo and Uber, financed by the biggest venture capital fund in history, the $100 billion Vision Fund run by Japanese conglomerate SoftBank. Unrest and frustration is growing among them as these startups have broken their promises, from New Delhi to Bogotá
WeWork lost $1.25 billion in the three months that ended in September, up from $497 million in the same period a year earlier. The numbers show why WeWork's planned initial public offering became a spectacular flameout
Kim Kardashian West and Kris Jenner discussed with Andrew Ross Sorkin of The New York Times the rise of their social media presences and businesses
SoftBank poured money into start-ups that use armies of contractors. That has upended the lives of drivers, hotel operators and real estate agents around the world, including many associated with Oyo in India
A Danish entrepreneur vented on Twitter that even though his spouse had a better credit score and other factors in her favour, her application for a credit line increase had been denied, in what doesn't seem to be an isolated case of discrimination with Apple's credit card. The criteria used by the Apple Card are now being scrutinised by the New York State Department of Financial Services