Excel is everywhere—more than 750 million people open a workbook each year to balance budgets, fine-tune supply chains, and ...
The offices of Google are pictured in London on February 28, 2026. JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images Google released agents-cli on April 21, 2026, and it has shipped 13 updates in the 71 days since — ...
Global Gurus places Spitz among the World’s Top Futurists; his Disruptive Futures Institute named to Thinkers360’s 50 ...
Finding good help can be hard these days, especially in the development and engineering world. These sites can help you hire ...
Landing your first job — or starting out in a new industry — has never been easy, but the stakes feel particularly high for Brits today. According to the latest ONS figures, UK payrolled employment ...
“The Mandalorian and Grogu” takes place after the popular Disney+ series – but when exactly in the larger Star Wars timeline does it land? The first Star Wars film to land in theaters since “The Rise ...
A Burmese python named Harriet has challenged scientific understanding of the species' reproductive cycle. Harriet produced six clutches of eggs over seven reproductive cycles, a much higher rate than ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. An award-winning reporter writing about stargazing and the night sky. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This ...
A group of scientists, including a class of undergraduate students at the University of Chicago, has discovered the most chemically pristine star yet known in the universe. This star dates back to the ...
The cereal aisle can feel overwhelming-especially when every box claims to be the right choice. Call-outs like "whole grain," "fortified," "heart healthy," or "high protein" add to the confusion. When ...
It’s “common knowledge”—and the scare quotes should be a warning—that the sun is an average star. But it’s not, and in fact it’s not even close: The sun is in the top 90th percentile of stars by mass.
“Python’s Kiss” collects a baker’s dozen stories, nine of which previously have been published in the New Yorker and elsewhere (each is illustrated with a drawing by the author’s daughter, Aza Erdrich ...