Around the world in 2024, voters chose change: in South Africa, France, Britain, and Japan. But nowhere does the anti-incumbent trend matter more than in the United States. The global uncertainty created by an oscillation of power between left and right—from Barack Obama to Donald Trump to Joe Biden and back to Trump—in the world’s only military superpower has again left political and business leaders in every region of the world scrambling to spot opportunities and risk. Trump’s comeback victory comes in a dramatically more unstable—and dangerous—geopolitical environment. Trump must manage two wars and a U.S. relationship with China that has grown much more confrontational. For business leaders navigating the next four years, there are critical questions that must be answered. Read the full magazine story here: https://lnkd.in/ezGa_JH7
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Victoria Slivkoff
Extreme Tech Challenge | Walden Catalyst Ventures | Deep Tech
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Fortune reposted this
As the drumbeat of AI news continues, with major investments and acquisitions creating headlines, it’s important to pause and appreciate the revolution underway. With many thanks to Fortune, read my latest article here. https://lnkd.in/giqzXuzW #Innovation #FutureofProfessionals #GenAI
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Humbled to be featured in Fortune for “changing the game” in plant-based meat with our recent significant reformulation of our fourth generation Beyond Burger, Beyond Beef and Beyond Sausage as well as our newest product innovation Beyond Sun Sausage. Full article ⬇️ https://lnkd.in/g2JXJJa5
How a campaign attacking plant-based meat led to a Beyond reformulation
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“Society has told us [women], or has told us, that our time is up.” https://lnkd.in/gWjqMV_D “I’m in menopause,” actress Halle Berry said during a live interview at the Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel, California. “How liberating is that?” Berry has launched a midlife women’s wellness business called Respin and is advocating for Congress to support a bill directing $275 million to research menopause therapies and medicines. In the interview at the #FortuneMPW Summit, Berry said middle-aged women “are just getting our groove.” Watch the full video here: https://lnkd.in/gWjqMV_D
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Elon Musk’s pre-kindergarten Montessori school in Texas can now open its doors. The school, which has been in the works since last year, received its initial permit from the Texas childcare regulator on Thursday, according to the agency, paving the way for Elon Musk to start building out ambitious, STEM-focused education plans that could eventually entail multiple independent K-12 schools and even a college within the state. The Montessori school—dubbed “Ad Astra” (Latin for “to the stars”) in a nod to Musk’s plans for interplanetary travel—is located about 40 minutes from Austin, in Bastrop county, where several Musk companies have operations. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gr7eHwsH
Inside Elon Musk’s plans for a private pre-school in Texas, which just got a permit to open and where children will learn to sweep, draw, and explore
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Kelly Ortberg took over the top job at embattled plane-maker Boeing a little over three months ago—and it appears he’s not massively impressed with some aspects of the company’s culture. https://lnkd.in/grz2-ci9 In an all-hands meeting this week, Ortberg gave his staff some brutal feedback, telling them to cut back on complaining and focus on beating competitor Airbus. “We spend more time arguing amongst ourselves than thinking about how we’re going to beat Airbus. Everybody is tired of the drumbeat of what’s wrong with Boeing. I’m tired of it and I haven’t been here that long,” he said. Read more: https://lnkd.in/grz2-ci9
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Tom Brady was speaking to some 200 CEOs, telling them how he became football’s greatest quarterback of all time. He was at the recent #FortuneGlobalForum in New York City, but he made only fleeting connections between his career and the CEOs’ jobs. That was clearly fine with the CEOs. He’s a football god with a great story to tell, and just hearing it was a thrill. Still, let’s hope the CEOs listened carefully. Whether they knew it or not, Brady’s story of a football career was a detailed tutorial on great performance at a CEO’s job. Read more here: https://lnkd.in/eeFHJHyK
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“Everybody’s asking me about it, ‘Is there a bubble here?’ Absolutely there’s a bubble. It’s huge." Over the last two years, analysts have pondered whether AI companies, both public and private, could possibly live up to their lofty valuations. To Thomas M. Siebel, who built his career in Silicon Valley as a sales executive at Oracle before leaving to start his own company that he eventually sold back to his former employer for $5.8 billion, the current state of AI reminded him of the dot-com bubble. Even then a great and wondrous technology—the internet—couldn’t save a host of companies from coming crashing down. “So we have this similar thing going on with generative AI that we’ve seen with previous technologies,” Siebel said. “The market is way, way overvaluing.” Read more: https://lnkd.in/d8TC9ADA
Silicon Valley billionaire warns 'absolutely there's a bubble' in AI valuations: 'Nobody would be surprised' if OpenAI 'disappeared next Monday'
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Successful gold mining today bears little resemblance to the storied era of America’s first gold boom: rough-and-tumble 19th-century boomtowns cropping up overnight to accommodate speculative prospectors, chasing gold veins and rumors. It’s also nothing like the gold industry that has prevailed since the 1980s, when dozens of mostly small companies competed to mine gold deposits as quickly as they could, often overextending themselves and failing once the market receded. What’s going on right now is methodical, measured, even cautious in comparison. The key players in the mining industry aren’t enterprising individuals or small firms anymore: They’re multinational corporations guided more by share prices and boardroom politics than the dream of striking it rich. Read more from the latest issue of Fortune Magazine: https://lnkd.in/dVgVDRAE
Inflation, China’s stumbling economy, and apocalyptic fear are driving a new gold boom. Investors think this time there’ll be no bust
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Over the past several years, Big Tech firms like Google and Microsoft have trumpeted ambitious plans to go carbon-neutral, or even carbon-negative, by 2030. But then the generative-AI boom came along and threw a giant wrench in their plans. AI models such as OpenAI’s GPT-4o and Google’s Gemini, which underpin this latest tech craze, suck up vast amounts of energy. In the race to develop better models, with the help of more data centers to train and operate them, companies will need a lot more power to come online, and soon. One way Big Tech hopes to achieve this, while also keeping its commitment to carbon-free emissions, is by tapping a source that has been much maligned in the U.S. Read more: https://lnkd.in/dyX9j5b6
Big Tech is the nuclear industry's new best friend: Amazon, Microsoft and Google rush to sign deals
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