Hackernews posts about Economist
- Economists agree that the nightmare of hiring Generation Z is real (finance.yahoo.com)
- Datasets – Good data is the lifeblood of economists (captgouda24.github.io)
- The health benefits of sunlight may outweigh the risk of skin cancer (www.economist.com)
- Are touchscreens in cars dangerous? (www.economist.com)
- AI might yet follow the path of previous technological revolutions (www.economist.com)
- Rail travel is booming in America (www.economist.com)
- How to stop AI's "lethal trifecta" (www.economist.com)
- China's 200M gig workers are a warning for the world (www.economist.com)
- Is the decline of reading making politics dumber? (www.economist.com)
- Pharma is a small component of US health care spending (www.economist.com)
- China is ditching the dollar, fast: Officials believe the yuan has come of age (www.economist.com)
- How to study people who are drunk (www.economist.com)
- A new theory of China's rise: rule by engineers (www.economist.com)
- The $4T accounting puzzle at the heart of the AI cloud (www.economist.com)
- Why AI systems may never be secure, and what to do about it (www.economist.com)
- China's 200M gig workers are a warning for the world (www.economist.com)
- A Made-in-China plan for world domination (www.economist.com)
- Britain is slowly going bust (www.economist.com)
- Don't panic about the global fertility crash (www.economist.com)
- Faith in God-like large language models is waning (www.economist.com)
- Humanity will shrink, far sooner than you think (www.economist.com)
- What if the $3T AI investment boom goes wrong? (www.economist.com)
- AI agents are coming for your privacy (www.economist.com)
- Russia is violating Europe's skies with impunity (www.economist.com)
- Faith in God-like large language models is waning (www.economist.com)
- The BBC's best programme (In Our Time) loses its star (www.economist.com)
- The health benefits of sunlight may outweigh the risk of skin cancer (www.economist.com)
- Five Republican factions jostle for the President's favor (www.economist.com)