
Adam Rogers
Articles
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1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Adam Rogers |Hannah Beckler |Dakin Campbell
A blank rectangle of a building sits next to a highway, facing an endless Wyoming prairie. It's painted the greenish-grayish-brown that Disneyland imagineers use on stuff they don't want people to notice. But the nine semitrailer-size green boxes nestling like nursing puppies into the building's long sides are a giveaway.
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3 weeks ago |
aol.com | Adam Rogers
The social network Blind had real juice when I wrote about it in June 2022. It gave 5 million tech workers a place to anonymously talk smack about their employers. Identified only by their workplaces, Blinders traded office gossip, swapped tips on acing technical interviews at places like Apple and Google, and voluntarily shared their Total Compensation — "TC," in the site's argot. Blind served as a giant, freewheeling water cooler for Silicon Valley.
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1 month ago |
businessinsider.es | Adam Rogers |Andrea Gómez Bobillo
Si eres un estadounidense que compra o vende cosas, los aranceles del presidente Donald Trump te van a afectar económicamente. La ciencia de la economía puede ser sombría, pero es lo suficientemente buena como para saber que cuando el Gobierno aumenta el precio de los bienes importados en cualquier lugar del 10% al 145%, alguien tiene que pagar, ya sea importador, comprador, fabricante, vendedor o consumidor.
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1 month ago |
nationalgeographic.fr | Adam Rogers
Adam McKay, le réalisateur de "Don't Look Up", est convaincu que pour sensibiliser à la crise climatique, le plus efficace n'est pas d'avancer des faits sérieux... mais de faire une satire mordante. Publication 13 mai 2025, 17:12 CESTAdam McKay, photographié par Sebastian Kim (August). Pour sa satire sur le réchauffement climatique, Don’t Look Up, le réalisateur Adam McKay a cherché comment donner une nouvelle approche à ce sujet brûlant.
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1 month ago |
businessinsider.com | Eric Bates |Adam Rogers |Henry Blodget
If you're an American who buys things or sells things, you're going to take a financial hit from President Donald Trump's tariffs. The science of economics might be dismal, but it's good enough to tell you that when the government increases the price of imported goods by anywhere from 10% to 145%, someone has to pay — be they importer, buyer, manufacturer, seller, or consumer. That's just the way the Great Material Continuum works.
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