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Editorial Unbelievable. Magic show performed at the Critereon Theatre, London, UK - 27 Sep 2023
- 2023-09-28
- 3
Editorial Unbelievable. Magic show performed at the Critereon Theatre, London, UK - 27 Sep 2023
- 2023-06-16
- 1
Editorial Ovide Emba, a scientist and biology student at the peatlands, close to the village of Mpeka, Democratic Republic of Congo, on Oct. 15, 2021. (Nanna Heitmann/The New York Times)
- 2022-12-12
- 1
Editorial Order of Canada, Ottawa, Can - 17 Nov 2022
- 2022-11-19
- 1
Editorial Technology empowers us, but technology alone is not enough, Shira Ovide writes in her final On Tech column.(Julian Glander/ The New York Times)
- 2022-09-09
- 1
Editorial Apple has long supported privacy and shunned those intrusive ads. What happens when it sells more ads, too? (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
- 2022-09-07
- 1
Editorial Many of the young companies that started with the premise of skipping stores are now selling in stores — both ones they own and more strikingly, those of conventional retailers. (Mathieu Labrecque/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-26
- 1
Editorial New research suggests that ride services in India might cut pollution. (Zak Tebbal/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-24
- 1
Editorial Global sales have cratered for Chromebooks, which were the star computers of the pandemic. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-19
- 1
Editorial No social app remains free of arguments over politics and social issues once it becomes popular. (Peter Steineck/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-18
- 1
Editorial One of the promises of digital life is that more data can help us make better choices. But we also need to be mindful of the economic and human costs of putting a Fitbit on every aspect of being human. (Vince Ibay and Jessica Miller/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-17
- 1
Editorial Companies developing computer-piloted car technology shouldn’t be in a race, sometimes it’s better to be safe than first. (Charles Desmarais/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-12
- 1
Editorial ??The United States has authorized $280 billion in taxpayer money to subsidize rich computer chip companies and invest in technology research for the sake of keeping America strong and innovative. (Brendan Conroy/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-11
- 1
Editorial Travel the world in an app, but be careful: Flight-tracking technology can be addictive. (Irene Suosalo/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-10
- 1
Editorial New regulations in Indonesia show that strict online controls are no longer confined to autocratic countries like China. (Burton Booz/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-05
- 1
Editorial In 2019, the White House declared that phone and internet equipment from Chinese technology companies should be ripped from every corner of the U.S. because it posed an unacceptable risk of snooping or sabotage by the Chinese government — more than three years later, most of that equipment remains. (Mathieu Labrecque/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-04
- 1
Editorial The U.S. government is suing to stop the book publisher Penguin Random House from buying a competitor, Simon & Schuster. (Stephan Dybus/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-03
- 1
Editorial It’s not always a driverless taxi or a new smartphone that is significantly different from what came before. Often it’s taking a product or a process that we know and slowly making it a bit simpler or cheaper. (Dan Anthony Kelly/The New York Times)
- 2022-08-02
- 1
Editorial Did tech win the pandemic or not? We likely won’t be able to tell for a while. (Gabriel Gabriel Garble/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-29
- 1
Editorial The march of technology has come with this puzzling reality: Hardly any technologies of the iPhone era have been an unqualified success. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-28
- 1
Editorial Sports are the lifeblood of TV but also choking it — Big Tech is following a similar playbook. (Christa Jarrold/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-27
- 1
Editorial When Netflix and other companies face a loss of faith in the growth potential of streaming, we all will feel it. (Yonk/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-21
- 1
Editorial If Elon Musk buys Twitter, there are steps he could take to expand the boundaries of online expression. (Brendan Conroy/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-20
- 1
Editorial Technology can help unleash creativity or discover new joys. (Loulou Jo?o/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-16
- 1
Editorial How much we buy online affects the whole economy, but right now there are lots of question marks. (Vince Ibay and Jessica Miller/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-14
- 1
Editorial Companies keep mistaking our fleeting e-commerce crushes for enduring love, and blowing money on ideas that don’t deserve it. (Sam Wood/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-13
- 1
Editorial Americans are treating tech companies like a substitute for effective representative government — it shouldn’t be this way. (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-08
- 1
Editorial Veronica Risinger made a little online spot for neighbors to share information on abortion. Then 30,000 people joined. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)
- 2022-07-02
- 1
Editorial In the days since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, there have been gobs of published material and warnings from privacy advocates about how digital bread crumbs might expose women seeking abortions to potential legal jeopardy. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-30
- 1
Editorial The volunteers who run our favorite groups on Facebook, Reddit, Nextdoor or Discord can make all the difference between our being part of a treasured community online or a gathering that descends into name-calling chaos. (Peter Burr/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-29
- 1
Editorial Apps have become a huge economy, but the rules that govern them are nearly impossible to understand. (Talia Cotton/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-24
- 1
Editorial Some onetime online stars like MapQuest and AOL have stuck around far longer than we might have expected, showing that it’s possible to carve out a life online long after stardom fades. (Charles Desmarais/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-22
- 1
Editorial For the foreseeable future, drone deliveries will be handy in a limited number of places for a small number of products under certain conditions. (Ruru Kuo/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-17
- 1
Editorial It’s clear more than ever that governments will no longer leave technology alone. (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-16
- 2
Editorial Electric scooters have had their share of haters, but some cities have found ways to make them more appealing. (Brendan Conroy/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-11
- 1
Editorial It happens like clockwork. Companies, including Apple this week, introduce new options to make their gadgets feel new and improved. And like clockwork, a vast majority of people won’t use these features. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-10
- 1
Editorial Maybe you own a Fitbit or an Apple Watch, but that category of digital devices hasn’t been as momentous as Tim Cook and many other tech optimists hoped. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-08
- 1
Editorial The Supreme Court handed social media companies a win on Tuesday, May 31, 2022, by blocking, for now, a Texas law that would have banned large apps including Facebook and Twitter from weeding out messages based on the views they expressed. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
- 2022-06-02
- 1
Editorial A promising, albeit imperfect, system that increased choices and improved internet service for Canadians is poised to fall apart, Shira Ovide writes. (Amir B Jahanbin/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-27
- 1
Editorial Chinese trends have shaped online experiences for Americans, and U.S. tech companies have inspired those in China. (Gabriel Garble/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-26
- 1
Editorial Chinese businesses have steadily been selling a smaller share of stuff that Americans buy on Amazon, and merchants based in the U.S. are gaining ground. (Charles Desmarais/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-25
- 1
Editorial We’re now buying less online than many had predicted, and it’s throwing tech companies and the economy for a loop. (Talia Cotton/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-14
- 1
Editorial The latest attempt to create the first broad national data privacy law in the United States is causing the typical nonsense in Washington — but from the mess in Congress and elsewhere in the U.S., we’re finally seeing progress in defending Americans from the unrestrained information-harvesting economy. (Peter Steineck/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-13
- 1
Editorial Gatekeepers like powerful tech companies have a bad reputation for controlling what happens online. (Ruslan Vyaltsev/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-06
- 1
Editorial Innovation is essential and tough to sustain now that technology is a mammoth industry. But the fixation on an individual’s ingenuity above all other abilities is a selective memory of tech history. (Jack Snelling/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-05
- 1
Editorial How have so many great digital products in this generation come from bad businesses? (Stephan Dybus/The New York Times)
- 2022-05-04
- 1
Editorial The past decade has been one long party for tech — where we go from here isn’t so clear. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-29
- 1
Editorial More than four in 10 people in the world, which works to more than three billion people, do not use the internet at home or on their phones, according to the most recently available estimates from the World Bank and United Nations, from 2019. (Vince Ibay and Jessica Miller/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-28
- 1
Editorial The perpetual belief that Twitter is one big idea away from being amazing has tempted many investors. But hardly anyone wants to actually own the company. (Sam Wood/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-21
- 1
Editorial For years to come, Apple has planned for devices rolling off assembly lines to continue relying on chips made largely in Taiwan. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-20
- 1
Editorial Thousands of people who sell goods on Etsy are going on strike to protest the company’s climbing fees — and what seems to be a fight over a small corner of the internet is really one of the most enduring battles over our digital world. (Víctor Arce/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-14
- 1
Editorial Americans spend more on groceries than almost anything else, and how we buy food is considered a finger in the wind to assess the future of our shopping habits. (Johana & Maxim Kroft/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-08
- 1
Editorial Old-school media companies are challenging Netflix in its role as a streaming star, and it needs new ways to stay on top. (Brendan Conroy/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-07
- 1
Editorial Having rich guys like Jeff Bezos in orbit can make space travel routine and help all of us dream big. (Peter Steineck/The New York Times)
- 2022-04-06
- 1
Editorial Americans have fallen for fancier smartphones, televisions, laptops and cars. (Alex Valentina/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-31
- 1
Editorial Apple’s “CODA” won the Oscar for best picture. Cool. But what happens when Big Tech stops throwing money around? (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-30
- 1
Editorial Beer coolers on wheels represent a debate over who belongs and who doesn’t in our shared spaces. (Nathan Die/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-25
- 1
Editorial Unlike so many of our online experiences, shopping is one area that has remained mostly local. (Gabriel Gabriel Garble/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-24
- 1
Editorial Recreating the human face could give virtual interactions the sense of intimacy they’re missing. (Yoshi Sodeoka/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-23
- 1
Editorial Hand videos by the food entertainment site Tasty reshaped the internet — the question now is what’s next. (Vince Ibay and Jessica Miller/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-17
- 1
Editorial Some people love technology that the rest of us see as obsolete junk. (Joel Plosz/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-12
- 1
Editorial Many international businesses in tech and other industries are stopping work in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, but it’s not clear how long the corporate solidarity to isolate Russia will last. (Ruru Kuo/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-10
- 1
Editorial Apple used to give us only a few cool options. Now the tech giant has to work harder to win us over. (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-09
- 2
Editorial The international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-05
- 1
Editorial Home internet is one of the most maddening services in the United States. But since the pandemic showed just how bad things have become, we’re beginning to see some change. Maybe. (Daniel Jurman/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-04
- 1
Editorial The international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
- 2022-03-03
- 1
Editorial Fresh data from the commerce department revealed a surprising fact: e-commerce lost ground in 2021 to brick-and-mortar stores. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-26
- 1
Editorial Facebook is going to make you love its short video format called Reels whether you want to or not, Shira Ovide writes. (Burton Booz/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-25
- 1
Editorial Ovide Emba, a scientist and biology student, in peatlands bordering the Ruki River, close to the village of Mpeka, Democratic Republic of Congo, Oct. 27, 2021. (Nanna Heitmann/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-24
- 4
Editorial Who wins when governments go head-to-head with technology giants — and whom should we root for? Apple’s fight with the Netherlands is an interesting test case, Shira Ovide writes. (Amir B Jahanbin/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-23
- 1
Editorial Podcasts have been a freewheeling corner of digital life, but the potential for profits is changing that. (Gabriel Gabriel Garble/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-18
- 1
Editorial Technology is so ingrained in our lives now that many of the company quirks that felt adorable in 2000 now seem like artifice. Exhibit One: “Metamates.” (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-17
- 1
Editorial Linus Sebastian is among the online personalities who have figured out that putting their names or faces on products is increasingly a ticket to cashing in on fame. (Jackie Carlise/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-16
- 1
Editorial The Biden administration is trying to figure out what to do about apps from China, including TikTok, which is owned by the Chinese internet giant ByteDance. U.S. officials have worried for years that China’s government might turn the information collected by the social media site against Americans. (Ruru Kuo/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-09
- 1
Editorial The world loves WhatsApp and other texting apps. Americans are chatting in their own bubble. (Brendan Conroy/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-07
- 1
Editorial America’s five technology superpowers — Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Facebook — are titanic, and still growing. (Nick Sheeran/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-04
- 1
Editorial Experimentation is great, yada yada. But it costs us when influential companies change their mind. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-02
- 1
Editorial For many people who try to make a living from entertaining or sharing information online, their job is part Hollywood producer, part small-business owner and all hustle. (Sarah Ann Banks/The New York Times)
- 2022-02-01
- 1
Editorial When the U.S. government started a new website for people to order free at-home coronavirus tests, you might have heard about it from everyone. (Gabriel Alcala/The New York Times)
- 2022-01-24
- 1
Editorial Facebook, which has renamed itself Meta, and other social networks must make tricky judgment calls to balance supporting free expression while keeping out unwanted material like imagery of child sexual abuse, violent incitements and financial scams. (Irene Suosalo/The New York Times)
- 2022-01-20
- 1
Editorial Microsoft said on Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2022, that it would buy Activision Blizzard, which makes video games including Candy Crush and Call of Duty. (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
- 2022-01-19
- 1
Editorial It turns out, one can live in America and not have an Amazon Prime account. (Derek Abella/The New York Times)
- 2022-01-15
- 1
Editorial The speed by which electric vehicles have taken over Norway has stunned even the cars’ enthusiasts. (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
- 2022-01-12
- 1
Editorial Big Tech got bigger-er and stronger in 2021. But it also appeared more vulnerable than ever to the forces of regulation, competition, a complicated public mood and perhaps hubris. (James Kerr/Scorpion Dagger/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-23
- 1
Editorial Heading into the third year of the coronavirus pandemic, we need and deserve more microdoses of human empathy and community. Technology can help. (Jon Han/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-22
- 1
Editorial Many U.S. politicians and technologists believe that America would be better off if the government put more financial support into computer chips, which are like the brains or memory in everything from fighter jets to refrigerators. (Nicole Ruggiero/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-15
- 1
Editorial New British guidelines are influencing what U.S. internet companies do to protect American children. (Deena So Oteh/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-13
- 1
Editorial If the tech predictions pan out, we’ll soon be wearing computers on our faces and plugging into immersive realms of virtual people and places, perhaps blended with the real world around us. (Burton Booz/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-09
- 1
Editorial The hottest thing on Netflix and TikTok is entertainment that becomes hot, but not for very long. (Harry Bhalerao/The New York Times)
- 2021-12-08
- 1
Editorial To build trust in the government, it would help if the website worked. (Irene Suosalo/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-25
- 1
Editorial We live at the whims of the tech giants. What if small businesses had alternatives? (Jordan Speer/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-24
- 1
Editorial Our online experiences are shaped by the people who run our favorite Facebook group or Reddit forum. (Hoi Chan/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-20
- 1
Editorial One way that our lives online have rewired our brains is that we’re more comfortable buying from an unfamiliar brand. (Kiel Mutschelknaus/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-19
- 1
Editorial Before we get to the metaverse, we need to talk about the past decade of tech ideas. (Rad Mora/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-18
- 1
Editorial For the first time in the United States, internet companies seem to be making a concerted effort to make shopping an inextricable and seamless part of the online spaces where we come to be entertained and informed but not necessarily to buy stuff. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-12
- 1
Editorial Satellite internet is exciting, but it needs to be part of a bigger effort to get more people online. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-10
- 1
Editorial Flashy new car technology may be exciting, but it might also be distracting us from what we need. (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-08
- 1
Editorial More than 70% of the smartphones that Americans bought this year have been either an iPhone or a Samsung device. (Amir B Jahanbin/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-05
- 1
Editorial Huawei is a test of how the U.S. government is trying to keep the country strong, safe and on the cutting edge as the future of technology becomes less American. (Dae In Chung/The New York Times)
- 2021-11-03
- 1
Editorial The tech giants talk a lot about the “metaverse” and cloud computing. What really powers them is selling us socks. (Rapapawn/The New York Times)
- 2021-10-29
- 1
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