More bad news for the medical-technology “unicorn.”
Another day, another snag for Theranos, the blood-testing startup with a $10 billion valuation.
More bad news for the medical-technology “unicorn.”
Another day, another snag for Theranos, the blood-testing startup with a $10 billion valuation.
Companies with 100 or more employees will have to start reporting salaries by race, gender, and ethnicity.
Today marks the seventh anniversary of President Obama signing his very first bill into law. That was the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act which restored protection against wage discrimination.
In response to lagging business during the winter months, the company is lowering fares for both UberX and UberXL.
In an effort to increase demand, Uber is slashing its prices by about 15% throughout New York City. First reported by the New York Post, the changes go into effect on Friday and will apply to both UberX and UberXL.
The FCC chairman wants to let people watch TV without renting a pricey cable box. Here’s why television providers are freaking out.
Are you sitting down (in front of your TV)? The government might just make it easier for you to finally get rid of that big clunky cable box—and those annoying monthly rental fees.
Mattel hopes the new tall, petite, and curvy dolls will boost slumping sales.
Barbie is getting a makeover. Today, toy maker Mattel unveiled three new bodies for the iconic doll: tall, petite, and curvy. The change comes following slumping sales for the 57-year-old toy—from 2012 to 2014, Barbie sales dropped 20%, and in 2014, Lego surpassed Mattel as the biggest toy company in the world.
But the new “Starry” wireless hub could run into the same problems Aereo did.
Chaitanya “Chet” Kanojia, the man who founded the now bankrupt Aereo, which allowed users to watch live broadcast television over an Internet connection, is launching a new company called Starry with the goal of bringing gigabit wireless Internet to every home.
Invention contradicts Cambridge research saying the web slinger couldn’t exist.
A few weeks ago, Cambridge University announced research findings saying that Spider-Man could never exist because a human being’s hands and feet don’t have enough surface area to include the size of the sticky pads they would need to lift a body up on a smooth surface. The Cambridge researchers said any Spider-Man wannabe would need adhesive pads covering at least 40% of their body–-making wall crawling impractical.
According to the New York Post, Amazon is reportedly working on a full-fledged music subscription service because sure, why not?
If you’re a giant tech company in 2016 and you don’t have your own Spotify-killing, all-you-can-stream music subscription service, what good are you?
The drugstore chain’s stance is a response to federal officials informing Theranos that its deficiencies jeopardize patient health and safety.
In the wake of the news that federal officials have informed Theranos its deficiencies pose “immediate jeopardy to patient health and safety,” the medical-testing startup’s partnership with Walgreens is hitting a bump. On Thursday afternoon, the drugstore giant announced that it told Theranos to stop sending the clinical laboratory tests collected from 40 Theranos Wellness Centers at Walgreens pharmacy locations in Arizona to the startup’s lab in Newark, California, for analysis.
The campaign hasn’t yet built the kind of modern get-out-the-vote operation that won the last two presidential elections. Cruz has.
With a big mouth, plenty of buzz, and a yuuge media presence, does Donald Trump still need a data-driven get-out-the-vote operation to win in Iowa and New Hampshire?