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How Hampton Creek’s Plant-Based Foods Have Scrambled The Grocery Aisle

From yolk-free mayo to chickenless “eggs,” Hampton Creek CEO Josh Tetrick has a vision for a new kind of food chain.

From Silicon Valley to SoMa, the Bay Area is packed with blockbuster companies that were built on little more than a good idea. But there’s only one that was built on a condiment. Three years ago, Hampton Creek’s Just Mayo, which swaps a protein derived from Canadian yellow peas for the eggs that help emulsify oil into sandwich-spreadable goodness, appeared in Whole Foods (and, later, Walmart and Kroger) stores across the nation. Among an increasingly influential coalition of shoppers—ethics-minded consumers, along with vegans and people with food allergies—it was an instant hit. To a casual observer, vegan mayonnaise hardly seemed like the opening salvo in a war to capture supermarket-aisle space from giants like Unilever, Kraft, and Nestlé. To Josh Tetrick, the 36-year-old founder of San Francisco–based Hampton Creek, it was that and more. A high school football star from Birmingham, Alabama, who still speaks with a Southern drawl, Tetrick sees the entire global food system as an opportunity for the kind of rip-it-up-and-start-again thinking at which Silicon Valley excels. Or as he puts it, flashing a wolfish grin, “I want us to be the biggest food company on the planet. And I want us to do some good at the same time.”

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How To Project Authority Right After You Get Promoted

How do you get former peers and supervisors to take you seriously as a boss when everyone remembers the mistakes you made years ago?

When employees take on leadership roles at new companies, they typically enter with a certain mystique. It’s likely that no one saw you in the early years, when you were green or made some big mistakes. Or, if someone who knew you then brought you to where you are now, they clearly think enough of you to understand how you’ve grown over the years.

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Why Hillary Clinton Is So Hard To Trust Even When She’s Telling The Truth

Clinton might be more trustworthy than many think, but the more we look for signs that she’s lying, the worse we become at finding them.

People don’t trust Hillary Clinton, and no one can agree on why: She’s a woman auditioning for a man’s job and being punished for it; she’s an opportunistic “establishment” politician in thrall to corporate interests; she’s more of a listener than a communicator; she’s just a goddamned liar.

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How WikiLeaks Has Changed: From Whistleblower To Weapon

Experts say the organization appears to have grown more partisan, and more eager to boost impact by pegging releases to events in the news.

When last week WikiLeaks released tens of thousands of emails believed to have been obtained by Russian hackers from top Democratic National Committee officials, experts say it marked a dramatic change in tactics from how the transparency organization has released data in years past.

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Four Reasons Why Betting Against Apple Is A Fool’s Game

The company’s sales have fallen for two quarters now. But forget the earnings, and instead focus on its long-term future.

Sure, Apple beat analyst expectations for its third-quarter earnings. But for two quarters in a row, the company’s sales have been falling. Sales of iPhones, which Apple has come to depend on for some 60% of its total revenue, were off 23% from the same quarter last year. Unit sales were down 15%, further confirming studies showing that consumers are not replacing their iPhones as often as they once did. Unit sales dropped for iPads and Macs as well, although iPad revenue rose.

I say forget the earnings, and instead focus on the long-term. Here are four reasons Apple is still the company to beat in technology.

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Rockets Of Awesome’s New Subscription Service Keeps Up With Your Growing Kids

This platform tries to make clothes shopping easier for parents by sending them seasonal boxes customized to kids’ sizes and tastes.

Shopping for kid’s clothes can be fun. You take your little ones to Gap Kids, J.Crew, or The Children’s Place and watch them try on cute new outfits; you have a chuckle when they pick a tutu for their school photo or only choose clothing in purple, their new favorite color.

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Four Alternative Types Of Accelerator That Startups Overlook

Traditional cash-focused accelerators may be the most well-known, but there are other options to consider.

As startup accelerators multiply, some argue that they do a better job of serving their own interests than those of the businesses they’re supposed to help launch. But that suspicion glosses over the diverse range of business models that more and more accelerators are adopting—even though they may not be getting quite as much attention.

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