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Sections

Business

Business Tech

How Intel Makes a Chip the Size of a Postage Stamp

Microprocessors cost billions to develop. They take three times longer to build than an airplane, in an environment 1,000 times more sterile than a hospital. Throughout the entire process, nobody ever touches them.

Max Chafkin, Ian King Businessweek Jun 2016 15min Permalink

Business Tech

Twitter Is Betting Everything on Jack Dorsey. Will It Work?

It’s been a rough year.

Nick Bilton Vanity Fair Jun 2016 20min Permalink

Business Crime

The Great Swiss Bank Heist

Hervé Falciani, a computer engineer working at HSBC, stole the bank’s list of secret accounts. But was he out to expose tax cheats or get rich himself? Perhaps both.

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Previously: Patrick Radden Keefe on the Longform Podcast

Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker May 2016 40min Permalink

Business

Even the World's Top Life Coaches Need a Life Coach

Meet Martha Beck.

Taffy Brodesser-Akner Businessweek May 2016 20min Permalink

Business

From Belief to Outrage: The Decline of the Middle Class Reaches the Next American Town

“Fast food and hedge funds. That’s where we’re going.”

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Previously: Eli Saslow on the Longform Podcast

Eli Saslow Washington Post May 2016 15min Permalink

Business Tech

The Inside Story of Facebook’s Biggest Setback

The social network positioned its plan to bring the internet to millions of Indians as a gift. The country saw a catch.

Rahul Bhatia The Guardian May 2016 25min Permalink

Business Crime

Thousands of Police Calls. You Paid the Bills.

The number one place Tampa Bay cops visit: Walmart. And it’s not even close — they average two trips an hour.

Zachary T. Sampson, Laura C. Morel, Eli Murray Tampa Bay Times May 2016 20min Permalink

Business Travel

The World's Smallest Ukulele

Scenes from a class conflict playing out between millionaires and billionaires on Hawaii’s Big Island.

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Previously: Robert Kolker on the Longform Podcast

Robert Kolker Bloomberg Businessweek May 2016 15min Permalink

Business Tech

Teatox Party

How detox teas laced with laxatives took over Instagram.

Chavie Lieber Racked Apr 2016 15min Permalink

Business Science Food Health

Nestlé Wants to Sell You Both Sugary Snacks and Diabetes Pills

Medicine, the company says, can also be a tasty snack.

Matthew Campbell, Corinne Gretler Businessweek May 2016 15min Permalink

Business Science Health

"You Want a Description of Hell?"

Purdue Pharma’s marketing materials say OxyContin works for 12 hours. It doesn’t. And this problem, long-denied by the drugmaker, is what makes it highly addictive.

Harriet Ryan, Lisa Girion, Scott Glover Los Angeles Times May 2016 25min Permalink

Business Sports Media

Get Gronk’d!

All aboard the maiden voyage Rob Gronkowski’s party cruise.

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Previously: The Longform Guide to Cruises

Simon van Zuylen-Wood Boston Magazine May 2016 15min Permalink

Business Sex World Health

Inside the Unregulated Chinese Hospitals That Make Men Impotent

Four men stood on the edge of the Shenzhen Health and Family Planning Commission, threatening to jump in protest. They referred to themselves as “China’s 21st century eunuchs,” damaged by medically-dubious surgeries.

RW McMorrow Vice May 2016 25min Permalink

Business

A Leak Wounded This Company. Fighting the Feds Finished It Off.

The Federal Trade Commission has brought more than 60 cases related to data security against businesses. Only one has refused to settle.

Dune Lawrence Businessweek Apr 2016 15min Permalink

Business Crime Politics Tech World

Fear This Man

David Vincenzetti says his company, which sells spyware to world’s law enforcement and intelligence agencies, is helping to thwart terrorism. Others say it’s a danger to citizens, dissidents, and journalists alike.

Read more

David Kushner on the Longform Podcast

David Kushner Foreign Policy Apr 2016 20min Permalink

Business Tech

How Uber Conquered London

There are 1.7 million active Uber riders in London, about half the daily ridership of the Tube. Three years ago, there were 5,000.

Sam Knight The Guardian Apr 2016 35min Permalink

Business World Food

Hot Mess

How 2-minute noodles became a half-billion dollar debacle for Nestlé in India.

Erika Fry Fortune Apr 2016 30min Permalink

Business

When Bitcoin Grows Up

Money is an idea that we all agree to believe in.

John Lanchester London Review of Books Apr 2016 45min Permalink

Business History

The Battle Over the Sea-Monkey Fortune

It involves a former 1960s bondage film actress, a Jewish neo-Nazi, the husband of the speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives, and a whole lot of creative marketing.

Jack Hitt New York Times Magazine Apr 2016 10min Permalink

Business World

The Untouchables

A brazen land grab in Zimbabwe and why it’s getting harder to stop multinational corporations.

Michael Hobbes Foreign Policy Apr 2016 15min Permalink

Business

Car Trouble

Inside the lucrative, predatory, booming world of subprime car loans.

Gary Rivlin Mother Jones Apr 2016 20min Permalink

Business

Crowd Source

On a company that provides fake paparazzi, pretend campaign supporters, and counterfeit protesters on demand.

Davy Rothbart California Sunday Mar 2016 20min Permalink

Business Sports

You Won't Believe How Nike Lost Steph to Under Armour

“The pitch meeting kicked off with one Nike official accidentally addressing Stephen as 'Steph-on.' ... It got worse from there. A PowerPoint slide featured Kevin Durant's name, presumably left on by accident, presumably residue from repurposed materials.”

Ethan Sherwood Strauss ESPN Mar 2016 20min Permalink

Business Crime

The Departed

On a November morning, Olympic rower and financial advisor Harold Backer left for a bike ride and never returned. His disappearance remained a mystery – until letters began arriving at the homes of his investors.

Kip McDaniel Chief Investment Officer Feb 2016 25min Permalink

Business Crime Tech

What Happens When the Surveillance State Becomes an Affordable Gadget?

Your local police department probably has a $400,00 device that listens in on cellphones. Soon your neighbor will be able to buy the same thing for $1,500.

Robert Kolker Businessweek Mar 2016 15min Permalink

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