OpenAI is paying employees more than any tech startup in recent history, according to financial data it has shown investors. The company’s stock-based compensation is about $1.5 million per employee, ...
Minimalist plotting for Python, inspired by Edward Tufte’s principles of data visualization. Maximising the data–ink ratio: remove non-essential lines, marks, and colours. Content-driven spines and ...
I was playing around with Chart.js and ended up putting together a simple Waterfall chart using stacked bars. It actually works pretty cleanly without touching any core internals, so I figured I’d ...
Congress released a cache of documents this week that were recently turned over by Jeffrey Epstein’s estate. Among them: more than 2,300 email threads that the convicted sex offender either sent or ...
Gayle King is an award-winning journalist and co-host of "CBS Mornings." King interviews top newsmakers and delivers original reporting to "CBS Mornings" and all CBS News broadcasts and platforms. She ...
For the first quarter, analysts are expecting the company to book between $21.2 billion and $22.2 billion in revenues, with a median estimate of $21.7 billion. This represents 0.4% revenue growth year ...
In his decades-long career in tech journalism, Dennis has written about nearly every type of hardware and software. He was a founding editor of Ziff Davis’ Computer Select in the 1990s, senior ...
Community driven content discussing all aspects of software development from DevOps to design patterns. It’s much easier to format an int with printf than a float or double, because decimal precision ...
Mr. Rattner was counselor to the Treasury secretary in the Obama administration. With unusual speed, and despite an armada of controversial provisions, Congress has birthed a sprawling, nearly ...
Bitcoin's bearish divergence signals a possible price crash toward $85,000, akin to the declines witnessed in 2019 and 2021. Bitcoin faces strong resistance near $106,000–$108,000, risking a drop ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...