This isn’t the first time Apple has fallen behind. It’s time to bring back the 1997 playbook before it’s too late.
Apple is facing a reckoning of its own making. The Cupertino, California company has fumbled so many times in the last year, it is quickly approaching a technological blackhole—a point of no return in its transformation from a world-changing force to an inconsequential churner of shiny stuff.
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Limelight Steel wants to make steel production less carbon intensive—so it’s turning to an unlikely source.
Steel is the most widely used metal in the world. You’ll find it in everything from cars to cutlery to skyscrapers. It’s truly a building block for modern society.
IRA investments are helping clean energy drive ‘a new era in American manufacturing.’
This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News. It is republished with permission.
Pig-to-human organ transplants have shown minimal success. We ought to be investing in better, less cruel alternatives.
Earlier this week, it was reported that Rick Slayman, the first person to ever receive a transplanted pig kidney, sadly passed away less than two months after the procedure. While the hospital, Massachusetts General, has stated that there’s no evidence that the patient’s death was a direct result of the transplant, it’s clear that the surgery did not succeed in substantially extending Slayman’s life.
Small businesses are currently exempt from the SEC’s climate disclosure rules—but that doesn’t mean they should ignore them.
Over the past several years, many large U. S. companies have taken cues from their international counterparts and prioritized environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives. Companies looking to establish transparency, trust, and accountability in human capital and sustainability reporting may have started out voluntarily—but that may not be the case much longer.