Sometimes it pays to be hated. The market's most heavily shorted stocks are crushing their peers in the early days of the new year, note analysts at Bespoke Investment Group.
TLDR: The Ultimate Logic Pro X Music Production Bundle is a music lover’s dream, an 8-course collection in using this high-powered production suite to make all your own beats. Paul McCartney did it. So did Bruce Springsteen and the Rolling Stones. From Led Zeppelin to Radiohead to Foo Fighters, right up to today’s hottest artists like Billie Eilish, musicians have often sequestered themselves away from the usual recording studio setting to create their music in a secluded outpost somewhere.
By Kellen Browning, The New York Times Company
NEW YORK — Nearly every weekday morning, Valentin Vivar curls up in bed next to his older sister, Araceli, and switches on one of his favorite television shows.
The hourlong program, “Let’s Learn NYC!”, isn’t typical children’s fare. Valentin, 5, watches as educators from New York City public schools teach math and science, sing songs and take viewers on virtual field trips to botanical gardens and dance performances.
By Brian X. Chen, The New York Times Company
Many of us are in the same boat these days. With the coronavirus killing more people by the day, we are increasingly stress-eating and drinking more alcohol. At the same time, with gyms shut down, we are sitting around more and glued to screens.
So you may be wondering what I’m wondering: How is the pandemic affecting my body?
By Brian X. Chen, The New York Times Company
This year, the technologies that we will most likely hear the most about won’t be fancy devices like smartphones or big-screen television sets. It will be the stuff we don’t usually see: workhorse software and internet products that are finding their moment now.
Before the coronavirus transformed our lives, the lists of tech to watch each year were often dominated by whiz-bang gizmos like smart speakers and curved televisions.
One real estate transaction in 2020, in particular, gave Jessica Ostermick confidence the COVID-19 pandemic would not derail industrial real estate in Denver like it has the city’s office market.
In April, Ostermick, a director with real estate firm CBRE, and four colleagues represented the seller in an $85.7 million deal for an occupied 647,500-square-foot warehouse and distribution building in Denver’s Central Park neighborhood.