The Financial Page
Inside America’s Infrastructure Problem
By James Surowiecki
The politics of chronic underinvestment.
Fifty years ago, Gerald Foos bought a motel and rigged it up in order to watch his guests having sex. He saw a lot more than that.
Emma moved from the Philippines to New York to make a living as a nanny for other people’s children—and hasn’t seen her own in sixteen years.
Will desktop-based photo-editing programs like the Google Nik Collection go the way of the film camera?
With the launch of Facebook Live, the company is now one step closer to controlling every aspect of our digital experience.
“Run,” a small but sparkling play in London, dramatizes the plights of young high-earners.
She is only now getting the credit she deserves for the success of the publishing company that bears her husband’s name.
Richard Brody on Martin Scorsese’s “The Wolf of Wall Street,” from 2013.
Jack Dorsey, the C.E.O. of Twitter and Square, is out to prove that he’s more than a lucky man.
Was the inventor important because he produced creations of practical value or because he didn’t?
Hoffman, who founded LinkedIn, has a premise about how the economic world will work from now on.