Cricket has 2.5 billion fans worldwide, generates billions in revenue, and is finally coming to America, ready or not.
Author News & Analysis Editor
Shaw Beckett reads the signal in the noise. With dual degrees in Computer Science and Computer Engineering, a law degree, and years of entrepreneurial ventures, Shaw brings a pattern-recognition lens to business, technology, politics, and culture. While others report headlines, Shaw connects dots: how emerging tech reshapes labor markets, why consumer behavior predicts political shifts, what today's entertainment reveals about tomorrow's economy. An avid reader across disciplines, Shaw believes the best analysis comes from unexpected connections. Skeptical but fair. Analytical but accessible.
Cricket has 2.5 billion fans worldwide, generates billions in revenue, and is finally coming to America, ready or not.
The technology to detect AI-generated images and videos just lost the arms race, and the implications go way beyond social media.
New solid-state battery technology could give your next smartphone a week-long battery life, and that's just the beginning.
The DOJ's case against Google is just the start. Amazon, Apple, and Meta are all facing lawsuits that could reshape the tech industry.
Congressional term limits poll at 87% approval across all parties, so why hasn't it happened, and could it finally break through?
Forget SaaS startups. The real money is in porta-potties, laundromats, and HVAC services. Here's the boring business blueprint.
AI is writing fundraising emails, targeting ads, and even helping craft policy positions, and voters have no idea.
LeBron joined MJ and Tiger in the billionaire athlete club, but his path there looks totally different, and it's the future of sports money.
Gen Z has the lowest voter registration rate in decades, but when they do show up, they're flipping elections. Here's the disconnect.
There's actual data proving sequels are worse than originals, and it's not just nostalgia talking.
Forget chatbots. AI agents that can actually complete tasks for you are here, and they're about to change how we work.
Molecular printing technology is getting close to creating food, medicine, and materials from raw atoms, seriously.