Lunedì 9 marzo 2026
- The curse of ancient lead tablets (Financial Times).
- Trump bets his legacy on a high-risk second term (Axios).
- Why Apple decided the time was right to launch a $599 MacBook (Bloomberg).
- Donald Trump's approval rating (The Economist).
Martedì 10 marzo 2026
- The curse of ancient lead tablets (Financial Times).
- Trump bets his legacy on a high-risk second term (Axios).
- Why Apple decided the time was right to launch a $599 MacBook (Bloomberg).
- Donald Trump's approval rating (The Economist).
Mercoledì 11 marzo 2026
- Energy: France cited as an example (Klement on Investing).
- It's time to buy the most rubbish stocks you can find (The Economist).
- Promoting private equity: are European investors at risk of a mis-selling scandal? (Financial Times).
- How Pokémon Go gives delivery robots a perfect view of the world (MIT Technology Review).
- A real estate developer who sought to reshape skylines in his image now takes on the world order (Foreign Policy).
- OpenAI plans to launch Sora video AI in ChatGPT as part of strategy shift (The Information).
Giovedì 12 marzo 2026
- Partners Group sounds the alarm on private credit defaults (Financial Times) and Investment funds question Blue Owl's private credit portfolio valuations (Financial Times).
- Trump shows China how to seize Taiwan (Project Syndicate).
- How OpenAI is trying to catch up with Claude in coding (Wired).
- AI, a mirror of the China/USA culture war (Noéma).
- When software finds targets to bomb (The Economist).
- How the war in Iran changed the world in one week (New York Times).
- "Trophy wives" are out of fashion (The Economist).
Venerdì 13 marzo 2026
- Putin's "hidden hand" guides Iranian strikes in a widening war (Bloomberg).
- Silicon Valley's new hobby: watching robots do their tedious work (Wall Street Journal).
- Ultra-short-term bets add "even more frenzy" to crypto trading (Financial Times).
- When low-beta stocks stop working (Klement on Investing).
- How "Handala" became the face of Iranian hacker counter-attacks (Wired).
- The U.S. has consumed "years" of munitions since the start of the war against Iran (Financial Times).






















