career
Careers in the industry; from corporate to middle management, food service, media, political figures, and beyond. All workplace careers.
Digital Landlords: Algorithmic Control in Bangladesh Ride-Sharing
By Tuhin Sarwar । Published: 13 January । 2024 । DHAKA, BANGLADESH At 4:30 AM, when most of Dhaka still sleeps, Mohammad Rahman starts his daily negotiation with an algorithm. He opens three ride-hailing apps simultaneously – Uber, Pathao, and local newcomer Shohoz watching the digital maps light up. His motorcycle, purchased with a high-interest loan, waits as he does. The algorithm will decide his day's fate.
By Tuhin sarwar29 days ago in Journal
Driving Innovation by Transforming Traditional Markets
Pioneering change in traditional markets has become a defining challenge for businesses operating in long-established industries. Markets built on decades of routine and familiarity are now facing unprecedented pressure from digital disruption, evolving customer expectations, and global competition. Organizations that once relied on stability alone must now rethink how they operate, communicate, and deliver value. Embracing innovation while respecting tradition is the key to sustainable success in today’s fast-changing economic landscape.
By Devin Doyle of Newport Beach29 days ago in Journal
5 Ways Agentic AI Is Outpacing Blockchain in 2026. AI-Generated.
For most of the last decade, blockchain development was talked about as the future backbone of enterprise technology. It promised something businesses had long struggled with shared trust, transparent records, and systems that couldn’t be quietly altered. For companies that deal with audits, reconciliations, or multiple parties sharing the same data, blockchain made a lot of sense.
By Jonathan Byers30 days ago in Journal
I Found a Forgotten Star on an Old Vinyl — and It Changed How I See Fame Forever. AI-Generated.
It was one of those narrow places that smell like dust, cardboard, and time. The kind where the shelves lean slightly, as if even they are tired of standing. I was flipping through old vinyls absentmindedly, not expecting anything more than background noise for a lazy afternoon.
By Reiner Knappabout a month ago in Journal
What I Learned About Being Seen Online in 2025. AI-Generated.
What I Learned From Starting Something New Hey, let me tell you something. A couple of years ago, I decided to start a small personal project. And honestly? I thought just putting it out there would be enough. I imagined people discovering it, enjoying it, maybe even sharing it. Easy, right?
By Time N Space Mediaabout a month ago in Journal
57 small business ideas for 2026
Small business owners are heading into a year of nonstop change. New tech, shifting workforce expectations, and evolving customer behavior are rewriting the rules. Supply chain disruptions have exposed real gaps, pushing more businesses toward local sourcing, sustainability, and circular models.
By ELIA MWAPINGAabout a month ago in Journal
How I.C.E. Shoots Renee Good and the Moment Minneapolis Broke
Sometimes a single bullet does more than tear through glass. Sometimes it shatters trust. On a cold Wednesday morning in south Minneapolis, a maroon SUV sat awkwardly on Portland Avenue. Horns echoed. Whistles pierced the air. Federal vehicles clogged the street like stones dropped into a river. Then came the gunshots — sharp, final, irreversible.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Journal
Merit-Based Hiring Isn't Just a Slogan:
Introduction Every hiring manager believes they make merit-based decisions. They consider qualifications, experience, and fit. But what they don't see—because it's unconscious—is how small, unrelated details shape their choices long before they evaluate actual skills. A candidate's name, their university, a shared hobby with the interviewer—these trigger snap judgments that override the facts. Many organisations still don’t have consistent systems to catch this, which means bias becomes baked into hiring decisions at scale.
By Amit Kumarabout a month ago in Journal






