• The more Americans who take Ozempic, the faster the US economy could grow, Goldman Sachs says

    Ozempic box
    Ozempic.

    • The US economy could see a surge in growth as more people start to take GLP-1 weight-loss drugs.
    • Goldman Sachs predicted that US GDP could jump by 1% if 60 million Americans took a GLP-1 drug.
    • Goldman Sachs also said that "poor health imposes significant economic costs."

    The more people who take GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, the faster the US economy could grow, a Goldman Sachs analyst said in a note last month. 

    The US GDP could grow by an extra 1% if 60 million Americans took GLP-1 drugs by 2028, Jan Hatzius, the chief economist at Goldman Sachs, wrote.

    Hatzius said health-related problems keep people from participating in the labor force and inhibit economic growth. Obesity increases the risk of serious health problems, including heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes.

    "Combining current losses in hours worked and labor force participation from sickness and disability, early deaths, and informal caregiving, we estimate that GDP would potentially be over 10% higher if poor health outcomes did not limit labor supply in the US," Hatzius said.

    So drugs that have shown promise in improving a range of patient health outcomes could have a sizable impact on the broader economy.

    "The main reason we see meaningful upside from healthcare innovation is that poor health imposes significant economic costs. There are several channels through which poor health weighs on economic activity that could diminish if health outcomes improve," Hatzius said.

    GLP-1 drugs from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly and Company are sold under the brand names Ozempic and Mounjaro to treat type 2 diabetes, and under the names Wegovy and Zepbound to treat obesity.

    Sales of the drugs have exploded, with some users seeing drastic weight loss of up to 20%. A study released in August found that patients who took Wegovy for weight loss reduced their risk of heart attacks, strokes, and cardiovascular death by 20%.

    And with the US obesity rate hovering at around 40%, tens of millions of Americans could be prescribed GLP-1 drugs over the next few years, but just how many will depend on the outcome of clinical trials on these drugs and whether health insurers will cover them.

    "If GLP-1 usage ultimately increases by this amount and results in lower obesity rates, we see scope for significant spillovers to the broader economy," Hatzius said.

    One spillover effect could be an increase in productivity, Hatzius said, citing academic studies that found obese individuals are less likely to work and to be less productive at work

    "These estimates therefore suggest that obesity-related health complications subtract over 3% from per-capita output, implying an over 1% hit to total output when combined with the over 40% incidence of obesity in the US population," Hatzius said. 

    And if there are more productivity gains via improved health outcomes, the impact on GDP growth in excess of its current trend could be between 0.6% and 3.2%.

    "Historically, health advancements have lowered the number of life years lost to disease and disability by 10% per decade in DM economies, and we estimate that a 10-year step forward in health progress in excess of current trends could raise the level of US GDP by 1%," Hatzius said.

    Glp1 drugs

    This story was originally published in March 2024.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Silicon Valley doesn’t seem to be buying Sam Altman’s NDA pleas

    Sam Altman
    • Sam Altman says he didn't know OpenAI had non-disparagement clauses in exit deals.
    • But a follow-up Vox report suggests Altman may have known, citing leaked documents and ex-staffers.
    • Silicon Valley types are voicing their skepticism of whether Altman was being entirely truthful. 

    Silicon Valley types are skeptical about whether Sam Altman knew OpenAI had non-disparagement clauses in its exit agreements.

    Tech firm workers have weighed in on the recent chaos at OpenAI after a bombshell Vox report said that the ChatGPT maker could take back vested equity from departing employees if they didn't sign non-disparagement agreements.

    Sam Altman took to X soon after the report was published, writing: "This is on me and one of the few times i've been genuinely embarrassed running openai; i did not know this was happening and i should have."

    The claims against OpenAI didn't go down well in the tech community, and some were unconvinced that Altman was being entirely honest.

    Another story published by Vox on Wednesday, citing unnamed former OpenAI employees and leaked documents, seemed to bring into question Altman's claim that he was out of the loop.

    Vox published a document showing the OpenAI chief signed incorporation documents for the holding company that handles OpenAI's equity. According to the report, some former staffers were given just seven days to sign separation agreements.

    Naveen Rao, vice president of generative AI at DataBricks, wrote that "there's just no way senior leaders didn't know about these separation terms."

    Neel Nanda, who leads Google DeepMind's safety research team, said it looked like OpenAI was caught in a "series of public lies," while Nils Reimers, director of machine learning at Cohere, said it was "unacceptable behavior" by OpenAI.

    Meta researcher Soumith Chintala praised the follow-up Vox report, saying it brought "receipts that it wasn't just some standard exit paperwork from OpenAI."

    Former OpenAI employee Jacob Hilton, meanwhile, posted a thread on X on Friday stating that he left a year ago and that he signed a non-disparagement agreement.

    He also said he signed a separate non-disclosure about the agreement so he wouldn't lose his vested equity.

    "The agreement was unambiguous that in return for signing, I was being allowed to keep my vested equity, and offered nothing more," he wrote, "I do not see why anyone would have signed it if they had thought it would have no impact on their equity."

    Hilton added that OpenAI contacted him a day earlier to release him from the agreement as a result of Vox's report.

    OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, sent outside normal working hours.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Take a look inside Lyndhurst Mansion, a historic 14,000-square-foot Gothic Revival home featured in ‘The Gilded Age’

    Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Lyndhurst Mansion.

    • Lyndhurst Mansion in Tarrytown, New York, belonged to three elite New York City families.
    • Completed in 1842, the Gothic Revival mansion spans 14,000 square feet.
    • The Max show "The Gilded Age" was filmed inside the mansion and on the 67-acre grounds.

    Lyndhurst Mansion in Tarrytown, New York, once belonged to three of New York City's wealthiest, most elite families. Now, it's a museum and an occasional film set for the Max show "The Gilded Age."

    Located around 26 miles from New York City, the mansion was built by former New York City mayor William Paulding Jr. and completed in 1842. It was subsequently purchased by merchant George Merritt and railroad tycoon Jay Gould.

    Take a look inside the historic home, including a behind-the-scenes look at its onscreen appearances in "The Gilded Age."

    Once a lavish summer escape for New York City's elite families, Lyndhurst Mansion in Tarrytown, New York, is now a museum.
    Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Lyndhurst Mansion.

    I booked an hourlong Classic Mansion Tour, which costs $25 and visits 16 rooms. The full list of tour offerings is available on Lyndhurst Mansion's website.

    Seasons one and two of the Max show "The Gilded Age" were filmed inside Lyndhurst Mansion and on the 67-acre grounds.
    "The Gilded Age" filming at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    "The Gilded Age" filming at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    On "The Gilded Age," Lyndhurst appears as the home of characters Charles and Aurora Fane, played by Ward Horton and Kelli O'Hara.

    The estate grounds also served as Sheep Meadow in Central Park in the show.

    The Carriage House, where horses were fed and groomed, is now the museum's Welcome Center.
    Horse stables turned into booths in the visitor's center at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Horse stables turned into booths in the visitor's center at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Built in the 1860s, the carriage house's horse stables have been reimagined as booths.

    The gift shop was once the tack room where bridles and saddles were kept.
    The gift shop at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The gift shop at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The original metal hooks on the walls that once held saddlery now help display the assortment of clothes, accessories, and other merchandise sold in the gift shop.

    Part of the Carriage House was also transformed into The New York Globe office for "The Gilded Age."
    Sullivan Jones and Denée Benton in "The Gilded Age."
    Sullivan Jones and Denée Benton in "The Gilded Age."

    The New York Globe was a Black newspaper founded by Timothy Thomas Fortune, played by Sullivan Jones in "The Gilded Age."

    When the show isn't filming there, the space functions as a screening room in the Welcome Center.
    Chairs at the visitor's center at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The visitor's center at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Visitors can watch an educational video about Lyndhurst Mansion and its history.

    The tour began outside the mansion, where our guide spoke about the three families that owned the property: the Pauldings, the Merritts, and the Goulds.
    The side of Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The side of Lyndhurst Mansion.

    In 1836, former New York City mayor William Paulding and his wife, New York real-estate heiress Maria Rhinelander Paulding, purchased the land overlooking the Hudson River to build a summer home.

    Architect Alexander Jackson Davis designed the home and much of its furniture. Construction began in 1838 and was completed in 1842.

    In 1864, the Pauldings' son sold the mansion to George Merritt, who made his fortune as the patent holder of a rubber spring used in railroad cars, and his wife, Julia. The Merritts rehired Davis to design an addition to the home, doubling its square footage.

    After George's death, Julia sold it in 1880 to Jay Gould, a railroad tycoon and businessman who was one of the wealthiest figures of the Gilded Age, and his wife, Helen Day Miller. Adjusted for inflation, his net worth totaled approximately $71.2 billion.

    Gould's daughter, Helen Gould, then took ownership of the property, followed by his youngest daughter, Anna Gould, who married a French aristocrat and spent most of her adult life abroad. After her death, Anna left the Lyndhurst estate to the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which manages the site today.

    The name "Lyndhurst" came from the Linden trees that the Merritts planted on the property.
    Linden trees on the grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Linden trees on the grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The Linden trees still grow on the grounds today.

    We then moved into the porte-cochère, the enclosed doorway where residents boarded and disembarked from horse-drawn carriages.
    The entrance to Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The entrance to Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The Merritts had Davis enclose the open porte-cochère from the Pauldings' era of the house with floor-to-ceiling doors and windows and construct a second porte-cochère outside.

    The grand entryway featured a marble floor and four closets.
    The entrance hall at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The entrance hall at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Closets were a sign of wealth, indicating that the owners could afford to use a room's valuable real estate for storage, the tour guide said.

    The walls and the ceiling looked like marble, but they were actually handpainted plaster, another sign of wealth.
    A bust of George Washington in Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A bust of George Washington in Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The Merritts could have afforded real marble, but it was more expensive to decorate with faux finishing than actual stone, making it a status symbol for their wealth.

    The Parlor, also known as the Drawing Room, was used for family gatherings and entertaining.
    The parlor at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The Parlor at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    All of the furniture is original to the Pauldings, the home's first owners from 1842, except for the cabinet in the bay window.

    A portrait of George Washington hung in a corner of the Parlor.
    The parlor at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The Parlor at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The piece was painted by American artist Rembrandt Peale.

    "The Gilded Age" transformed the room for scenes in the show, though the same blue patterned carpet is still visible.
    Taissa Farmiga, Carrie Coon and Donna Murphy in "The Gilded Age" filmed at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Taissa Farmiga, Carrie Coon, and Donna Murphy in "The Gilded Age."

    "The Gilded Age" brought all of its own furniture in for filming since the existing furniture pieces are valuable artifacts original to the home.

    The formal Dining Room, added as part of the Merritts' renovation, featured a hexagon-shaped table designed by Davis.
    The dining room at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The Dining Room at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Staff prepared food in a downstairs kitchen, brought it up on a dumbwaiter, and plated it in a butler's pantry off to the side of the room.

    The fireplace was made of red-grain marble, but its columns were handpainted with a marble pattern over plaster and wood.
    A fireplace in the dining room at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A fireplace in the Dining Room at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The walls were also hand-stenciled to look like they were covered with leather wallpaper.

    The Dining Room featured stunning views of the Hudson River.
    The view from the dining room at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The view from the dining room at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge would not have been visible in the Gilded Age since it was completed in 2018.

    Scenes from "The Gilded Age" were shot in the Dining Room.
    Louisa Jacobson, Cynthia Nixon, and Bill Irwin in a scene from "The Gilded Age" shot in the Lyndhurst dining room.
    Louisa Jacobson, Cynthia Nixon, and Bill Irwin in a scene from "The Gilded Age" shot in the Lyndhurst dining room.

    The Dining Room appears in episode three of the first season of "The Gilded Age."

    One of the mansion's grandest rooms was the enormous Art Gallery on the second floor.
    The art gallery at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The art gallery at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Priceless paintings covered nearly every surface of the walls.

    The Pauldings originally used the room as a library.
    The art gallery at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The Art Gallery at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    When the Merritts moved in, they turned the Pauldings' old dining room into their library and built the new dining room as part of the expansion.

    The Lyndhurst guide called Gould's art collection "one of the finest intact Gilded Age art collections in the country."
    Paintings at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Paintings at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Gould's collection included pieces from French, German, and Spanish artists.

    The State Bedroom off the Art Gallery was considered the best guest room in the house.
    A bedroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A bedroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The room featured a Tiffany & Co. stained-glass window.

    A bathroom in the hallway was furnished with pink double sinks sourced from Trenton, New Jersey.
    A bathroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A bathroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The bathroom also included a claw-foot tub and rain-style shower.

    Gould's daughter, Anna Gould, redecorated her late sister Helen's girlhood room and turned it into a guest room.
    A bedroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A bedroom at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Anna Gould continued to sleep in her childhood bedroom when she visited Lyndhurst.

    Before electricity, Lyndhurst's wealthy residents used speaking tubes in the walls to communicate with servants.
    A speaking pipe at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    A speaking tube at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The tubes connected to the butler's pantry downstairs.

    Back downstairs, the estate office contained one of the mansion's most valuable artifacts: Gould's "laptop."
    Jay Gould's desk at Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Jay Gould's desk at Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Gould's 100-pound Wooton desk, known today as his "laptop," held all of his business paperwork and accompanied him to work in New York City every day.

    Gould refused to take the railroad to work because it was owned by his archrivals, the Vanderbilts.
    Railroad tracks on the Hudson River near Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Railroad tracks on the Hudson River near Lyndhurst Mansion.

    Even though the railroad passed right by Lyndhurst Mansion, Gould commuted with his desk down the Hudson River on his steam yacht called the Atalanta. The journey took around 45 minutes.

    The Vanderbilts also owned a mansion upstate during the Gilded Age in Hyde Park, New York.

    Once the mansion tour concluded, the guide encouraged us to spend some time exploring the grounds.
    The grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The property is full of walking trails, gardens, and scenic picnic spots with views of the Hudson.

    I could see why the estate stood in for Central Park in "The Gilded Age."
    Sullivan Thomas and Denée Benton in "The Gilded Age."
    Sullivan Thomas and Denée Benton in "The Gilded Age."

    The wooded paths, park benches, and grass lawns looked just like Central Park.

    While walking along the river, I stopped inside the bowling alley built for Helen Gould in 1894.
    The bowling alley on the grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.
    The bowling alley on the grounds of Lyndhurst Mansion.

    The bowling alley can be rented for special events where guests bowl with the lightest possible balls to help preserve the historic space, according to The National Trust for Historic Preservation.

    Lyndhurst Mansion and its sprawling estate are worth a visit even if you've never seen "The Gilded Age."
    Views of the Hudson River from Lyndhurst Mansion.
    Views of the Hudson River from Lyndhurst Mansion.

    With so many notable residents and original furnishings, the home preserves the opulence of the real Gilded Age.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • I ranked 12 fast-food double cheeseburgers from worst to best, and my favorite was also one of the cheapest

    Double cheeseburgers from In-N-Out. Cook Out, and Sonic.
    Double cheeseburgers from In-N-Out. Cook Out, and Sonic.

    • I ranked double cheeseburgers from 12 different fast-food chains.
    • White Castle surprised me with its small, cheap, and super-flavorful sliders.
    • I thought In-N-Out's famous Double-Double was great value and undeniably delicious.

    A classic double cheeseburger is a fast-food staple, but which chain has the best one?

    May 28 marks National Burger Day, but burgers remain one of the most popular foods in the US throughout the rest of the year. A 2023 report by Cargill Meat Solutions Corporation found that 79% of Americans order burgers at restaurants at least once a month, while Forbes reported McDonald's is one of the most valuable brands in the world.

    Over the years, I've tried practically every fast-food double cheeseburger on the market. For a definitive ranking, I tried double cheeseburgers from McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger King, Shake Shack, White Castle, Whataburger, P. Terry's, Five Guys, Cook Out, Checkers, Sonic, and In-N-Out.

    Here's every fast-food double cheeseburger ranked from worst to best.

    My least favorite double cheeseburger was from Burger King. It cost me $3.89.
    The author holds a burger king double cheeseburger
    Burger King's double cheeseburger.

    The burger was under $5, but I'm not sure it was worth the price.

    It comes with two of the chain's beef patties, American cheese, pickles, mustard, and ketchup on a sesame-seed bun.
    burger king double cheeseburger
    Burger King's double cheeseburger.

    It comes with one slice of cheese.

    This burger was super filling, but I liked the other burgers I tried more.
    burger king double cheeseburger
    Burger King's double cheeseburger.

    Right away, I tasted the thick beef patties. The burger had traveled a little more than 15 minutes from my local Burger King to my apartment, but the meat was still juicy and the cheese nicely melted.

    The pickle slices were thick and crunchy, and I enjoyed the sesame-seed bun, which added a nice textural element. But I thought there was just a little too much ketchup, which will likely vary depending on who's making your burger that day.

    It was also a little heavy for my liking. It filled me up a little more than I had anticipated before jumping into the rest of the burger comparison. Still, for a burger that costs just under $4, that might be more of an asset than a hindrance if you want a filling, inexpensive lunch.

    Next was Wendy's double cheeseburger, which the chain calls a Double Stack. I ordered it for $4.49.
    wendys meal
    Wendy's double cheeseburger.

    It was about the same price as the burgers from McDonald's and Burger King, though it landed squarely in the middle in terms of value.

    A Wendy's double cheeseburger comes with two junior-size hamburger patties, American cheese, ketchup, mustard, pickles, and sweet onion.
    wendys meal
    The Wendy's Double Stack.

    The toppings looked a little stingy, and they were clustered in the middle of the sandwich. I would have liked to see them more spread out.

    The burger bun was fluffy and light, and the toppings had a ton of flavor.
    wendys meal
    Wendy's double cheeseburger.

    But I had to get a few bites in to reach the toppings in the center.

    The toppings themselves were amazing. I thought the pickles were the most flavorful out of the burgers I tried, and I liked the use of an onion ring rather than diced onion, although I would've liked more.

    The McDonald's double cheeseburger cost me $5.79.
    The author holds a mcdonalds double cheeseburger
    McDonald's double cheeseburger.

    It was slightly more expensive than Wendy's version but had more toppings. It came with an extra slice of American cheese plus chopped onions, and I thought it was still relatively affordable.

    The double cheeseburger from McDonald's comes with two beef patties, pickles, chopped onions, ketchup, mustard, and two slices of American cheese.
    mcdonalds double cheeseburger
    McDonald's double cheeseburger.

    I was interested to see if the added toppings would amp up the flavor.

    I thought the ingredients came together well in this burger, but the bun was a little lackluster.
    mcdonalds double cheeseburger
    McDonald's double cheeseburger.

    The bun held everything together and was a good size, but it was a little too soft and didn't have a lot of flavor on its own. But I enjoyed the amount of condiments and didn't find them overpowering.

    The chopped onions added a lot of flavor, and the burger patties were juicy despite being thinner than the Burger King ones. I liked the added cheese but didn't think it was necessary.

    In ninth place was the double-meat Whataburger with cheese.
    whataburger double cheeseburger in paper packaging on blue background
    Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

    It costs $9 at a Whataburger in Austin, excluding tax and fees.

    I ordered it with a large bun, American cheese, grilled peppers and onions, pickles, and ketchup.
    whataburger double cheeseburger
    Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

    The burger was a decent size and I could see the gooey cheese peeking out from underneath the soft potato bun. 

    Unlike the other double cheeseburgers, this burger had sliced jalapeño peppers that I imagined would add quite the kick.
    open whataburger double cheeseburger
    Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

    The ingredients definitely set this burger apart from the others.

    I thought the burgers had a delightfully crispy texture to them, and the toppings added a ton of flavor.
    bitten into whataburger double cheeseburger
    Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

    The bun was light and fluffy, but I did think the burger patties could have been a little thicker and juicier.

    Coming in eighth was the double cheeseburger from P. Terry's Burger Stand, a regional chain I visited in Austin, Texas.
    p terrys double cheeseburger
    P. Terry's double cheeseburger.

    The burger cost only $5, making it one of the cheaper burgers I tried.

    Despite being less expensive than the Whataburger double cheeseburger, the P. Terry's burger was larger.
    p terrys double cheeseburger
    P. Terry's double cheeseburger.

    I ordered it with pickles, onions, ketchup, mustard, and American cheese.

    I again thought the cheese could have been more melted, but the size definitely made up for that small detail.
    p terrys double cheeseburger
    P. Terry's double cheeseburger.

    One of the benefits of ordering from P. Terry's is that you can easily customize your burger and add a number of toppings including grilled onions, the chain's special sauce, tomato, lettuce, and more.

    I thought the burgers were juicy and the pickles had a tart crunch to them.
    bitten into p terrys double cheeseburger
    P. Terry's double cheeseburger.

    The bun was slightly underwhelming, but I thought it was an excellent, large burger with tons of flavor, especially for the low price. I also thought the mustard really came through and added a lot to the burger.

    The double cheeseburger from Shake Shack was the second most expensive burger I tried.
    shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background
    Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

    I paid $12.49 for a double cheeseburger. I could customize my toppings, but I went with pickles, onions, and Shack sauce.

    Right away, I thought the burger was massive.
    shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background
    Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

    The burger patties were perfectly crispy on the outside and covered in gooey melted cheese. The pickles also looked large and homemade. It was even heavy to pick up.

    The toppings were generous and the chain's signature Shack sauce, which is a mayo-based sauce with a slight mustard flavor, made it really tasty.
    shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background
    Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

    The cheese was thick and perfectly melted.

    However, biting into the Shake Shack burger was a little overwhelming, in my opinion.
    bitten into shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background
    Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

    The burger was huge, which was both an asset and a hindrance. I struggled to get through more than a few bites.

    However, despite being the second most expensive burger, I thought it was worth the price. The burger patties were much thicker than the other burgers I tried, and the toppings took it over the edge in terms of flavor.

    Overall, I was impressed … but stuffed.

    In sixth place was the double-decker burger with cheese from Checkers.
    checkers double cheeseburger
    Checkers double cheeseburger.

    The burger has since been replaced with the Big Buford, which has all the same ingredients but a bakery-style bun instead of a sesame-seed bun. The burger costs $7.69 at my local Checkers in Brooklyn.

    I thought this burger was a little pricey for the size.
    checkers double cheeseburger
    Checkers double cheeseburger.

    It was smaller than my hand, though it did include a variety of toppings like tomato, lettuce, and red onion. The burger also comes with American cheese, dill pickles, ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise on a toasted bun.

    The burger patties were very juicy and the toppings tasted fresh.
    checkers double cheeseburger
    Checkers double cheeseburger.

    I also thought the American cheese was very tangy and flavorful. Overall, I enjoyed the combination of flavors. However, the price prevented this burger from ranking higher. 

    I also tried the double cheese slider from White Castle.
    white castle double cheeseburger on blue background
    White Castle double cheeseburger.

    White Castle sliders tend to be eaten in pairs, so I ordered two. Each burger cost me $3.55, so I ended up paying $7.10.

    The burgers were small but packed with flavor.
    white castle double cheeseburger on blue background
    White Castle double cheeseburger.

    The burgers smelled strongly of onions and condiments the second I removed them from the bag.

    The amount of toppings on each burger was generous.
    white castle double cheeseburger on blue background
    White Castle double cheeseburger.

    The pickles were crunchy and flavorful. Though the burgers each had a bun sandwiched in the middle of the burger, it wasn't too bready — instead, it allowed the flavors to really come together while still being filling.

    I was blown away by the cheeseburgers from White Castle, a result I admittedly wasn't expecting.
    white castle double cheeseburger on blue background
    White Castle double cheeseburger.

    As the cheapest and smallest burgers, I was expecting them to be a little lackluster. However, I found that good things definitely come in small packages. The onions, condiments, and pickles were flavorful, but it was the beef that really impressed me.

    The small-but-mighty burger was one of the most flavorful out of the ones I tried, easy to eat, and perfectly priced. 

    My fourth-favorite double cheeseburger was from Five Guys.
    five guys cheeseburger
    Five Guys cheeseburger.

    Five Guys doesn't technically have a "double cheeseburger" — its regular cheeseburgers already come with two slices of cheese and two beef patties.

    My burger cost $13.55, excluding taxes and fees, making it the most expensive burger I tried.

    I was able to customize my toppings, but I ordered the burger with pickles, grilled onions, ketchup, and mustard.
    five guys cheeseburger
    Five Guys cheeseburger.

    Right away, I noticed that the toppings were generous. The pickle slices were large, and none of the toppings cost extra to add.

    The burger was large without being too intimidating.
    five guys cheeseburger
    Five Guys cheeseburger.

    I thought it was a perfect size. It required two hands to pick up and eat, but it wasn't as heavy as the burger from Shake Shack. Slices of melted American cheese coated each burger, and there wasn't so much sauce that it dripped out from underneath the sesame-seed buns.

    The burger patties were crispy on the outside but juicy on the inside.
    five guys cheeseburger
    Five Guys cheeseburger.

    I thought the pickle slices were thick, crunchy, and tart. I also really enjoyed the choice of a sesame-seed bun — it added a bit of texture to each and every bite.

    The grilled onions also really impressed me. They were soft and almost caramelized, adding a lot of flavor that I didn't get from any other burger.

    My third-favorite double cheeseburger came from Sonic Drive-In.
    sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background
    SuperSonic double cheeseburger.

    The SuperSonic double cheeseburger was the only burger I tried that came with lettuce and tomato. Since this was the default option, I decided to try it with these toppings rather than specifically remove them. 

    The burger cost me $9.75, excluding taxes and fees.

    The burger came with a hearty serving of shredded lettuce, tomatoes, two slices of cheese, diced onions, pickles, mayonnaise, and ketchup.
    open faced sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background
    Sonic double cheeseburger.

    Unlike Sonic's quarter-pound double cheeseburger, which comes with two junior patties, the full-size burger has a combined half-pound of meat. 

    The bun was perfectly soft but still held the sauce-covered burger together.
    bitten into sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background
    Sonic double cheeseburger.

    The ingredients tasted fresh and vibrant. The tomato wasn't too watery, the lettuce was crisp, and the burgers tasted well-seasoned and juicy. Plus, the burger was a very generous size. 

    However, despite all these accolades, I thought the price was a little steep compared to what I got from Cook Out and In-N-Out.

    My second-favorite double cheeseburger came from Cook Out, a regional chain I visited in South Carolina.
    cook out double cheeseburger
    Cook Out big double burger.

    You can order a "big double" from Cook Out any way you wish, but I ordered mine with cheese, ketchup, mustard, onions, and pickles. It cost me $4.99, not including tax.

    The burger came wrapped in foil and featured two juicy patties.
    cook out double cheeseburger
    Cook Out big double burger.

    It also had thick slices of fresh onion and large pickle spears layered on top of the burger.

    For the price, I thought the burger was out of this world.
    cook out double cheeseburger
    Cook Out big double burger.

    The cheese slices were thick and tangy, and the burger was perfectly moist and medium-rare. It was also very large, and, after already eating dinner, I struggled to get through more than a few bites, though I kept wanting to go back for more.

    At an amazingly low price, this burger definitely earned the second-to-top spot on my ranking.

    In my opinion, the best double cheeseburger I tried was the famous Double-Double burger from In-N-Out.
    in n out double double, fries, and drink on blue background
    In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

    It cost me $4.90, which I thought was an excellent deal for the large burger sitting in front of me. One of the first things I noticed was how thick the burger patties were — they were much thicker than other burgers I tried at a similar price point.

    Most Double-Double burgers come with lettuce, tomato, onions, and spread.
    in n out double double on blue background
    In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

    To keep my burger similar to the other burgers I tried, I ordered it with onions, pickles, and spread, which I thought tasted similar to Thousand Island dressing.

    The first thing I noticed about the In-N-Out burger was how juicy the burger patties were, followed by the incredible layers of cheese.
    bitten into in n out double double on blue background
    In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

    The cheese slices were perfectly melted and coated each part of the burger, something I couldn't say about any other burger I tried.

    The bun was perfectly soft and held everything together perfectly, while the special spread had my mouth watering for another bite.

    Of all the burgers I tried, I thought the In-N-Out double cheeseburger packed the most flavor for the best price.
    bitten into in n out double double on blue background
    In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

    When it came to a double cheeseburger, the West-Coast chain really nailed it. The burger was beyond flavorful, the perfect size, and, in my opinion, very good value for money.

    The next time I'm in a state with an In-N-Out, I know where I'll be filling my burger craving.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Ohio man plans to take a 2-person submersible to Titanic depths to show the industry is safe after the OceanGate tragedy

    A picture of an OceanGate vehicle
    The Titan submersible.

    • A submersible imploded as it descended to view the wreck of the Titanic last year.
    • All five passengers on board the OceanGate vessel were killed in the incident.
    • Two men are now planning a trip in a new submersible to try to prove the industry is safe.

    An Ohio real-estate investor is planning to take a two-person submersible down to Titanic-level depths to prove that the journey can be carried out safely following the Titan sub implosion last year.

    The investor, Larry Connor, told The Wall Street Journal: "I want to show people worldwide that while the ocean is extremely powerful, it can be wonderful and enjoyable and really kind of life-changing if you go about it the right way."

    He is working with Patrick Lahey, the cofounder and CEO of submersible manufacturer Triton Submarines.

    The pair aims to show that such an expedition can be carried out repeatedly and safely despite the implosion of the OceanGate sub last June, which killed all five people on board, including the company's CEO, Stockton Rush.

    Stockton Rush.
    Stockton Rush.

    Lahey said that Connor rang him a few days after the implosion and said: "'You know, what we need to do is build a sub that can dive to [Titanic-level depths] repeatedly and safely and demonstrate to the world that you guys can do that, and that Titan was a contraption.'"

    Connor, who has previously been to the Mariana Trench, the deepest oceanic trench on Earth, said they plan to do the journey in a two-person vessel called the Triton 4000/2 Abyssal Explorer, named "4000" for the depth in meters it can reach. He did not say when the trip will take place.

    Lahey was one of the many industry figures who criticized OceanGate before and after the disaster, accusing it of questionable safety standards.

    After the implosion, he described Rush's approach to convincing people to get on board as "quite predatory."

    Others in the industry and the company also voiced their concerns.

    An OceanGate tourist submersible descending from the surface.
    An OceanGate tourist submersible descending from the surface.

    A former chief submersible pilot for the company said years before the fatal incident that he was worried Rush would get himself and others killed in a "quest to boost his ego."

    Filmmaker and Titanic explorer James Cameron also weighed in, saying he and some engineers had warned OceanGate officials that the Titan could lead to "catastrophic failure."

    The waiver that Titan passengers were required to sign mentioned multiple ways that passengers could die and described the vessel as "experimental" three times.

    Previous passengers had also described errors, failed trips, and feeling unsafe.

    CBS News' David Pogue said his trip on the submersible was canceled after the Titan reached 37 feet due to an equipment malfunction, while one diver who made it to the wreckage said there were multiple aborted attempts, calling it a "suicide mission."

    Nevertheless, Rush and his company repeatedly defended the submersible and its design.

    A side view of the Titan submersible, a large white cylindrical vessel with a rounded grey front that has a single porthole in water.
    The Titan sub.

    The subsequent disaster raised concerns about the industry, with some experts calling on the industry to reassess taking people to such a remote location.

    But Lahey said he believed that OceanGate's problems weren't reflective of the wider industry, saying that classed submersibles are considered to be very safe due to the extensive testing they undergo.

    Rob McCallum — a former OceanGate consultant who had warned Rush about the safety of the Titan — agreed with that assessment.

    "In that sense, OceanGate didn't make the industry look bad," McCallum told the Journal. "It made us look good."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A tech company that posted a ‘whites only’ job ad was ordered to pay $7.5K and give staff better training

    Job searching - stock photo.
    Job searching – stock photo.

    • Virginia tech services firm Arthur Grand posted a job ad seeking only white, US-born candidates.
    • The Justice Department found the ad violated the Immigration and Nationality Act.
    • The company must now pay a $7,500 fine and implement training to comply with federal laws.

    The US Department of Justice has fined a Virginia-based tech company $7,500 after it posted a discriminatory job listing in March 2023 seeking only white candidates.

    The DOJ secured the agreements with Arthur Grand Technologies Inc., an information technology services firm, earlier this month. The company is also required to give its employees comprehensive training on the Immigration and Nationality Act.

    The job ad said it was after "only US-born citizens [white] who are local within 60 miles from Dallas, TX."

    The ad quickly spread on social media, drawing widespread criticism.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    The Justice Department said that the advertisement deterred qualified individuals, including US citizens born outside the US and non-US citizens, from applying.

    Investigations by the Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, or OFCCP, found that a recruiter from the company's Indian subsidiary posted the job ad on Indeed.

    Arthur Grand apologized and said that an employee added discriminatory language to the listing and published it without authorization.

    "At Arthur Grand, we do not condone or engage in any type of discrimination based on race, color, or religion," the company said on LinkedIn.

    It added: "We conducted an investigation and discovered that a new junior recruiter at our firm was responsible for the offending job posting. We have taken immediate action and terminated their employment for violating our policy."

    The Justice Department determined that the ad violated the Immigration and Nationality Act by excluding eligible candidates based on citizenship status and national origin. 

    The Department of Labor also found that the job posting breached Executive Order 11246, which prohibits federal contractors from discriminating in employment decisions based on race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or national origin.

    Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division called the incident "shameful."

    As part of its settlement with the Justice Department, Arthur Grand will pay the US Treasury a civil penalty of $7,500 and implement comprehensive training for its staff on INA compliance.

    The settlement also requires the company to revise its employment policies, which will be subject to ongoing monitoring.

    The agreement with the Labor Department requires that Arthur Grand compensate individuals who filed complaints with the OFCCP.

    "We are committed to holding federal contractors accountable for outrageous discriminatory practices like this advertisement," said Acting Director Michele Hodge of the OFCCP, per the DOJ.

    Racial bias still plays a part in job hiring in the US.

    Last month, Business Insider reported on a study that showed CVs with Black-sounding names are less likely to get callbacks.

    AI tools are increasingly being integrated into hiring processes and were initially touted as a means to reduce bias. But AI is not exempt from echoing human racial bias.

    OpenAI's ChatGPT over-selected Asian women candidates and under-selected Black men in a recent experiment, Bloomberg reported.

    OpenAI told Bloomberg that recruiters can add their own safeguards against bias, such as stripping names from the screening process.

    Arthur Grand didn't immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • The FBI is looking at whether stolen items from the British Museum ended up in the hands of US eBay buyers: report

    The British Museum in London, England.
    The British Museum in London.

    • The FBI is helping investigate stolen items from the British Museum, per the BBC.
    • It's investigating if items from the museum were sold to US buyers, the report said.
    • This includes items bought off eBay that may have come from the museum's collection.

    The FBI is investigating the potential sale of hundreds of items stolen from the British Museum to American buyers, including some sold on eBay, the BBC reported.

    The London museum is one of the biggest in the world. But since last year it has been the subject of unwanted worldwide attention after it said that over a thousand items from its collection, including jewelry, gems, and Greek pottery, had been stolen, were missing, or had been damaged.

    The BBC reported that the FBI is now investigating whether items from the museum were sold to buyers in the US.

    The FBI's efforts include contacting individuals who bought items on eBay, including a man in New Orleans who bought two gems on the platform, according to the BBC.

    The man told the BBC that the FBI had reached out to him for more information. He said he no longer had the items and told the BBC he didn't think the authorities had located them yet.

    The Telegraph reported last year that some items stolen from the museum were listed on eBay at low prices. Items worth around $63,000 were listed for as little as $50, it said.

    In its report, the BBC said that the FBI had also likely assisted in recovering 268 items that were sold to a Washington DC collector on eBay, which the museum says belong to it.

    Items may also have been sold to people in other countries, the BBC reported.

    The British Museum didn't immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

    The museum has accused one of its curators, Peter Higgs, of stealing and damaging artifacts.

    Higgs was fired last year after an internal investigation, but has not been arrested or charged. He denies any involvement.

    Three buyers said that an eBay seller with the username "sultan1966" used the names "Paul Higgins" or "Paul" when they communicated via email.

    The buyer in New Orleans said he bought his items from sultan1966, which the BBC appeared to confirm by looking at records and receipts.

    An antiquities expert reported suspicion that a museum staff member was stealing from secure vaults back in 2013, according to The Telegraph, with missing items beginning to turn up on eBay three years later.

    Sources told the outlet that the museum had not properly cataloged all eight million items in its collection, which made it easier for the thefts to go undetected.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Why the US can’t send humans to Mars

    An artist concept of two astronauts in large spacesuits on Mars with a rover in the background
    Getting to Mars will be tricky. NASA and others have been working on the problem for decades.

    • Humans have long imagined life on Mars, though our understanding of the planet has changed a lot.
    • Some of the US's earliest plans assumed humans could reach the Red Planet by the 1980s.
    • Over the decades, technology and funding challenges have hampered the nation's hopes of crewed flights.

    Earlier this month, NASA announced it was funding a revolutionary high-thrust rocket — called a Pulsed Plasma Rocket — that could make crewed missions to Mars in just two months.

    That's seven months faster than it'd take with current technology and would drastically reduce the risk and cost of a crewed Mars mission, according to Howe Industries, which is developing the concept. It "holds the potential to revolutionize space exploration," NASA said in a statement.

    The PPR is just one of the latest developments in the US's decades-long discussion to send humans to Mars. In the early '60s, for example, nuclear-bomb-powered spaceships were proposed for the trip.

    Since well before NASA landed the first humans on the moon, the US has poured money and time into proposals for a crewed Mars mission, only to see its attempts never leave the ground. But technology isn't the only thing standing in the way. Politics also plays a big role.

    "That's kind of like a joke within the space community or the Mars community," Matthew Shindell, a curator with the National Air and Space Museum, told Business Insider. "Putting humans on Mars is always 20 years away."

    It's short enough to seem tangible, he said, but long enough that the political situation will change before it can be realized.

    To fully understand why the US hasn't sent humans to Mars, despite sending more robots there than any other country, it just takes a trip down memory lane. Here's a history of the US's most promising crewed Martian missions that never were.

    1950s: The Mars Project
    Wernher von Braun at his desk with moon lander in background and rocket models on his desk
    Wernher von Braun helped shape NASA's space program and was director of Marshall Space Flight Center.

    In the '40s and '50s, no one really knew what they might find on Mars, but they knew getting there would be tricky. One of the first to seriously tackle the problem was Wernher von Braun.

    During WWII, von Braun was a member of the Nazi party and created V-2 missiles. After the war, he continued his work on missiles with the US Army as part of Operation Paperclip while also working on a novel called "The Mars Project." In it, he laid out the first detailed plan to send humans to the Red Planet.

    He envisioned a 260-day mission that would launch in 1985 with 10 spaceships and 70 crew members. "He sat down and did the math and created a whole story around it," Shindell said.

    In the late '50s, von Braun consulted on NASA's very first 10-year plan, which included sending the first probes to Mars. (Sending humans to Mars would come later.) What started as fiction got closer to reality when von Braun started working at NASA a couple of years later.

    1960s: Mars by 1965
    A concept drawing of Project Orion with a nuclear-powered spaceshift labeled USA heading toward a planet
    This concept drawing for Project Orion shows a spacecraft powered by nuclear fission.

    In the late 1950s, Theodore Taylor, who worked on nuclear weapons at Los Alamos, and theoretical physicist Freeman Dyson embarked on an ambitious plan to build a nuclear-explosion-powered spaceship.

    Called Project Orion, the resulting ship would take 12 years to develop, cost $100 million per year, and comfortably hold 150 people. Their motto was "Mars by 1965, Saturn by 1970."

    However, NASA was concerned about what would happen if any of the hundreds of bombs required to fuel the rocket exploded.

    By 1963, the team was having trouble getting increased funding. That same year, the nuclear test-ban treaty was signed, hampering the team's ability to test its vehicle.

    The project was canceled a year later.

    1965: Mars's first close-up
    A black-and-white image of Mars that was shown on TV in 1965
    An enhanced version of the first Mars photograph shown on TV in 1965.

    Though NASA was feverishly working toward the moon in the '60s, it didn't fully abandon its plans for Mars.

    In 1962, German rocket scientist Ernst Stuhlinger was working at NASA on a project to get five crewed ships to the Red Planet by the early 1980s.

    Stuhlinger's planned ships were huge, almost 500 feet long. For comparison, NASA's Space Shuttles are under 200 feet. But as NASA raced to land the first humans on the moon, it shifted focus to smaller, lighter spacecraft. This helped speed things along toward the moon, but it was a step back for Mars.

    This pivot "reduced Apollo's utility as a technological stepping stone to Mars," David S. F. Portree wrote in "Humans to Mars: Fifty Years of Mission Planning, 1950–2000."

    In the meantime, NASA knew it needed more information about Mars before it landed humans there. So in 1964, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory launched the very first probe to fly by Mars: Mariner 4.

    The images the probe transmitted to Earth were fuzzy and showed a desolate, barren planet. But they were the first close-up images of Mars's surface that anyone on Earth had seen.

    1970s: The post-Apollo plans
    A drawing of a slim spacecraft labeled e route spacecraft configuration
    An artist's concept from 1969 of a spacecraft for a crewed Mars mission.

    NASA had just landed the first people on the moon in 1969 as part of its Apollo Program and was ready for the next big step. That same year, a Richard Nixon-appointed Space Task Group issued a report that supported human flights to Mars in 1982.

    However, President Nixon ignored most of the 1969 report's suggestions in favor of what would become the Space Shuttle program, which didn't involve going to Mars. It was a turning point for NASA.

    During the height of the Apollo era, NASA didn't have to compete for funding, Shindell said. Now, Nixon's administration started cutting its budget.

    This was in the midst of the Vietnam War, and many Americans wanted the government to focus on poverty, the environment, and other domestic issues.

    "If you're a proponent of human Mars exploration, this is the problem you've faced ever since the 1970s," Shindell said. Sending humans to the moon was already incredibly expensive, and it's a lot closer than Mars.

    1980s: Sally Ride's report
    sally ride women in space
    Sally Ride communicates with ground controllers from the flight deck during the six-day mission in Challenger, 1983.

    In 1985, President Ronald Reagan appointed the National Commission on Space to envision the next 50 years of space travel, which involved the possibility of piloted vehicles to Mars.

    But then NASA's Space Shuttle Challenger exploded. The disaster affected how the agency thought about human space travel as a whole.

    "In general, there was a great deal of soul-searching within NASA about the use of expensive and risky human-rated launch vehicles like the shuttle," William Sheehan and Jim Bell wrote in "Discovering Mars: A History of Observation and Exploration of the Red Planet."

    Just a year later, though, NASA's administrator tasked astronaut Sally Ride with laying out the agency's future space explorations. In her report, she explained what it would take for the US to land an astronaut on Mars by 2005.

    To meet that timeline, NASA would need to triple its current budget in the next decade. That didn't happen.

    1989: 20 years to Mars
    Five men in suits stand beneath NASA's Lunar Module 2 at the National Air and Space Museum
    Twenty years after the Apollo 11 moon landing, George H.W. Bush announced the US would attempt to go to Mars.

    By 1989, a crewed mission to Mars seemed back on the table, according to a speech by the newly elected President George H.W. Bush.

    "Why Mars?" he asked. "Because it is humanity's destiny to strive, to seek, to find. And because it is America's destiny to lead."

    NASA's response was the Space Exploration Initiative, an analysis of Bush's space exploration goals, which would cost an estimated $400-$500 billion.

    At that point, Mars was still a long way off. The missions weren't expected to begin until after 2010.

    However, according to Sheehan and Bell, a lack of Congressional funding and political support led to the demise of Bush's Martian mission a few years later in 1993.

    1990s: "Better, faster, cheaper"
    Rocks on Mars and a small rover
    Pathfinder delivered Sojourner, the first rover to successfully operate on Mars.

    By the 1990s, Mars enthusiasts were dreaming of getting humans there by the end of the millennium. Aerospace engineer Robert Zubrin formed the Mars Society, an advocacy group pushing for the planet's exploration and eventually establishing a human settlement there.

    Meanwhile, NASA was trying to figure out how to study Mars after losing contact with the robotic probe Mars Observer in 1993. With so much still unknown about the planet, uncrewed missions continued to be the focus.

    The agency's new administrator Daniel Goldin was pursuing a new mantra for the robotic missions: "better, faster, cheaper."

    This decade saw success with the uncrewed Pathfinder and Mars Global Surveyor missions. Pathfinder delivered Sojourner, the first operational Mars rover, while MGS sent back incredible images and data from the planet.

    Just a couple of years later, though, NASA lost two more uncrewed spacecraft, the Mars Polar Lander and the Mars Climate Orbiter (MCO).

    2000s: But first, the moon
    Two images of Mars, one from Opportunity and the other from Spirit
    Images from Spirit (top) and Opportunity (bottom), two successful Mars rover missions.

    Despite the setbacks of the Polar Lander and MCO, NASA again had success in 2004 with rovers Spirit and Opportunity.

    Though NASA had recently suffered another tragedy with the loss of the Space Shuttle Columbia and its crew in 2003, the agency's rovers seemed to reignite some of the desire for human missions to Mars.

    In 2004, 15 years after his father's space speech, President George W. Bush announced what would become the Constellation Program. The ultimate goal was to put people on Mars, though there was no exact date given for this part of the plan.

    A large part of Bush's vision involved returning to the moon before heading to the Red Planet. In 2010, President Barack Obama canceled Constellation but set a timeline of getting astronauts to Mars by the 2030s.

    2010s: Mars goes commercial
    Elon Musk on a stage with dark blue curtains behind a large screen with an image of space travel vehicle labeled with different parts like engines, payload, and delta wings
    SpaceX CEO Elon Musk first hoped to go to Mars by the mid-2020s.

    In the 2010s, private space companies — like SpaceX and Virgin Galacticstarted planning projects to get crews to Mars.

    SpaceX founder Elon Musk said in 2016 that he would get people there in less than a decade. He later revised the date to 2029 with robust colonization by 2050.

    Equally ambitious was Richard Branson's space company Virgin Galactic. In 2019, the company announced it planned to send an uncrewed spacecraft to Mars by 2022. But so far, neither SpaceX nor Virgin Galactic has sent anything to Mars.

    Meanwhile, President Donald Trump reversed the Obama administration's space exploration plans. NASA was again planning for a moon-first agenda.

    Established in 2017 under the Trump Administration, NASA's Artemis Program is its latest and current mission for crewed deep space exploration. It aims to return humans to the moon and create a lunar space station where astronauts can live for weeks or months, at a time.

    However, this moon-first agenda doesn't completely rule Mars out. Dayna Ise, who leads NASA's Mars Campaign Office, said it will actually help us get to the Red Planet.

    "You learn a lot by going to the moon, but you learn even more by staying at the moon," she said. "And so whatever we learn there will help with Mars."

    She also thinks private space companies have a role to play. "It's all hands on deck," she said. "It is such a difficult engineering problem that we cannot exclude anybody from helping."

    2020s: Simulating life on Mars
    A person in a black SpaceX t-shirt looks at the Starship megarocket
    SpaceX's huge Starship had a successful launch in 2024.

    The private space companies have been busy this decade. In 2024, SpaceX had its first mostly successful Starship launch after several fiery attempts. The mega-rocket will play a huge role in Musk's plans to colonize Mars.

    Meanwhile, the Biden Administration has continued to support the Artemis lunar missions. There have been a few setbacks, though.

    Citing safety and technical challenges, NASA recently pushed back its first crewed Artemis mission to the moon, which is now slated for 2025.

    Artemis IV, NASA's mission to deliver part of a lunar space station to the moon, is still scheduled for 2028.

    Having a long-term presence on the moon will help experts learn more about how crews can survive on a different world for longer than a few days, Ise said.

    Meanwhile, the agency is also studying how people will fare in isolation. NASA's CHAPEA missions put volunteers in a simulated Mars habitat for a year. The "analog astronauts" follow strict schedules, have limited contact with loved ones, and are closely monitored. The first crew will emerge from the habitat this year on July 6.

    2030s and beyond: Getting humans to Mars
    A concept drawing of humans on Mars showing people in spacesuits with futuristic buildings and a vehicle on the red planet
    There are many challenges to solve before humans can safely travel to Mars.

    Despite its moon-first agenda, NASA knows Mars has its own challenges that the lunar surface can't prepare them for. In addition to taking a lot of time and fuel to get there, the trip will mean communication delays of at least 20 minutes between the crew and Earth.

    The travelers will need to be able to take care of their own health emergencies and fix hardware issues, Ise said. But NASA is also working on making some systems more autonomous. "If there is an issue, they don't have time to troubleshoot with someone on the ground to fix their life support system," she said. "So we need those life support systems to be smarter."

    Other problems include keeping the crew safe from radiation, dealing with the planet's skin-irritating dust, and developing a food source. "We have to build an ecology inside a transit vehicle to keep everyone alive and healthy," Ise said.

    All that will take time. NASA administrator Bill Nelson has said there's potential for the agency to send humans to Mars by 2040. Ise compared it to eating an entire elephant. "We're doing it one bite at a time and building on everything that we learn," she said.

    It remains to be seen whether private US companies will reach Mars first.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Aramco share sale set for summer could net Saudi Arabia a welcome $10 billion amid its Neom project struggles

    A general view of Saudi Aramco's Abqaiq oil processing plant on September 20, 2019
    Saudi Aramco's Abqaiq oil processing plant.

    • Saudi Arabia is reportedly planning a multi-billion-dollar sale of shares in its state oil company.
    • The sale could take place as soon as next month, Reuters reported.
    • The rumored share sale could provide extra funds for the Neom project.

    Saudi Arabia looks set for a multibillion-dollar share sale in its state oil company, Saudi Aramco.

    The sale, which could raise about $10 billion, may take place as soon as June and would mark one of the region's largest stock deals, Reuters reported, citing two people familiar with the matter.

    The unnamed sources said planning was ongoing and details could change, the report added.

    "Decisions about share sales are matters for our shareholders and are not something we are able to comment on," an Aramco spokesperson told Reuters.

    The government of Saudi Arabia remains the largest shareholder in Aramco, which is the world's largest oil company by market cap.

    Saudi Aramco did not immediately reply to a request for comment from Business Insider.

    The news comes amid Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's Vision 2030 plan to diversify the kingdom's economy and pivot away from oil.

    The plan has involved big spending on sports, entertainment, and infrastructure — largely financed by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF).

    The kingdom has embarked on a number of "gigaprojects" as part of the 2030 plan, including its Neom megacity.

    The project, which is expected to cost at least $500 billion — with some estimates putting the figure at $1.5 trillion — includes the much-talked-about "The Line," a futuristic city in the northwest of the country.

    But recent reports suggest Saudi Arabia has been seeking to borrow funds for the project, while also scaling back population estimates for The Line.

    The Saudi government had previously said it wanted to move 1.5 million residents into The Line by 2030, but that number is now likely to be fewer than 300,000, Bloomberg reported in April, citing an unnamed person familiar with the matter.

    And while the city was set to stretch over 170 kilometers (roughly 105 miles) to the Red Sea, the Bloomberg report said that officials expected just 2.4 km (around 1.5 miles) of the project to be completed by 2030.

    The PIF has also been hit with falling cash levels. In January, it said that its cash as of September had dropped to around $15 billion — the lowest level since December 2020, The Wall Street Journal reported.

    Saudi Arabia's finance minister said in April that while the kingdom was "very pleased" with the state of its Vision 2030 progress, "challenges" meant adjustments would be made to some aspects of the project.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • I’m a boomer who’s about to retire at 59. I’m nervous about retirement because I’ll have less income and too much free time.

    a woman standing at the end of a dock, looking out
    The author, not pictured, is retiring early at 59.

    • After 20 years of teaching in Texas schools, I am retiring early at 59.
    • My pension will be less than half of my current salary, so I'm going to freelance to make ends meet.
    • I'm also nervous about the free time I will have and the total lack of structure.

    For the last 20 years, I've had the same two alarms set ever weekday — one at 5:15 a.m. and one at 9:17 a.m.

    As a Texas high school teacher, the 5:15 alarm is really just a formality. After 20 years of early rising, I'm up before the sun with no prompting required. The 9:17 a.m. alarm is also deeply ingrained; it's the official attendance time when I'm required to pause my instruction and take attendance. It's Texas' official "time of record" by which schools are funded on daily attendance.

    It's the schedule I've followed for two decades. But after this week, neither time will matter. I will walk away from teaching and into early retirement at 59, which makes me more than a little nervous.

    My income will now be cut in half

    I'm unnerved by several things. I'll be "living smaller" on less income. With my pension, my income will be less than half what it has been. My expenses will be lower but won't be cut by 50%.

    I've been a remote adjunct instructor at a local community college for the past year, concurrent with my high school job, but the rules of my pension require me to sit out this Fall semester. It took me years of applying to secure that adjunct position. I worry that being forced to sit out the busiest semester of the academic calendar will push me to the back of the adjunct line once again. The pay isn't great, at about $50 per hour, but a few classes certainly can help close the gap in my income.

    Since I won't be making nearly enough, I decided to accept a remote writing job, but it doesn't have benefits and won't have any structure or routine. While I'll be doing something I care deeply about, I will still be below the salary I earned this year.

    I'm struggling to understand how I will fill my time

    For 20 years, the more than 200 teachers in the building have been my daily interaction with adults. We lunch together, and I've shared the rollercoasters of their lives. They've been there to discuss and weigh in on my classroom dilemmas and personal predicaments. Where will the new voices of reason come from?

    Wary of only my spouse for interaction, I have big plans. I've applied to join a committee for my community — one that meets monthly to review permits for home improvements, paint colors, and landscape design.

    Two Mahjong sets have been growing dusty in my closet for decades. I've found a beginner's group that meets twice monthly that I have every intention of joining. I'm hopeful that Mahjong will keep the cobwebs from settling into the corners of my brain and give me a new group of peers.

    Additionally, it's been easy to push off any amount of formal exercise with the "I don't have time" excuse. Now that I'll have the time in retirement, what will my new exercise regime look like? For 20 years, it's been steps in the school building that have been my only exercise. I've always known I need to stave off osteoporosis with weight resistance training, but now will be the time to pick up a dumbbell.

    I'm not sure who I am without my job

    Finally, for the last 20 years, I have proudly proclaimed that "I teach high school" to anyone who asks about my employment. What will the next answer be? I haven't found one that I'm comfortable with.

    I'm not quite ready to say, "I'm retired." That phrase carries too many negative connotations for me. More than 30 years later, I finally understand why my former mother-in-law didn't embrace her new status as "grandmother" with any enthusiasm. Titles carry weight, and I'm not ready to shoulder "retiree."

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