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How Walmart Is Leveraging Automation and AI to Deliver Faster
Walmart projects that by 2025, 65% of its stores will be serviced by automation. Here’s how the country’s biggest retailer is leaning into a high-tech distribution strategy to keep pace in the fast shipping race against Amazon and Target. Photo illustration: Annie Zhao
How Binance Melted Down in Less Than a Year
Israel Reaches Deal With Hamas for Release of 50 Hostages
NASA Has an Infrastructure Problem. Here’s Why It Matters.
How Qatar Became the World’s Lead Hostage Negotiator
Not Sure How Much to Tip? A New Study Shows You’re Not Alone
As requests for more and bigger tips increase, so has confusion. WSJ personal-finance reporter Julia Carpenter joins host Ariana Aspuru to discuss why some people view tipping as an obligation and others see it as a personal decision. Photo: Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press
What the End of Mint Means for Users and the Future of Budgeting Apps
Why It's a Terrible Time to Spend Money
Is it Time to Give Up on Trying to Buy a Home?
How Online Currency Is Changing the Way Kids Spend Money
OpenAI Employees Threaten to Quit After Sam Altman’s Ouster
Most employees at OpenAI have demanded that former CEO Sam Altman be reinstated after the company’s board fired him on Friday. Microsoft said late Sunday that it hired Altman to lead a new advanced artificial-intelligence research team. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
WSJ Opinion: Hits and Misses of the Week
WSJ Opinion: Happy Birthday, Mr. President
Babies Evacuated From Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital Arrive in Egypt
WSJ Opinion: Nikki Haley Stands Out on Foreign Policy
House Ethics Chairman Moves to Expel George Santos From Congress
Republican Rep. Michael Guest, the House Ethics Committee chairman, filed a resolution to expel New York Rep. George Santos from Congress after a report found he “blatantly” stole money from his campaign. Santos has dismissed the report. Photo: Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
Biden, Xi Meet as Underlying Frictions Remain
Watch: House Passes Plan to Avert Government Shutdown
Sen. Mullin Challenges Teamsters President to a Fight During Hearing
Candidates Explain Their Approach to Abortion Access at GOP Debate
Why Amazon Is Launching Free AI Classes
Amazon is offering free AI classes. WSJ reporter Sebastian Herrera joins host Julie Chang with more on why the e-commerce giant launched the new program. Photo: Associated Press
A Sextortion Scam Is Preying on Teenage Boys
How Israel Uses Battlefield Data to Fight Hamas in Gaza
How Bad Are Public EV Chargers? I Visited Over 120 to Find Out.
Solar Power is Booming. Could a Glut of Cheap Parts Make It a Bust?
How Italy Plans to Build the World’s Longest Suspension Bridge
Italy’s parliament has approved a plan to build the world’s longest suspension bridge between Sicily and the mainland, an area prone to 170-mph winds, powerful riptides, and earthquakes. WSJ explains the technical plans that may make it feasible. Illustration: Alexandra Larkin
Why the U.S. Can’t Quit Tipping
Inside the Decadeslong Permit Process Holding Back 10,000 Energy Projects
The High-Tech Drones Tracking the World’s Most Dangerous Storms
The Antitrust Lawsuit That Helped Make Modelo America’s Top Beer
WSJ Opinion: The Enduring Division of House Republicans
Journal Editorial Report: Speaker Mike Johnson faces familiar antagonists. Images: Reuters/Zuma Press Composite: Mark Kelly
WSJ Opinion: CEOs' Standing O for Xi Jinping
WSJ Opinion: Biden Family Subpoenas and ‘Loan Repayments’
WSJ Opinion: Hits and Misses of the Week
WSJ Opinion: Joe Manchin Announces he Will Not Run Again for the Senate
Why the Biggest Roadblock for Driverless Cars Is Driver Distrust
Driverless companies have been rolling out more self-driving cars onto public roads. But the increase in vehicles also increases the probability that one of these cars could have an accident. WSJ’s George Downs explores how companies are working to build driver trust. Photo: San Francisco Fire Department
Biden Visits Illinois Auto Plant and Celebrates UAW Labor Deal
Hollywood Actors Union Reaches Deal to End Strike
Julia Louis-Dreyfus on Her First Job and a Life Lesson From Improv
How SZA Went From Sneaker Salesperson to Music Superstar
Justice Department Details $4.3 Billion Settlement With Binance
The Justice Department announced details of a deal with cryptocurrency exchange Binance to pay $4.3 billion in fines. Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao stepped down and pleaded guilty to violating criminal anti-money laundering requirements. Photo: Haiyun Jiang/Bloomberg
Oxygen Therapy Is a Darling of the Biohacking Era. Does It Work?
FDIC Chairman Recants Testimony on Toxic Workplace Investigations
Inside Target’s Strategy to Compete With Amazon, Walmart in Fast Shipping
October Inflation Cools, Signaling End to Fed Interest Rate Hikes
How Travel Brings Families, Communities and History Closer
Sustainability Regulation: A Catalyst for Business Transformation
From Tech Startup to the Public Market
Accelerating Performance On and Off the Racetrack
What's Next for Linear TV, Nostalgic Content and Ad
Mattel's CEO on Holiday Sales, Barbie, and Future Movie Projects
CEO Ynon Kreiz talks about the company's ambitions for growing beyond the toy aisle.
Ann Mather on the Netflix Board, AI, and Working for Steve Jobs
Kyla Scanlon on Gen Z's Money Worries and Approach to Investing
Intel CEO on Why 'We Must Be Engaged' With China
Intel CEO: Why the Chipmaker's Business in Israel is 'Deeply Personal'
Why oil prices could stabilize in 2024 after a rocky stretch
Oil prices slipped this year, weighed down by a supply surplus and waning global demand. Crude prices, however, appear set to normalize in 2024 as supply and demand are expected to balance. Here is what investors need to know.