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Caiaimage/Paul Bradbury | Caiaimage | Getty ImagesWhen is a dupe an appropriate gift? Alternatively, "if it seems appropriate in the situation — if it is a more light-hearted gift — you can definitely go the dupe route," she said. 'It's a dupe for a reason'While some shoppers take pride in buying dupes, roughly 86% of shoppers have been disappointed by their purchase of a dupe, CouponCabin found. Shopping secondhand this seasonConsumers should make the same value considerations when buying secondhand, which has also become more popular, even for gifting. The majority, or 83%, of shoppers are also open to receiving secondhand gifts this holiday season, the report found.
Persons: Paul Bradbury, Caiaimage, Ellyn Briggs, Melanie Lowe, Lowe, CouponCabin, Lauren Beitelspacher, it's, Beitelspacher Organizations: Morning, Babson College, Pew Research Center, Facebook Locations: dupes, U.S
Accenture CHRO Ellyn Shook's biggest lessons from the C-suite
  + stars: | 2024-11-04 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAccenture CHRO Ellyn Shook's biggest lessons from the C-suiteCNBC Content Editor Susan Caminiti sits down with Accenture CHRO Ellyn Shook for a wide-ranging exit interview ahead of her retirement in March. Shook shares her biggest lessons from her 36-year career at Accenture, her thoughts on generative AI, leading with compassion, and how to find your purpose.
Persons: Susan Caminiti, Accenture CHRO Ellyn, Shook Organizations: Accenture, CNBC
Gen Z is choosing "micro-spending" over traditional financial milestones, analyst Riani Kenyon said. AdvertisementTwenty-somethings are ditching traditional financial milestones in favor of filling their wish lists with more instant forms of gratification. Gen Z is collecting trinketsSonny Angel dolls have become a hit with American Gen Zers. Related storiesThey're adhering to trendsHailey Bieber, a trendsetter for Gen Z, has many lining up to buy her beauty brand. RhodeAs the TikTok For You Page refreshes, so do the hot new items that Gen Zers must have.
Persons: Riani Kenyon, , Ellyn Briggs, Meredith Whitney, Gen, Kenyon, Angel, Zers, Edmond So, Z, Sonny Angel, Sonny Angel unboxing, Hailey Bieber, Briggs, Gen Zers, Shawn Owens, Hailey Bieber's, It's, Owens, Stanley, Megan Willett, Owala, Todd Owyoung, Gen Z, That's Organizations: Service, Financial, American Express, China Morning, Getty, Dreams USA, Rhode, Wei, NBC Locations: TikTok, Hailey Bieber's Rhode
From leggings to lip gloss, there's a dupe for almost any brand-name product. Buying a knockoff used to be a consumer's dirty little secret, largely because a "fake" was considered inferior to the real thing, not to mention the economic cost and intellectual property rights infringement. But brand imitators, also known as dupes — short for duplicates — have elbowed their way into the mainstream and are now even cool. "It's not a direct knockoff, it's kind of revising something that's very chic from a designer world into a more accessible product," Walker said. Even when consumers can get the real thing, nearly 33% of adults intentionally purchased a dupe of a premium product at some point, according to a report by Morning Consult.
Persons: Sara Walker, Walker, Ellyn Briggs Organizations: Finance, Morning Locations: Los Angeles
ConstructionElon Musk's vision of a Martian city (top) and an artist's concept of Bezos' O'Neill space colony (bottom). Bezos' space stations could be built to resemble Earth more easily — no massive terraforming necessary. "If I had to pick a billionaire's vision of the future, I would definitely go with Elon Musk's Martian colony," Gonçalves told BI. That's why Rachael Seidler thinks Musk's Martian cities are a better bet than Bezos' space stations. Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesThe majority of experts BI spoke with agreed that Musk's Martian colony is more feasible than Bezos' enormous space stations.
Persons: Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Musk, Bezos, he's, O'Neill, Anthony Longman, Longman, I'm, Rebeca Gonçalves, Gonçalves, Elon, Rachael Seidler, SEBASTIAN KAULITZKI, roaches, we've, Adam Watkins, It's, Watkins, it's, Joe Raedle Organizations: SpaceX, Origin, Business, Elon, YouTube, Space Station, NASA, Wikimedia, University of Florida, University of Nottingham, Elon Musk
Using AI to decode clicks from sperm whales, the scientists discovered a sophisticated alphabet hidden in the animals' sounds. And similar to Morse Code, their clicks are what they mainly use to communicate and socialize with other sperm whales. AdvertisementThinking like baby whalesA Project CETI collaborator holds the drone that the researchers use to observe sperm whale behavior and body language. Project CETIIn partnership with the Dominica Sperm Whale Project, Project CETI observes and documents sperm whale communication using a variety of different technologies. The researchers supplement these auditory recordings with drone surveys of the whales' body language and field observations taken by Project CETI researchers.
Persons: , David Gruber, Gruber, Brandon Sloter Organizations: Service, Business, Project, Morse, Nature Communications, Project CETI, NOAA Locations: Dominica, Eastern
In the game of climate change, there are both winners and losers. AdvertisementMany of these climate change "winners" are hardy, fast-breeding scavengers that already live in some of the most degraded habitats on Earth: cities. When it comes to what they eat, they aren't picky, which means they probably don't have to worry about climate change eliminating their food source. If climate change is driving a "ratpocalypse," as some evidence suggests, that could have big consequences for human health. But as climate change raises temperatures and alters precipitation trends, their range is expanding and shifting to new geographic areas.
Persons: Giovanni Strona, Shutterstock, they've, We're, , they're, They're Organizations: Service, Business, Commission's, Research Centre, Pest Control, South America, AP, CDC Locations: York, Africa, Asia, South America, South, Florida, Texas, Europe, Vermont
Read previewTwo years ago today, NASA unveiled the first full-color space images captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. Webb's raw telescope images can look like empty black boxes when they first beam back to Earth. NASA/ESA/CSA/STScIDePasquale is a principal science visuals developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute. He processed some of the very first Webb images that the public got to see. They're able to resolve very small details in these really distant objects," like the Tarantula Nebula, DePasquale told Business Insider.
Persons: , James Webb, Joe DePasquale, DePasquale, Webb, David Higginbotham, Webb peered, Joseph DePasquale, Anton M, Alyssa Pagan Organizations: Service, NASA, James Webb Space, Business, JWST, ESA, CSA, Telescope Science, Hubble
Elon Musk offered his sperm to seed a settlement on Mars, anonymous sources told The New York Times. Secretive teams at SpaceX are investigating options for a Mars colony, including reproduction, according to the report. It's unclear whether it's possible to have babies on Mars due to high radiation and low gravity. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Two anonymous sources told the Times that Musk had volunteered his sperm.
Persons: Elon Musk, , Elon, Mars, Musk Organizations: New York Times, SpaceX, Service, Times, Business
NASA aims to send astronauts to Mars by the 2030s. But with current technology, the journey will be years long. That's why NASA invested in a new type of rocket that could shorten the trip to just 2 months. AdvertisementNASA has invested $725,000 in a new rocket system that could solve one of the major obstacles standing in our way of sending humans to Mars: travel time. With current technology, a round-trip to the red planet would take almost two years.
Persons: Organizations: NASA, Service, Business
Seeing Workplace Misery, They Offer Company
  + stars: | 2024-07-09 | by ( Martha C. White | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
“Making It Work” is a series is about small-business owners striving to endure hard times. Over six months of weekly video calls, Ms. Schiro, 45, learned how to pare down her overloaded to-do lists. Making changes like adding a line to her email signature saying that she does not respond to messages sent after 6 p.m. seemed like “stupid stuff,” she said, but it took an outsider’s perspective to pinpoint these adjustments. “When you’re burned out, it’s hard to think of those things and implement them,” Ms. Schiro said. Even before the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted how and where people work, the World Health Organization recognized burnout.
Persons: Karen Schiro, Ellyn, , , Schiro, pare, you’re, ” Ms, Michael P, Leiter Organizations: World Health Organization, Acadia University Locations: Fairfax Station, Va, Tacoma, Nova Scotia
Everest is the world's tallest peak, that doesn't mean it's the most difficult to climb, according to three professional mountaineers. Jenn DrummondDon't let the name fool you — when it comes to difficulty, there's nothing secondary about the Seven Second Summits. Unlike the seven highest summits, some of the Seven Second Summits involve skiing and rock climbing in addition to hiking. AdvertisementOut of all the Seven Second summits, Mt. Climbing Mt.
Persons: , Jenn Drummond, Drummond, there's, Jake Meyer, Garrett Madison, it's, crevasses —, Alan Arnette, Arnette, Jason Maehl, Madison Organizations: Service, Mountaineers, Business, Everest Locations: Everest, Kilimanjaro, . Logan, Nepal, Kathmandu, Logan, Tyree, Mt . Logan, Mt, Lhotse, Nuptse
Dr. Andrea Sanchez, a veterinarian at Banfield Pet Hospital, previously told Business Insider that cats scratch to communicate, stretch and condition their claws, and claim possessions. But if you really want your cat to stop scratching up your couch and chairs, it's worth knowing the exact reason they're doing it in the first place. How to stop cats from scratching up your furnitureStressed-out cats can wreak havoc on your furniture and other household items. Magui-rfajardo/Getty ImagesIf your cat won't stop scratching up your furniture, there are things you can do to curb the behavior, the researchers found. Observing your cat's scratching behavior can help you figure out what type of scratching post is best for them.
Persons: , Andrea Sanchez, they're, Larisa Tyushova, Nico De Pasquale, Quagliozzi Organizations: Service, Banfield Pet Hospital, Business, Veterinary Science Locations: France
Read previewNASA has confirmed that a hunk of space junk as big as a car hood found in North Carolina belonged to a SpaceX Dragon Capsule, according to an agency statement shared on X. AdvertisementDebris from the Dragon Capsule landed in the middle of a train at the Glamping Collective, a mountaintop resort in North Carolina. Photos by Brett Tingley, courtesy of the Glamping CollectiveA similar chunk of Dragon trunk was found in Franklin, North Carolina in June. It's when space debris free-falls toward Earth with no one controlling its course. Even though this space debris is relatively small compared to, say, car-sized satellites, it's not harmless.
Persons: , Justin Clontz, Space.com, Brett Tingley, It's, landers, Moriba Jah, Jah, Jonathan McDowell, McDowell, it's Organizations: Service, NASA, SpaceX, International Space, Business, International Space Station, United Nations Office, Outer Space Affairs, Aerospace Engineering, Engineering Mechanics, The University of Texas, Harvard, Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Aerospace Corporation, Federal Government Locations: North Carolina, Asheville, Franklin , North Carolina, Saskatchewan, Canada, Florida, Austin, Asheville , North Carolina
K2 "has been called the mountaineer's peak, whereas Everest has become more of an amateur climber's peak," he added. In 2023, roughly 600 climbers summited Mt. The average cost to climb Everest in 2024 was about $55,000, according to pricing data from ExpedReview. Everest, Mt. AdvertisementEven though Everest is the tallest of these three mountains, it's not the most challenging to climb, Madison said.
Persons: , Garrett Madison, He's, it's, LAKPA SHERPA, Alan Arnette, Arnette, Jake Meyer, It's, Madison Organizations: Service, K2, Business, Everest, Everest Mountaineers, Getty, Magazine, PBS, Madison Locations: Everest, Nepal, Everest's, Kathmandu, Mt, Madison, ExpedReview, Lhotse, Nuptse, it's, It's
Read previewIn the search for intelligent alien life, finding a Dyson sphere would be like hitting the jackpot. Dyson spheres are a hypothetical, super-advanced form of alien technology that may surround seven stars in our galaxy. Love Employee/Getty ImagesDespite what the name suggests, a Dyson sphere isn't necessarily one solid sphere that encases a star, although the most advanced ones could be. AdvertisementFor their study, Majumdar and colleagues analyzed more than 5 million stars throughout the Milky Way that exhibit IEEs. Next, the researchers will look closer at these seven strong Dyson sphere candidates using spectroscopic analysis, Majumdar said.
Persons: , Freeman Dyson, Suman Majumdar, Majumdar, Dyson, Jason Wright, Boyajian, Gaia, Wright Organizations: Service, Business, Royal Astronomical Society, Indian Institute of Technology, Penn State University, Dyson, ESA, Gaia, Space Agency, Louisiana State University
Now that his cancer is in remission, his next adventure is to run about 111 miles through Death Valley, California, to celebrate. When he finished treatment in 2023, he decided to make the 111-mile trip through Death Valley, "as a treat to myself," he said. The hottest time of year in Death Valley (shown here) is the same time Zahab plans to run through it. Jesse DelgrosseThat's because Death Valley was experiencing hotter-than-usual temperatures that year. This summer's Death Valley run will be the next in a long series of ultramarathons and expeditions for Zahab.
Persons: , Ray Zahab, Matt Damon, Zahab, Tucker Prescott, it's, shakiness, chemo, didn't, Jon Golden, he's, Jesse Delgrosse That's, I've, Stefano Gregoretti Organizations: Service, Business, Zahab Locations: Canadian, Death, Death Valley , California, chemo, South America
On Thursday and Saturday, two different "potentially hazardous" asteroids will fly by Earth. The first is as big as a mountain, and the second will be one of the brightest in recent history. Neither of them pose a threat to Earth, and you can watch their fly-bys live. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Due to their size and trajectory, both of these space rocks are labeled "potentially hazardous."
Persons: Organizations: Service, European Space Agency, Business
Read previewThe oceans are our planet's largest carbon sink, naturally absorbing about 25% of the carbon dioxide that humans emit. Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) companies like Equatic are trying to harness that natural process to absorb even more. On June 18, Equatic announced it started engineering designs for the world's first commercial-scale, ocean-based CDR plant, Sanders said. The plant could remove carbon dioxide at a rate that's 99,000 times as fast as the oceans. Questions remain about CDR's economic and environmental impactAs ocean-based CDR technology scales up, concerns grow over its environmental impact.
Persons: , Edward Sanders, Equatic, Sanders, Grace, Weiquan Lin, we're, Sergii Petruk, Jessica Cross, Cross Organizations: Service, Business, National Academies of Science, Engineering, Companies, Boeing, Equatic, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Locations: LA, Singapore
Read previewGarrett Madison has built a career on risking his life to stand atop the world's tallest peaks. Everest, oxygen is scarce. Lack of oxygen causes the body to produce more red blood cells, which carry oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body. AdvertisementHow you can whip your body into Everest shapeIt's best to train for a high-altitude climb outdoors on hilly terrain. His company, Madison Mountaineering, has even created a training guide that can help whip your body into shape for an Everest-level climbing expedition.
Persons: , Garrett Madison, I'm, Madison, michelangeloop, he's Organizations: Service, Business, Madison, Everest, Madison Mountaineering Locations: Everest, summiting Mt, Lhotse, Nuptse, Madison, Washington
These three peaks — Mt. Everest, Mt. Professional mountaineer Garrett Madison has achieved the Everest triple crown not once, but twice — first in 2023, the deadliest Everest climbing season on record, and again this year. Plus, the climbers have to carry extra protective equipment like gloves and packages for transporting the trash down the mountain. Madison's cleanup project partners with both of these organizations in a united front against trash pollution on the world's tallest peaks.
Persons: , Garrett Madison, he's, we've, Madison, PRAKASH MATHEMA, Everest haven't, Troy Aupperle, summitted, Aupperle, PIERRE BESSARD, it's, Alton Byers, Byers, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Madison, DOMA, Everest, Pollution Control Locations: Everest, Mt, Lhotse, Nuptse, microplastics
Jeff Bezos's space colonies would look like cylindersAn artist's concept of an O'Neill space colony, which could theoretically emulate Earth-like living conditions in space. O'Neill space colonies would be large enough to host entire cities, 10,000-foot-tall mountains, and millions of people. AdvertisementBezos isn't suggesting that people will be living in O'Neill space colonies by the end of the century. AdvertisementSaving Earth would be far easier than building Bezos' space colonies, he told BI. Even if we never make it to space colonies, the work of researchers studying extraterrestrial colonization could benefit us here on Earth.
Persons: , Jeff Bezos, podcaster Lex Fridman, Bezos, Fridman, astrobiologists —, Jeff Bezos's, O'Neill, Gerard K, Anthony Longman, Longman, Rebeca Gonçalves, Adam Watkins, we've, Watkins, you've, We've, Martin Rees, Gonçalves, Rees Organizations: Service, Business, Elon, SpaceX, European Space Agency, NASA, University of Nottingham, United, Royal Locations: Antonio , TX, O'Neill
But there is a possibility that residual underground lava tubes may still exist. HUM Images/Getty ImagesIf these lava tubes are anything like Earth's, they could be the perfect place for astronauts to hunker down during their stay on Mars. It's unclear if lava tubes on Mars would also be this warm — it's not a stretch to imagine, just a challenge to confirm. But to be clear, just because there could be life in these pits, doesn't mean Mars definitely hosts extraterrestrials. "This is a good place to look, but we don't know if there's life on Mars at all," Johnson said.
Persons: , Brandon Johnson, Johnson, George Rose, Ross Beyer, Beyer, there's, it's Organizations: Service, University of Arizona, Business, NASA, JPL, Scientists, Purdue University, Olympus, SETI Institute, Goddard, Arizona State University, Reconnaissance Locations: Arizona, Tharsis, Hawaii
Read previewHidden off the US Western shore, beneath the Pacific Ocean, is the Cascadia Subduction Zone. The results will help scientists assess earthquake and tsunami risk for this region, including one particularly vulnerable state: Washington. How the Cascadia Subduction Zone causes earthquakesIn the Cascadia Subduction Zone, the Juan de Fuca plate is slowly subducting under North America. The Cascadia Subduction Zone can produce even larger, more dangerous quakes. Additionally, understanding that Cascadia is broken up into segments is key to assessing earthquake hazard, Watt said.
Persons: , Suzanne Carbotte, Bruce, Lamont, Carbotte, Juan de Fuca, Juan, Fuca, de Fuca, it's, Chris McGrath, Janet Watt, Watt Organizations: Service, Business, Columbia University, US, Survey Santa Cruz Locations: Cascadia, Washington, US West Coast, North America, America, Japan, Gaziantep, Turkey, Oregon, British Columbia
WASP 107b: The exoplanet that shouldn't existAn artist's impression of WASP 107b passing in front of its host star. But models suggested that WASP 107b's core would be too small to have formed a gas giant. Scientific models didn't align with observationsHubble images of WASP 107b didn't solve the mystery of its large size and low density. Venom82Why it took astronomers years to understand WASP 107b's mysterious origins stems from what many astronomers face: a lack of information due to technological limits. But WASP 107b's surface temperature was cold enough that it should have had more methane than what JWST observed.
Persons: , they've, it's, David Sing, NASA's, Luis Welbanks, Sagan, James Webb, Welbanks —, Sing, Welbanks, Ralf Crawford, we're, Scott Gaudi, Gaudi, Olmsted, Russo Organizations: Service, Business, ESA, Hubble, NASA, Kornmesser, Bloomberg, Johns Hopkins University, WASP, NASA's Goddard Space Flight, ESO, Arizona State University, Telescope, Sing, WASP 107b's, CSA, JHU, Ohio State University
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