Steve Jobs Used the 2-Hour Rule to Come Up With Some of His Greatest Ideas. So Can You
Steve Jobs knew that constant busyness was the enemy of great ideas. Put his insight to use with the 2-Hour Rule.
Read more at Inc.
Topics
-
The risks of ‘space junk’ are clear: what goes up, might well come back down on top of you | Patrick Schröder
As commercial space activity ramps up, detritus from launches poses a risk to active satellites and those of us down on Earth. Last month, people in a small village in Kenya looked to the sky and ...The Guardian - 2d -
Orhan Pamuk: ‘I have some fame, so I can say things others cannot’
The Turkish writer, 72, talks about his father’s artistic support and being a feminist in the Middle East, his love of Istanbul and fear of government repression. I grew up in a middle-class, ...The Guardian - 4d -
The Brightest Comet of 2025 Is Coming. Here’s How You Can See It Shine
On January 13, Atlas C/2024 G3 will reach its closest point to the sun.Wired - 4d -
‘As the sun comes up, it is so upsetting’: KNBC reporter shows wildfire destruction
KNBC reporter Brittany Hope shows the devastation left behind by a wildfire in Malibu after sunrise.NBC News - 5d -
Agentic AI can help you to get a new software engineering job in 2025
Thanks to a widening skills shortage, software engineers don’t generally have to look too far for a new role on better money.VentureBeat - Jan. 7 -
How to Tell Stories Like Steve Jobs
A professor came up with four principles that anyone can use to make messaging more memorable.Inc. - Jan. 6 -
The big idea: can what you eat change your mind?
From designer drinks to dodgy leftovers, our brain responds to food in surprising ways. Probiotic drinks, brain-boosting superfoods, gut-healthy snack bars: every day we’re bombarded with ...The Guardian - Jan. 6 -
Vikings snatch up $2 million worth of tickets so their fans can invade Detroit for game vs. Lions
Minnesota is pulling out all the stops for the biggest game of the seasonCBS Sports - Jan. 6 -
Did the US jobs market hold up?
Market Questions is the FT’s guide to the week aheadFinancial Times - Jan. 5 -
How Meta’s latest research proves you can use generative AI to understand user intent
By thinking about recommendation as a generative problem, you can tackle it from new angles and use LLMs to better understand user intent.VentureBeat - Jan. 3
More from Inc.
-
Star Psychologist Adam Grant Joins Glassdoor as ‘Chief Worklife Expert’
In this role, the bestselling author and organizational psychologist aims to leverage the company’s workplace data to improve work lives, he tells Inc.Inc. - 12m -
Star Psychologist Adam Grant Joins Glassdoor as ‘Chief Worklife Expert’
In this role, the bestselling author and organizational psychologist aims to leverage the company’s workplace data to improve work lives, he tells Inc.Inc. - 12m -
7 Unexpected Ways to Make Your Workplace Irresistible
Unpopular but highly effective, these strategies maximize employee engagement and retention to create a more compelling employee experience.Inc. - 1h -
Everything to Know About Big Banks Earnings
Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and other firms are expected to report strong earnings.Inc. - 3h -
Warren Buffett Wants You to Know What He Thinks Makes an Exceptional Leader
Your accomplishments and brilliance don’t matter as much as this leadership skill.Inc. - 3h
More in Business
-
JPMorgan Chase posts record profit as the bank’s massive scale pays off
The bank said profit rose 50% to $14 billion in the fourth quarter as noninterest expenses fell 7% from a year earlier.CNBC - 2m -
Core inflation rate slows to 3.2% in December, less than expected
The consumer price index was expected to rise 0.3% in December and show an annual inflation rate of 2.9%.CNBC - 4m -
Citigroup swings to fourth-quarter profit, tops estimates on investment banking strength
The fourth-quarter report comes after a year where Citi's stock rose almost 37%, outperforming the S&P 500.CNBC - 8m -
Stocks and bonds rally after US price pressures ease
Headline inflation rises to 2.9% for December but closely watched core figure dips unexpectedlyFinancial Times - 8m -
Microsoft launches consumption-based 365 Copilot Chat option for corporate users
Microsoft is providing an alternative to the Microsoft 365 Copilot, which has gained some commercial adoption at $30 per user per month.CNBC - 12m