Bibliografías recientes

Título Fuente
The beast of Bentonville battles Amazon, the king of the e-commerce jungle. Amazon’s position today is eerily reminiscent of Walmart's circa 1999 The Economist
Worm hole. The first voyager to another star may be a worm or a tardigrade. Life in the fast lane The Economist
Negative-emissions technology. What they don't tell you about climate change. Stopping the flow of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is not enough. It has to be sucked out, too The Economist
Remember corporate Europe? It wants to be noticed again. Emmanuel Macron is helping revive the grandest idea in European business The Economist
New Green advocates. Climate-change lawsuits. Global warming is increasingly being fought in the courtroom The Economist
Sucking up carbon. Greenhouse gases must be scrubbed from the air. Cutting emissions will not be enough to keep global warming in check The Economist
Summit-mania. New life for the Paris climate deal. A flurry of meetings should help curb greenhouse-gas emissions. But the global agreement is still essential The Economist
Miniature robotics. Military robots are getting smaller and more capable. Soon, they will travel in swarms The Economist
The meaning of the man behind China’s ideology. Why Wang Huning is a name to remember The Economist
Buried poison. China’s rockiest environmental problem: its soil. Cleaning filthy soil is much harder than cleaning foul air The Economist
Disjointed markets. The price of cannabis is falling, suggesting a supply glut. Hazy regulations encourage American marijuana firms to list in Canada The Economist
Calculating behaviour. The EPA is rewriting the most important number in climate economics. Reducing the social cost of carbon would allow the EPA to dispense with regulations The Economist
Seeing is believing. Drones—what are they good for? Today’s drones are mostly flying cameras. They are already being put to a wide range of business uses The Economist
Can drones deliver the goods? Why the wait for delivery drones may be longer than expected. Carrying cargo is a lot more complicated than carrying a camera The Economist
Rules and tools. The future of drones depends on regulation, not just technology. Engineers and regulators will have to work together to ensure safety as drones take to the sky The Economist
Welcome to the wild. Broadcom's $130bn Qualcomm bid highlights a ruthless chip industry. The world’s biggest-ever technology deal would face antitrust scrutiny globally The Economist
The leapfrog model. What technology can do for Africa. Technology in Africa is making huge advances, says Jonathan Rosenthal. But its full benefits will be reaped only once basics like power supplies and communications are widely available The Economist
Not so Froogle. The European Commission levies a huge fine on Google. Its case is not perfect, but it asks the right questions The Economist
Lost in the maize. Why fertiliser subsidies in Africa have not worked. Good intentions, poor results The Economist
Scandal, outrage and politics. Do social media threaten democracy? Facebook, Google and Twitter were supposed to save politics as good information drove out prejudice and falsehood. Something has gone very wrong The Economist

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