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The fabulous life of Alexa Dell, the 24-year-old billionaire heiress who grew up in 'The Castle,' dated Tinder's CEO, and just got engaged with a million-dollar ring

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Hey Baldwin @heybaldwinner

A post shared by Alexa Dell (@alexakdell) on Aug 30, 2017 at 12:43pm PDT on

Just after Christmas 2017, Alexa Dell got engaged to Harrison Refua.

Dell, 24, is a daughter of Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell, who, with a net worth of nearly $24 billion, is one of the wealthiest people in the world. Her fiance, Refua, is a millionaire real-estate investor. He presented Dell with a 12-carat diamond that could be worth up to $3 million.

Read on to learn more about Alexa Dell's glamorous life.

SEE ALSO: The fabulous life of billionaire Michael Dell, who just completed a $67 billion mega-deal to cement his empire

This is Alexa Dell, 24 years old.

Instagram Embed:
http://instagram.com/p/BbicZ7YgfPJ/embed/
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Source: Instagram



Dell's parents are Michael (pictured below) and Susan. Michael is the CEO of Dell Technologies and is worth nearly $24 billion, according to Forbes.

Source: Forbes



The Dells have four children together: Zachary, Juliette, Alexa, and Kira.

Source: Forbes



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10 people who died in 2017 who reshaped the world

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Helmut Kohl funeral

2017 saw a number of people who made a massive impact in world history, in both good ways and bad, pass away.

James M. Lindsay at the Council on Foreign Relations has compiled a list of ten of the most influential people who died in 2017. The names he cites come from all over the world and represent world leaders, warlords, and even a spy.

"Each made a mark on history. Some were heroes; some were villains," Lindsay writes. "And for some, which they were is your call to make."

Check out who they are and how they changed the world:

SEE ALSO: The 50 most incredible photos of 2017

Helmut Kohl, Chancellor of Germany

Helmut Kohl oversaw some of the greatest transitions of post-war Germany.

A member of the Hitler Youth during the war, he became a politician and rose through the ranks to become the Chancellor of West Germany in 1982 and Chancellor of the reunited Germany in 1990.

During his tenure, he mended relations with France and helped end the Cold War by pursuing diplomatic goals with East Germany's Erich Honecker and the Soviet Union's Mikhail Gorbachev. After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, Kohl oversaw the reunification of Germany.

Kohl was also the architect of the Maastricht Treaty, which established the European Union and the Euro. For this, he received the first ever EU state funeral.



Martin McGuinness, Irish leader

Martin McGuinness was a former commander of the Irish Republican Army who eventually became the deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland.

McGuinness was an instrumental negotiator of the Good Friday Agreement, which helped end The Troubles, a period in Northern Ireland that saw bombings and assassinations between the IRA, British, and Loyalist factions.

Following the Good Friday Agreement, McGuinness was elected to the House of Commons, a seat he held until 2013. He also served as the leader of Sinn Fein, an Irish nationalist party, and was elected to Northern Ireland's Assembly.

In a historic moment for the British Isles, McGuinness shook hands with Queen Elizabeth during an official visit by the monarch to Northern Ireland in 2012 — something that was unimaginable years earlier.



Manuel Noriega, Panamanian dictator

Manuel Noriega was the dictator of Panama from 1983 to 1989.

Noriega, who took power in a coup with General Omar Torrijos in 1968, was originally an ally of the US. However, he began to get involved in Panama's drug trade, and sold sensitive information to US adversaries.

His popularity among his people deteriorated, and when a Panamanian soldier killed a US Marine, the US launched Operation Just Cause, an invasion of Panama “to protect American lives, restore the democratic process, preserve the integrity of the Panama Canal treaties and apprehend Manuel Noriega."

Noriega was arrested and spent 18 years in a US prison. He was extradited to France in 2010 to face money laundering charges, but was sent back to Panama, where he had been convicted of human rights abuses in absentia.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

14 hilarious pictures of what people bought online versus what they received

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Shopaholic

Shopping is great, and online shopping is even better. But sometimes things go awry when people order products online without doing their research.

From a miniature desk chair to a disproportionate, 6-foot teddy bear, keep scrolling to see 13 cringe-worthy times online shopping went wrong.

This dinosaur pillow from Amazon might have been a misprint.

In November, Twitter users claimed that instead of a dinosaur-shaped pillow, they were sent a pillowcase that showed a child sleeping on a dinosaur-shaped pillow.

INSIDER's Jacob Shamsian reported that this alleged misprint likely happened as a result of an error in Amazon's algorithm



Bethany McNamara, a 5-foot-2 hairdresser, tweeted that she was sent a pair of high-waisted pants that were the entire length of her body.

The pants, which she ordered from PrettyLittleThing in October, looked fine on the model, but they were way too long on McNamara.



Twitter user Geroge Riggall ordered a pair of jeans from ASOS, but they were also way too long.

Riggall compared the ASOS jeans to another pair he owned, and the difference seemed clear.



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20 lottery winners who lost every penny

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lottery

On Thursday afternoon, the Mega Millions jackpot reached $306 million. The Powerball jackpot hit $384 million.

While buying a ticket may seem tempting, the numbers suggest that it almost certainly isn't worth it.

But even if it does pan out, winning the lottery will not solve all of life's problems.

In fact, many people's lives became notably worse after they hit the jackpot, as you can see from the following cautionary tales.

SEE ALSO: We did the math to see if it's worth it to buy a ticket for the Powerball jackpot

Lara and Roger Griffiths bought their dream home … and then life fell apart.

Before they won a $2.76 million lottery jackpot in 2005, Lara and Roger Griffiths, of England, hardly ever argued.

Then they won and bought a million-dollar barn-converted house and a Porsche, not to mention luxurious trips to Dubai, Monaco, and New York City.

Their fortune ended in 2010 when a freak fire gutted their house, which was underinsured, forcing them to shell out for repairs and seven months of temporary accommodations.

Shortly after, Roger drove away in the Porsche after Lara confronted him over emails suggesting that he was interested in another woman. That ended their 14-year marriage.



Bud Post lost $16.2 million within a nightmarish year — his own brother put out a hit on him.

William "Bud" Post won $16.2 million in the Pennsylvania lottery in 1988, but he was $1 million in debt within a year.

"I wish it never happened," Post said. "It was totally a nightmare."

A former girlfriend successfully sued him for a third of his winnings, and his brother was arrested for hiring a hit man to kill him in the hopes he'd inherit a share of the winnings.

After sinking money into family businesses, Post sank into debt and spent time in jail for firing a gun over the head of a bill collector.

"I was much happier when I was broke," he said, according to The Washington Post.

Bud lived quietly on $450 a month and food stamps until his death in 2006.



Martyn and Kay Tott won a $5 million jackpot, but lost the ticket.

Martyn Tott, 33, and his 24-year-old wife, from the UK, missed out on a $5 million lottery fortune after losing their ticket.

A seven-week investigation by Camelot Group, the company that runs the UK's national lottery, convinced officials their claim to the winning ticket was legitimate. But since there is a 30-day time limit on reporting lost tickets, the company was not required to pay up, and the jackpot became the largest unclaimed amount since the lottery began in 1994.

"Thinking you're going to have all that money is really liberating. Having it taken away has the opposite effect," Kay Tott told The Daily Mail. "It drains the life from you and puts a terrible strain on your marriage. It was the cruelest torture imaginable."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Your favorite childhood cereals, ranked by sugar content

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cereal

  • Most of the cereals children love are packed with sugar, but that's what makes them so delicious. 
  • Some of these brands are almost equivalent to having dessert for breakfast. 
  • From Fruit Loops to Trix, here are your favorite childhood cereals, ranked by sugar content. 

Recently, the SpoonHQ team ranked some classic childhood cereal by taste and calorie count. But have you ever wondered why these cereals taste so good? The reason is simple: sugar. You probably experienced at least once in your childhood your mom not letting you have your favorite flavor because there was just “too much sugar.”

The truth is, some of these brands are almost like having dessert for breakfast. Here are ten of your favorite childhood cereals ranked from lowest to highest by sugar content.

10. Rice Krispies: 3 grams per serving

Rice Krispies have only 3 grams of sugar per 33-gram serving. This makes sugar only 9 percent of the total serving, which is something to snap, crackle and pop about. Maybe mom let you have this cereal every once in a while. With such a low sugar content, you can feel free to add marshmallow and tons of other add-ins and make your own Rice Krispie treats, like these five epic recipes.



9. Lucky Charms: 11 grams per serving

They’re magically delicious…and 31.4 percent sugar (or 11 grams per serving). You watched the commercials jealously, wishing you were one of those kids chasing the leprechaun around. Then, when you grew up and Mom couldn’t tell you what to do, you started eating Lucky Charms for every meal. Maybe you even baked them into sugar cookies, like this recipe here.



8. Cinnamon Toast Crunch: 10 grams per serving

Before there were Cinnamon Toast Crunch milkshakes and shots made with Fireball, there was the cereal. With 10 grams of sugar that made up 32.3 percent of the serving, you probably weren’t allowed to munch on this with your Saturday morning cartoons. But that’s all right, because the possibilities now are endless. Sorry Mom, but you’re craving those crazy squares.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

6 teams are fighting for the final 3 spots in the NFL playoffs — here's what each team needs

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Falcons

It's the final weekend of the NFL regular season, but there is still plenty of business to be settled before we settle in for the playoff push.

While there is still a jumble of seeding to be arranged in both conferences that will come down to numerous tiebreakers on Sunday, nine teams — the Patriots, Steelers, Jaguars, Chiefs, Eagles, Vikings, Rams, Saints, and Panthers — have all punched their tickets to the postseason. For the remaining three spots in the playoffs, six teams remain in contention.

You can dive into every possible playoff permutation of the NFC and AFC through these useful graphics, but for those simply interested in who's in and who's out, there's a few key games you'll especially want to keep your eye on.

Below we break down every team that's still fighting to extend their season. All playoff percentages based on FiveThirtyEight's projections.

Atlanta Falcons

The Atlanta Falcons have the simplest path to the playoffs — beat the Panthers this week and they're in. Depending on how things fall, it's possible that these teams would meet again in the Wild Card round, but for now Atlanta fans should keep their thinking simple. Win and you're in.

Should the Falcons fall to the Panthers, they can still sneak into the playoffs if the Seahawks fall at home to the Cardinals.

Paths to the playoffs: 

  • Falcons win
  • Seahawks lose
  • Falcons tie, Seahawks tie

Current chances: 70%



Seattle Seahawks

The Seahawks to win and the Falcons to stumble against the Panthers in order to keep playing into the postseason. Luckily for them, the Panthers still have something to play for, as they can potentially win their division with a win.

Paths to the playoffs: 

  • Seahawks win, Falcons lose or tie
  • Seahawks tie, Falcons lose

Current chances: 30%



Baltimore Ravens

For the Ravens, a spot in the AFC playoffs is all but secured. They control their own fate, and are playing the Bengals at home. If they win, they are in.

But should the Ravens stumble against the Bengals, they'd still be able to get a spot in the Wild Card round with a Bills loss to the Patriots or a Titans loss to the Jaguars. With so many outs remaining for Baltimore, fans should feel pretty comfortable about their postseason chances.

Paths to the playoffs: 

  • Ravens win or tie
  • Bills lose or tie
  • Titans lose or tie

Current chances: 94%



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

13 places around the world that are being ruined by tourism

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barcelona tourists market

  • Tourists can make everyday life much harder for locals in cities all over the world. 
  • Some tourists vandalize ancient monuments, like one traveler who carved his name into the Colosseum in Rome, Italy. 
  • Cities often receive an influx of tourists during peak season, sometimes far more than their own population.

 

It's no surprise that locals often get frustrated with tourists who visit their home city.

Some tourists have behaved very badly while traveling, from knocking over art displays while taking selfies to throwing items at the Queen's Guard in London.

Some cities have encountered so many problems with tourists that they've introduced caps on how many people can visit the city per day. Locals in other cities have even held protests against tourism in their hometowns.

Keep reading for 13 places that have been ruined by tourism.  

Venice, Italy

Venice is already known to be sinking, and the masses of tourists that visit the city every year certainly aren't helping.

Locals have complained that tourism, including cruise ships, is responsible for increased pollution in the city, and the UNESCO World Heritage Committee is concerned about the impact it has on Venice's many historical sites.

Venice has implemented strict rules regarding tourism: littering, engaging in horseplay, not wearing a shirt in public, leaving love locks, and writing on or damaging trees or buildings are all fineable offenses in the city. According to CNN, the city is even limiting the number of new hotel rooms.



Dubrovnik, Croatia

In part due to the popularity of HBO's "Game of Thrones," Dubrovnik, Croatia, has seen a significant increase in tourism in recent years. The coastal city that is frequently seen on the show experienced a 10% rise in tourism in 2015 due to "Game of Thrones," according to Dubrovnik's mayor. 

The city hasn't been able to handle to recent influx of tourists, however. In August 2017, Dubrovnik's mayor announced plans to reduce the maximum number of tourists allowed in the city per day from 8,000 to 4,000 over the next two years. 



Reykjavik, Iceland

Reykjavik, Iceland, is a popular vacation destination, especially given recent airfare deals. However, the entire country has been overwhelmed with tourists in recent years.

In 2015, 1.26 million people visited Iceland, compared to the country's population that year of approximately 330,000. In 2016, the number of American tourists alone will be greater than the number of locals.

A local politician recently complained about the number of tourists, comparing the island country to Disneyland. While tourism has given the economy a much-needed boost post-recession, it's bad news for local infrastructure (there's construction everywhere), and it has pushed local prices sky-high.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Inside the secretive waterfront town that's home to Bill Gates' $125 million 'Xanadu 2.0' and Jeff Bezos' $91 million estate

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MedinaSeattle (12 of 35)

Forget about the Upper East Side of New York or Atherton, California, as bastions for the ultra-rich.

The tiny waterfront city of Medina, Washington, is where several of the world's wealthiest people live.

Located just outside of Seattle, Medina is home to the world's top two richest people— Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos.

But they are far from the only moneyed residents. The town's inhabitants include a number of other Microsoft bigwigs, tech entrepreneurs, and telecom magnates. 

We visited to see why the sleepy town has become a haven for the 1%.

SEE ALSO: The world's richest people are flocking to these 17 cities

DON'T MISS: Meet the kids of the world's richest tech billionaires

Medina is located on a peninsula, just across Lake Washington from Seattle, and has long been a haven for tech bigwigs in the area.



Visitors enter the town from the Evergreen Point Floating Bridge. At 7,708 feet-long, it is the longest floating bridge in the world.

Source: The Seattle Times



Medina is a city of about 3,000 people. The Medina Beach Park doubles as the City Hall and police station.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

An ex-Google exec, a 'Shark Tank' investor, and other experts think they know what work will look like in the future

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A Universal Robots employee demonstrates how a model of their industrial robot arms works in Singapore March 3, 2017. Picture taken March 3, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su

As 2017 draws to a close, LinkedIn asked experts in a range of fields to share the ideas that will make the biggest impact in 2018.

Some of the greatest insights had to do with the future of the workplace.

CEOs, professors, and entrepreneurs weighed in with predictions about everything from open offices to corporate diversity.

Read on to find out how these experts think work will change for most people in the next 12 months.

SEE ALSO: 11 experts share their favorite tips so you can make 2018 your most productive year yet

DON'T MISS: 12 awesome offices reveal what work will look like in the future

James Manyika, chairman of the McKinsey Global Institute, says you probably won't lose your job — but it will change

Manyika says jobs will fall into one of three buckets: lost (e.g. cashiers), gained (e.g. robot repairers), and changed (everyone else). According to a McKinsey report, up to one-third of the American workforce may have to learn new skills and change occupations by 2030.

Jobcase CEO and founder Fred Goff told Business Insider's Aine Cain that blue-collar workers shouldn't worry too much about the coming of the robots. That's because there will likely be new jobs that we haven't even thought of yet.

Still, Goff emphasized the importance of preparing to re-train to gain more marketable skills.



Arianna Huffington, founder and CEO of Thrive Global, says we'll start paying more attention to technology's effects on our daily lives

"We're at an inflection point," she told LinkedIn.

Huffington said something similar in an article for NBC News: "[W]hat we need is to re-calibrate our relationship our technology. This is one of the most important conversations of our time. ... Importantly, our ability to have this conversation won’t last forever. The rise of AI, and the increasing hyper-connectivity of our daily lives, has the potential to erode our humanity even further."

Some experts in the fields of mental health and psychology have already started making some noise around this issue. For example, Business Insider's Chris Weller spoke to Adam Alter, an NYU psychology professor and the author of the new book, "Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked," about our addiction to technology.

Alter says people who work at technology companies are literally responsible for creating products that people can't resist — but simply being aware of a product's irresistible design is the first step to fighting the addiction.



Wharton professor Adam Grant says artificial intelligence will help us with creative projects

Think speeches you've given or articles you've written. What made them great — and how can you replicate the success?

"A.I. is going to help us learn from our own successful routines," Grant said, adding that he's already set up a database with all his work so the technology can start analyzing.

A less-fancy version of this technology is already available in speech-coaching apps such as Ummo. As Business Insider's Nathan McAlone reported, Ummo tracks your speech so you know which phrases you overuse and learn how to pace yourself.

Grant also predicted that companies will start adding CLOs — chief learning officers — who will help workers prepare should they have to switch jobs.

Grant said: "If you don't think it's strategic to have a function that comes right down from the C-suite — to think how do we retrain, and how do we reskill? — then you're going to be missing out on a really high-qualified workforce to do jobs that don’t exist today."

 



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5 claims Trump used to justify pulling the US out of the Paris Agreement — and the reality

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Donald Trump

On Thursday, President Donald Trump announced that he would begin pulling the US out of the Paris Agreement on climate change. The accord, signed by all but two countries, aims to keep the world from warming by more than 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, a threshold that scientists say could save the planet from the worst-case scenarios of climate change.

During a White House news conference, Trump outlined his reasons for leaving the agreement. Many of them, however, were based on questionable data. Here are some of Trump's main arguments for exiting the pact — and what the numbers say about them.

SEE ALSO: Trump is pulling the US out of the Paris Agreement — here's what that could do to the environment

Job losses

Trump suggested that US compliance with the Paris accord could "cost America as much as 2.7 million lost jobs by 2025, according to the National Economic Research Associates."

The report on which that claim is based has been widely criticized by environmental groups. As the World Resources Institute pointed out, the NERA study uses a scenario in which the US industrial sector is forced to reduce the country's overall emissions by nearly 40% in 20 years. That calculation doesn't take into account the role of other sectors in reducing emissions.

The WRI also faults the NERA report for assuming a low rate of clean-energy innovation. That rate was calculated by the Department of Energy as a minimal case that "may underestimate advances." What's more likely, the National Resources Defense Council suggests, is that the development of clean energy technologies will accelerate. Even since 2016, solar costs have decreased by about 8%.

Today, solar jobs vastly outnumber those in coal, and those numbers continue to grow — a recent report from the International Renewably Energy Agency estimated that employment in the solar industry expanded 17 times as fast as the US economy overall in 2016.



Just a tiny temperature decrease

Trump also suggested that the Paris Agreement would lead to only a minuscule reduction in global temperature.

"Even if the Paris Agreement were implemented in full, with total compliance from all nations, it is estimated it would only produce a two-tenths of one degree — think of that, this much — Celsius reduction in global temperature by the year 2100," he said. "Tiny, tiny amount."

A detailed analysis of the impact of the Paris goals by Climate Interactive suggests those numbers are off.

The global temperature will rise — there is no scenario in which there will be an overall reduction. But let's assume that Trump meant a reduction from the projections of temperature increases that would happen without the Paris Agreement.

Under a "business as usual" scenario in which past trends continue, the expected temperature increase in 2100 is 4.2 degrees Celsius (7.6 degrees Fahrenheit). If all nations fully achieve their Paris pledges, however, the average global surface temperature in 2100 is expected to be 3.3 degrees. That means the accord would lead to a reduction of nine-tenths of one degree, not two.

Nine-tenths of a degree on a global scale is huge. Since the industrial revolution, global temperatures on average have risen 0.99 degrees Celsius, according to NASA. That's not so far from .90, and we're already seeing plenty of dramatic changes around the planet. Even a reduction of two-tenths of a degree would not be "tiny"— it would be 20% of the increase we've already seen.

Trump went on: "In fact," he said, "14 days of carbon emissions from China alone would wipe out the gains from America — and this is an incredible statistic — would totally wipe out the gains from America's expected reductions in the year 2030."

That claim also does not appear to be accurate. With the US abandoning its commitments, Climate Interactive calculates that by 2025, the country would emit 6.7 gigatons of CO2 a year instead of the 5.3 gigatons of CO2 a year that the US would emit under the agreement.

As of 2013, China emitted 9.2 gigatons of carbon dioxide a year— which comes out to 0.025 gigatons a day. Fourteen days' worth would be 0.35 gigatons — far less than the annual US decrease.



A negative economic impact on the US

In his speech, Trump suggested that remaining in the agreement would cost the US economy "close to $3 trillion in lost GDP and 6.5 million industrial jobs, while households would have $7,000 less income, and in many cases, much worse than that."

Trump didn't cite a source for that statistic, but he suggested in a speech on April 29 that the cost would be $2.5 trillion — and the nonpartisan website Factcheck.org looked into that claim.

White House spokesman Steven Cheung told Factcheck.org that the number came from a report published by the conservative Heritage Foundation in April 2016.

Factcheck.org ran Heritage’s analysis by Roberton C. Williams III, a resource economist at the University of Maryland who is a senior fellow at the economic-analysis nonprofit Resources for the Future. Williams said the Heritage estimate was correct based on the methodology the foundation used — the analysts estimated a carbon tax rate of $36, which would increase by 3% each year from 2015 to 2035. With those numbers, the US gross domestic product would take a hit of 0.55% annually through 2035.

But according to calculations done by Resources of the Future, the US could reach its Paris goals with a much lower carbon tax rate over less time (either a constant rate of $21.22 a year until 2025 or a rate that starts at $16.87 and increases by 3% each year in the same period). By those numbers, the US GDP would be negatively affected by about 0.10% to 0.35% a year from now until 2025.



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How America's No. 1 bicycle company secretly tested the world's lightest production road bike, then unveiled it the day before the Tour de France

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Trek Emonda SLR 9 2018 bike launch Contador

Most major bike brands adore the Tour de France, and for good reason. Millions watch the three-week race from the roadside and hundreds of millions more watch it on TV, making it the ideal time to roll out new bikes and cycling gear.

But brands don't just introduce new bikes at the race. Bikes need to be test-ridden, tweaked, and, yes, raced. At the same time, companies want to preserve the excitement of a new bike, build hype, and ensure customers keep buying the existing model that's soon to be replaced.

Trek Bicycle Corp.'s launch this past summer of its latest super-high-end road bike was a good example of how brands try to conduct under-the-radar real-world testing before unveiling bikes in prime time. The day before this year's Tour it debuted one of the most talked-about new bikes, its redesigned Émonda SLR 9, an ultralight carbon climber for its Trek-Segafredo team.

But it came only after a year or so of redesigning the bike from its previous iteration and trying its best to test it in stealth mode with some of the world's best cyclists.

In the run-up to this year's Tour, Business Insider got an inside look at how America's leading bike company readied and debuted one of the most important bikes in its over 40-year history.

DON'T MISS: Canyon finally comes to America

SEE ALSO: Kittel makes history at Tour on discs brakes

NEXT UP: A conversation with Sven Nys, the greatest cyclocrosser of all time

It all began for us with a cryptic email from Trek inviting a handful of journalists to attend a private event at its headquarters, in Waterloo, Wisconsin, in early June, less than a month before the Tour's start in Düsseldorf, Germany. The invite concluded by saying it was an embargoed event, meaning no teaser previews or "spy shots" on social media until June 30, the day of the official launch.



So about three weeks before we headed to the Tour we made the drive from Chicago to Waterloo, wondering what lay in store. Almost certainly Trek would be announcing a new bike — but which one? A redesign or a completely new one? Or something else?



We arrived at Trek HQ in time for the opening presentation. The large building, sleek and modern, houses about a thousand employees (another thousand or so work at offices and stores around the world). Trek says everyone is encouraged to get out and ride during the workday, and employees we talked to said the company has a "very generous" employee discount on bikes and gear. Trek is the only billion-dollar bike company in the US.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This startup makes sofas that sound almost too good to be true — they’re easy to move and only take 10 minutes to build

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The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships so we may get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

Burrow_Father_Dog

  • Moving and assembling furniture is a major pain that everyone has gone through and no one enjoys. 
  • Burrow makes mid-range priced, quality sofas that can be set up in a fraction of the time it usually takes.
  • The sofas are simple but customizable, and even come with convenient outlets and USB ports.

Raise your hand if you like moving. If you're raising your hand, you are probably lying to yourself. You think you like your couch now, but when you have to lug it up and down too many flights of stairs (because the fifth floor walkup is totally worth the cheaper rent), and reassembling it takes an hour, an army of support, and a literal pool of sweat and tears, you might reconsider how much you're really lovin' that couch. 

For young adults transitioning through college and post-grad life, finding and keeping quality furniture is easier said than done. At the end of every academic year, you can look at any campus "For Sale" group online and you'll see hordes of students putting their furniture up for sale and hoping they can make even a fraction of their money back. 

Direct-to-consumer start-up Burrow aims to change this relentless cycle by offering mid-range priced, quality sofas that can be set up in under 10 minutes, no tools necessary. 

The Y-Combinator-backed company came out of founders Stephen Kuhl and Kabeer Chopra's own struggles with the complications of sofa buying, shipping, and assembly. Their business model and solution to a common problem have clearly resonated. Burrow delivered its first luxury couch within just 12 weeks of coming up with the original business idea in 2016, and crossed $1 million in sales within its first six months. 

Here's how Burrow is changing the way you buy your sofa:

SEE ALSO: The 10 best purchases I've made to save space in my small apartment

The sofa features a simple mid-century design, but is also customizable to your tastes and needs.

You can choose the fabric color, armrest height, and number of seats. However you combine the options, you'll end up with a versatile couch that you can carry with you throughout your life. 

  • Four seat number options
  • Two arm options: Low or High
  • Five color options: Beige, Brick Red, Crushed Gravel, Navy Blue, and Charcoal

 



The pricing is on par with that of similar sofas you would find at West Elm or Wayfair.

While it may be more expensive than something you would get at IKEA, unlike an IKEA product, a Burrow sofa is easier than assemble and one that you'll actually keep. Here are the prices: 

  • 1 seat: $495
  • 2 seat: $795
  • 3 seat: $1095
  • 4 seat: $1,395 


Shipping and assembly is easy.

Shipping is free, the sofa ships in two to five business days, and you don't need to be home to sign for the package. 

The sofa arrives in lightweight boxes. Each seat is contained in its own box, and the arms are contained in another box. The assembly process consists of nine steps, is tool-free, and should take 10 minutes or less.

The nice thing is that you have the flexibility to make your sofa smaller or larger by simply removing or adding additional seat modules. 



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10 celebrity babies we can't wait to meet in 2018

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celeb babies 2018

2017 was a banner year for famous babies. From Beyoncé and Jay-Z's twins, Sir and Rumi, to Mindy Kaling’s baby girl, fans couldn't get enough of each celebrity’s new offspring. Even more so, pop culture addicts were obsessed with pregnancy rumors this year, anticipating who would be expecting a child in 2018.

As the new year rolls around, there’s a lot to be excited for, including the births of many celebrity babies. Here are 10 famous babies we can’t wait to meet in 2018.

Khloe Kardashian and Tristan Thompson

Fall of 2017 was the season of Kardashian pregnancy reports, particularly for Khloe and her younger sister, Kylie Jenner.

Although Jenner’s pregnancy is yet to be confirmed, Kardashian officially announced that she and boyfriend Tristan Thompson are expecting. In the Instagram post, she wrote, "I still at times can’t believe that our love created life! … I know we’ve been keeping this quiet but we wanted to enjoy this between our family and close friends as long as we could privately."



The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge

Another royal baby is on the way! Prince William and Kate Middleton announced in September that they are expecting another child. The royal couple currently has two children: Prince George and Princess Charlotte.

Although fans are enjoying predicting the upcoming baby’s name, the couple nor Kensington Palace have confirmed a name yet. The baby is due in April.



Jamie Lynn Spears and Jamie Watson

Cue the "Zoey 101" theme song. Actress and singer Jamie Lynn Spears announced on Christmas Eve that she and husband Jamie Watson are expecting.

This is Spears’ second child, the first being Maddie Briann Aldridge born in 2008. In the Instagram post, Spears wrote, "I appreciate each of you for your patience and support through it all. 2018 has a lot coming, so GET READY …"



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The INSIDER Horoscope: Prepare for a powerful start to the new year this January

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Think big, think long-term and do whatever it takes to start the month and year off in a positive way.

The new year kicks off with Saturn in Capricorn, a powerful positive as it’s one of the signs it rules. This planetary position indicates a very strong and powerful start to the new year for business, as well as love and money with Venus also in this area.

The first of the year brings the full Moon in Cancer, the sign the Moon rules, and a Supermoon, which intensifies the energy in a way that allows you to get in touch with your emotions and thoughts. The energy inspires you to put plans into action. During the first week, Mars and Jupiter connect and this powerful combination in Scorpio can present opportunity.

In the second week, the combined Sun, Venus, Pluto energy is a powerful force to push forward with your plans and goals. The Capricorn new Moon mid-month encourages career development. As the Sun and Venus move to Aquarius, the energy helps to broaden your perspective on life and make you more open to options and opportunities.

Mars moves to the adventurous sign of Sagittarius and the month concludes with a full Moon in Aquarius, the second full Moon for the month, a powerful Supermoon, and a total lunar eclipse, which heightens emotions and passion. A perfect combination to bring success in 2018.

ARIES: The more passion and certainty you can start the year off with, the more successful you will be.

January kicks off with a new start in the way of business, however, it will be up to you to recognize the opportunities and go after them. The more passion and certainty you can start the year off with, the more successful you will be.

Moon energy and the lunar eclipse at the end of the month can help connect you with like-minded people who could be significant in your life. But don’t leave love out of your schedule, as romance can take you by surprise now. Friends can be supportive during this time too, so you will need to divvy up your time between work and your social life. 



TAURUS: Love is possible right now.

The more you learn, the more you will succeed. Be open to expanding your knowledge in order to step up your career. Knowledge is power. Combine knowledge with utilizing your contacts for connecting with power players and you will be in a good position this year to realize your professional dreams.

Love can be passionate right now and can provide the trigger that lets you know you have met someone amazing, someone more in tune with you. A family development can demand your attention, and you will want to be there for someone close.



GEMINI: Love is definitely in the air for you this month.

Love is definitely in the air for you this month, Gemini! Communication is important. Remember, the way to form a close relationship and build intimacy between you and another is to share your inner thoughts even if it does make you feel a little vulnerable.

Financial opportunities and options can reveal themselves and this year, you have a chance to build long-term security. Teamwork is also favored, but with the right people, of course. When thinking of your new year resolutions, make sure your health and well-being are on the list.



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The best value plays in your DraftKings lineup for Week 17 of the NFL season

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Antonio Gates

It was another solid week for our daily fantasy value picks last Sunday.

Dion Lewis and Bilal Powell were both top-five running backs, providing DraftKings players with 55 points between them for just $10,000 worth of your budget. Eric Ebron also showed up as the second best tight end of the week, available for the low, low price of $3,700.

For the final week of the regular season, we're back at it, trying to identify the best, affordable players for your DraftKings lineup. Below we've picked some of our best value plays for daily fantasy. Consider them when trying to find a few extra dollars to upgrade elsewhere in your lineup.

QB: Jameis Winston, $5,800

Jameis Winston got a bit of blowback after he was seen shouting on the sidelines on Sunday, but as a value play this week, he's still a pretty solid choice. Few quarterbacks in this price range have the potential high return of Winston.



RB: Derrick Henry, $5,500

The Titans are playing for a Wild Card spot on Sunday and with DeMarco Murray out for the game, a large portion of the Tennessee offense will be on the shoulders of Derrick Henry. Henry has already had a few break out games this year and should be in good position to have another one on Sunday against the Jaguars.



RB: Carlos Hyde, $4,900

The Rams are sitting some of their best players on Sunday to keep them fit for the playoffs. The defensive front of Los Angeles will have an Aaron Donald-sized hole in the middle of it, and I expect Carlos Hyde to run straight through it.



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25 high-paying jobs for shy people

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• Shy people can thrive in certain occupations and work environments.

• Business Insider scoured Occupational Information Network (O*NET to find out what jobs are a great fit for shy people.

• Many of the jobs we found are in the field of science.



Shy people are often at risk of getting shouted over and ignored in certain office settings, regardless of how talented and competent they are.

But that doesn't mean that reserved, quiet employees always have to be relegated to workplace wallflowers.

Some occupations actually seem tailor-made for the shyer individuals among us.

Business Insider reviewed the Occupational Information Network (O*NET), a US Department of Labor database that compiles detailed information on hundreds of jobs, and looked at salary data on the US Bureau of Labor Statistics' website to find positions with a median annual salary of over $75,000 that do not require much social interaction.

O*NET ranks how important "preferring work with others rather than alone, and being personally connected with others on the job" is in any job, assigning each a "social orientation importance level" between 1 and 100.

Here are 25 high-paying positions with a social orientation importance level of 40 or lower:

SEE ALSO: 11 horrible body language habits that are hard to quit but you'll be glad you did

Molecular and cellular biologists

Median salary: $75,150

Social orientation importance level: 32

Molecular and cellular biologists study the nature and use of areas of the Earth's surface, relating and interpreting interactions of physical and cultural phenomena.



Network and computer systems administrators

Median salary: $77,810

Social orientation importance level: 39

Network and computer systems administrators install, configure, and support an organization's local area network, wide area network, and Internet systems or a segment of a network system.



Biochemists and biophysicists

Median salary: $82,150

Social orientation importance level: 25

Biochemists and biophysicist study the chemical composition or physical principles of living cells and organisms, their electrical and mechanical energy, and related phenomena.



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The TB12 Method: Inside Tom Brady and Alex Guerrero's fitness philosophy of hydration, pliability, and avocado ice cream

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Tom Brady

Tom Brady is a bit of a health nut, which makes sense. It's hard to be one of the top quarterbacks in the NFL for 17 seasons without being in peak physical condition.

But over the past few years, Brady has gone from providing mystifying sound bites about his regimented lifestyle to building a full-fledged exercise empire along with his fitness guru, Alex Guerrero. Along with a book released in September, the TB12 product line includes apparel, gym equipment, and nutritional supplements, all geared towards the goal of "sustained peak performance."

But just how does Brady employ the TB12 method to get results in his day-to-day life? Below, find out more about one of the strictest lifestyles in all of sports.

At 40, Tom Brady is the oldest starting quarterback in the NFL, and he's also one of the best.

Read more: Bill Belichick had a great response to whether he plans on buying Tom Brady's new book



In an 18-season career, he has won five Super Bowl rings and has been named to 13 Pro Bowls, including the past nine editions.



But staying at the top of your game for nearly 20 years isn't easy — in fact, Brady is a bit of a fanatic when it comes to his physical fitness.



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The 50 best video games of all time, according to critics

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There are dozens of ways you could put together a list of the best video games ever made. You could look to classics, like "Super Mario Bros." here.

You could look at impact on the medium, or highest sales. You could write down your personal favorites on pieces of paper, then throw them into the air. Where the pieces land? That's your list.

But what we've got here is something slightly more scientific. Reviews aggregation site Metacritic compiles all reviews of games, then it averages those scores into an overall average. What you'll find below is the top 50 highest-rated games of all time, based on the averages obtained by Metacritic. We made one small change: Since there are a handful of duplicates on the list (multiple versions of the same game, released on multiple platforms), we've just taken the highest-ranked version of the game to make room for a handful of games that wouldn't have otherwise made the list.

Without further ado, these are the 50 best video games of all time:

SEE ALSO: The 50 best movies of all time, according to critics on Metacritic

50. "Devil May Cry"

Critic score: 94/100

User score: 8.6/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "In a large American metropolis, a man named Dante, a private investigator of the supernatural, is seeking revenge for the death of his mother and brother. The world is waiting, for Dante is no ordinary man, and with his father's sword in hand, he must enter the demon realm and avenge mankind."

Platforms: PC, iOS, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One



49. "Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4"

Critic score: 94/100

User score: 8.4/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "Build your skills, earn respect, and show that you've got what it takes to Go Pro. 190 progressively harder goals. No time clock, no constraints. Pro-specific challenges. Evolving levels. Interact with other skaters. Multi-player modes. Customize your game...Your career is what you make of it."

Platforms: GameCube, Xbox, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, Tapwave Zodiac, OS X, PC



48. "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2"

Critic score: 94/100

User score: 6.4/10

Plot summary (from Metacritic): "'Modern Warfare 2' continues the gripping and heart-racing action as players face off against a new threat dedicated to bringing the world to the brink of collapse. An entirely new gameplay mode which supports 2-player co-operative play online that is unique from the single player story campaign. Special Ops pits players into a gauntlet of time-trial and objective-based missions. Rank-up as players unlock new Special Ops missions, each more difficult. Missions include highlights from the single player campaign, fan favorites from 'Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare' and all new, exclusive missions. Setting a new bar for online multiplayer, 'Modern Warfare 2' multiplayer delivers new capabilities, customization, game states and modes, including: Create-a-Class Evolved. Secondary Weapons - Machine Pistols, Shotguns, Handguns, Launchers. Riot Shields. Equipment - Throwing Knives, Blast Shield, Tactical Insertion. Perk Upgrades. Bling (Dual Attachments). Customizable Killstreaks - AC130, Sentry Gun, Predator Missile, Counter-UAV, Care Package. Accolades (Post match reports)."

Platforms: Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC, OS X



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The weird and wild ways Microsoft's first employees spent the millions they made

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Bill Gates

For those lucky enough to hitch their wagons to Microsoft early on in its meteoric rise to the top of the computing market, the payoff was huge.

Some analysts estimate that thanks to the stock options the company gave to early employees, Microsoft had created three billionaires and as many as 12,000 millionaires by 2005. And even for those who didn't quite get to those heights, the rewards were huge. 

Here's a look at what some of Microsoft's most successful alumni have done with their post-Redmond lives, from fine art to spaceflight. 

SEE ALSO: WHERE ARE THEY NOW? What happened to the people in Microsoft's iconic 1978 company photo

Bill Gates, the world's richest man, is a huge collector of rare books and paintings. In 1998, he set a record for American art when he paid $36 million for Winslow Homer's "Lost on the Grand Banks."

The record has since been surpassed — earlier this year, Jean-Michel Basquiat painting sold for $110 million at auction.

Source: The New York Times



Former CEO Steve Ballmer was reportedly interested in bringing an NBA team back to Seattle, but when those plans fell through he dropped $2 billion on the Los Angeles Clippers.

Ballmer has since said that he has no plans to bring the Clippers to Seattle.



Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen owns two pro sports teams — the Seattle Seahawks and the Portland Trailblazers, plus he's a part owner of Major League Soccer's Seattle Sounders. And he owns a massive yacht with a submarine on board. Take that, Ballmer.



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No 'Star Wars' game has ever looked this real

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In the last two Star Wars games, "Battlefront" and "Battlefront II," you're given a sandbox of Star Wars characters and worlds to play in.

These games are very pretty — some of the best-looking games on any system — but they don't hold a candle to what one intrepid gamer turned the original "Battlefront" into. 

Behold:

Star Wars Battlefront mod

No, that isn't a still from "Star Wars: The Last Jedi"— that's what happens when you apply a "mod" (modification) to "Star Wars Battlefront" on PC. And no, you can't do this to the Xbox One or PlayStation 4 versions, sadly; modding games requires a level of access to the guts of a game that you simply can't access on consoles.

All that aside: Whoa, right?

SEE ALSO: A brand new 'Star Wars' game was just announced — here's everything we know

All of these images was captured by the mod's creator, Martin Bergman.



Bergman says that running the mod can be pretty intensive on your computer's processor.



It apparently drops the framerate pretty dramatically (in the 30-40 frames per second range).



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