Thursday morning articles
What to Know About TurboTax Before You File Your Taxes This Year: Don’t get tricked into paying for tax prep if you don’t have to. Learn how the biggest tax preparation companies have suppressed free filling options for years. (ProPublica)
The Bloomberg Terminal Just Got a ChatGPT-Style Upgrade: The new technology is designed to make searching the terminal simpler. (Institutional Investor)
How Will AI Change Investing? I Asked a Chatbot: Are analysts toast? Will opportunities to find mispriced securities disappear? Is my fund bloated? ChatGPT kisses and tells. (Morningstar)
Investors Sold REITs in Response to the Banking Crisis. They May Have Overreacted. “We are less focused on the risks to REITs and more focused on where private market property valuations are going,” says Cohen & Steers’ Rich Hill. (Institutional Investor)
There’s Exactly One Good Reason to Buy a House: Owning a home won’t make you happy. Filling it with love will. (The Atlantic)
How You Can Grab a 0% Tax Rate: The zero rate on investment income is often overlooked. Make sure it’s in your tax tool kit. (Wall Street Journal)
Not even wrong: predicting tech: “That is not only not right; it is not even wrong” – Wolfgang Pauli. (Benedict Evans)
Trump’s Net Worth Plunges $700 Million As Truth Social Flops: The former president’s fortune dropped from an estimated $3.2 billion last fall to $2.5 billion today. The biggest reason? His social media business, once hyped to the moon, has come crashing down, erasing $550 million from his net worth—so far. (Forbes)
All the Big (and Small!) News From Watches & Wonders Geneva 2023: 2023 (Bloomberg)
The Best New Watch Designs of 2023: Here are the top timepieces from the annual Watches and Wonders trade show in Geneva. (Wall Street Journal)
FLASHBACK: When right-wing pundits thought political hush money payments were a crime: “The facts are that he broke campaign finance laws and that he lied to cover it up,” Fox News’ Sean Hannity said. (Popular Information)
Cornering Classic Cars: How a Midwestern Insurance Salesman Cornered the Classic Car Market: In two years, McKeel Hagerty has transformed his modest family business for vintage vehicles into a conglomerate with unprecedented control of the entire industry. (Bloomberg)
He Wasn’t Thinking About Renting His Arizona Home. Then Rihanna Came Knocking. When a big event comes to town or vacation time rolls in, A-listers turn to the privacy, security and space of private homes. (WSJ)
Apple’s New Classical Music App Is a Ton of Fun: It’s an exciting moment for classical music, and Apple’s new dedicated music streaming app is the perfect way to experience it. (GQ)
Paradigms Gone Wild: The tragedy of Thomas Kuhn’s life was to have written a great book. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions was published in 1962, when he was forty, and he spent the rest of his life distressed by its success. It has sold 1.7 million copies, and has been translated into 42 languages. Very few academic books sell in those numbers and scarcely any are still seen as state of the art sixty years after publication. (LRB)
How Pro Wrestling Explains Today’s GOP: The battle between Ron DeSantis and Donald Trump could split the party with surprising results, argues the author of a new book on Vince McMahon. (Politico)
You Can Kiss Your Web Browser Goodbye: Welcome to the radical future of push media, where information cascades to you—and doesn’t need your clicks. (Wired)
Why dinosaurs were terrible swimmers: They dominated earth, but not the oceans. (Popular Science)
“It’s Not So Black and White”: Gisele Bündchen, Self-Professed “Witch of Love,” Talks About It All: The supermodel is super ready for her next act, as she enjoys the pura vida in Costa Rica. (Heads up, casting directors—she has superhero ambitions!) (Vanity Fair)
The impossible job: inside the world of Premier League referees: Players, pundits and fans complain bitterly that referees are getting worse each season – but is that fair? (The Guardian)
A Collection of Cherry Blossoms: Spring started a little more than a week ago, and the Northern Hemisphere has begun to warm; flowers and trees are blooming. Gathered below are some recent images of people enjoying themselves among groves of flowering cherry-blossom trees in Tokyo; Munich; Washington, D.C.; and more—signs of warmer days to come. (The Atlantic)