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Anna Kepner Update: Mother Speaks Out As Stepbrother Becomes Suspect

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Anna Kepner’s mother Heather said that she had been told not to attend her daughter’s memorial.

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Where software engineers can live well and earn big

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Seattle
Seattle

Data guru Hakeem Shibly recently dug into every US software engineering pay package shared with Levels.fyi in the past year.

His goal: Figure out which cities pay engineers the best after adjusting for the cost of living.

The Greater Seattle Area tops the list, followed by Austin — ahead of the big dog, Silicon Valley, which ranked third.

A few surprises: Denver and Boulder edge out bigger, older hubs such as Chicago. The Raleigh-Durham research area in North Carolina ranks pretty high, offering solid compensation along with a reasonable cost of living.

Want more options beyond Big Tech hubs like Silicon Valley and the Seattle area? San Diego, Dallas, and Atlanta offer software engineers a solid combination of pay and manageable living expenses, according to Levels.fyi data.

If you want to know which tech jobs pay what kind of money, check out Business Insider’s salary data here.

And here’s the data from Levels.fyi, in a handy chart from BI’s awesome graphics crew:

Sign up for BI’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.

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China War Over Taiwan Would Trigger Global Financial Crisis, US Warned

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A congressional commission warned the economic fallout could be on a par with the 2008 Great Recession.

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Miss Mexico crowned Miss Universe weeks after leading walkout following viral berating

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The pageant, held in Thailand under the theme “The Power of Love,” was marred by scandal since the contestants arrived in Bangkok, the capital, in early November.

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Trump Posts Viral AI Video With Cristiano Ronaldo

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Donald Trump spins, dribbles, and heads a football with soccer icon in a surreal AI-generated White House clip.

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California officer, 28, killed in violent crash during pursuit: ‘Dedicated public servant’

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First responders across Los Angeles County are mourning the death of an Alhambra police officer who was killed in the line of duty early Thursday after a police pursuit ended in a violent crash.

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Ukraine Lays Out ‘Red Lines’ as Trump’s Russia Plan Revealed: Live Updates

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Ukraine is digesting the White House’s 28-point draft plan for peace with Russia. Follow Newsweek’s live coverage.

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Iran Ends Nuclear Inspection Deal—What We Know

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Tehran suggests openness to a ‘balanced’ deal with the U.S.

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I visited Meta’s NYC pop-up. It felt like a mix of an Apple store and Warby Parker, with no expense spared.

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Henry Chandonnet is pictured in the Meta Ray-Ban Displays.
My trip to the Meta Lab pop-up included a Meta Ray-Ban Meta Display demo.

  • I visited the New York Meta Lab pop-up. It got me excited for the future of Meta’s in-person retail.
  • The pop-up was artfully designed and loaded with different use cases for the company’s AI glasses, which you can demo.
  • Meta staff dwarfed the number of customers, but it may have been a quiet period at 11:30 a.m. on a weekday.

For years, Meta has built its businesses online. Now, it’s also expanding to brick-and-mortar — including a new two-story location in NYC that I visited this week.

As it continues to launch new gadgets, including its popular Ray-Ban and Oakley AI glasses and VR headsets, Meta is accelerating its in-person pop-ups. In 2022, Meta opened its store in Burlingame, California, near the company’s Reality Labs campus. Pop-ups expanded to Los Angeles in 2024 and Las Vegas in October 2025. The recently opened pop-up in New York is smack in the middle of 5th Avenue’s shopping hub.

In-person retail could send new customers to Reality Labs products. Meta’s AI glasses and VR headsets have been available at major retailers for some time, but the Meta Labs pop-ups are the company’s first stand-alone glasses stores.

Are these pop-ups the future of Meta’s retail presence? I visited the New York location to find out.

Meta Lab was in the luxury shopping district on 5th Avenue.
Meta Labs is pictured on 5th Ave.

Meta Lab is a small, blue building on Fifth Ave. The pop-up is around the corner from the St. Regis hotel, and two blocks from the Louis Vuitton flagship. Next door is the jewelry boutique Harry Winston.

The area is ripe for foot traffic.

The pop-up “highlights and fosters community.”
The Meta Lab founding principle is pictured.

On the door, Meta Lab gives its mission statement. The four paragraphs were also at the base of the elevator bank inside.

“We endeavor to set the standard for conceptual retail in tech by celebrating customization and self-expression,” it read. “We hope the experiences will continue to delight and bring you back time and time again.”

The first floor was filled with AI glasses.
Ray-Bans are pictured and Meta Lab.

Upon entering, Meta Lab resembled a Warby Parker (funnily enough, Warby Parker partnered with Google for its rival AI glasses bet.)

The walls were lined with AI glasses from collaborations with both Oakley and Ray-Ban. These glasses were available for purchase, while the Meta Ray-Ban Displays required an appointment to buy.

One of Meta’s retail innovations: ping pong paddle mirrors.
Ping pong paddle mirrors at Meta Lab.

There were mirrors all around the Meta Lab, and I caught more than one customer taking a mirror selfie. They were also used for glasses demos (say: “Hey Meta, take a picture”).

On the glasses counters, Meta replaced the traditional rubber on a ping pong paddle with a mirror for handheld use.

The pop-up’s design was skate-themed.
A Zoo York skateboard is pictured.

After exploring the wall of glasses, I turned to the other side, which was filled with skateboard-themed art. The collection was made in collaboration with Zoo York. It offered viewers an opportunity to “travel through the timeline of New York skate culture,” per a sign.

Around this time, I noticed how quiet the Meta Lab was. At 11:30 a.m. on a Wednesday, it likely wasn’t peak hours. However, on this base floor, there seemed to be twice as many staff members as customers.

A Meta representative wrote over email that “foot traffic numbers have exceeded expectations across all stores.”

Time for a demo!
A Meta Lab employee unboxing a pair of Ray-Bans

The Meta Lab is built for AI glasses demos. There are signs scattered around the shop suggesting prompts to ask your glasses. Naturally, I signed up.

A trusty Meta Lab employee pulled me aside and started with my first demo: the second-generation Meta Ray-Bans.

“Hey Meta, take a picture.”
The Meta Ray-Bans in a mirror.

My Meta Lab guide walked me through all of the features. He showed me how to play music, how to ask Meta AI for information, or how to take a picture. Thus, this mirror selfie.

He also showed me how the Ray-Bans have transition lenses based on the time of day and brightness. Using a flashlight, he darkened one of the lenses. That, dear reader, is why it looks like I’m wearing an eyepatch.

My second demo: The higher-tech Meta Ray-Ban Display
The Meta neural band is pictured.

Going upstairs, I asked to demo the Meta Ray-Ban Display, which, as their name suggests, includes an integrated screen in the glasses lens. (I was still jealous of my colleague, Peter Kafka, who got to try them out in September.) My Meta Lab guide sized a “neural band” for me and walked me through its features.

The glasses are controlled through a series of small hand motions. Users tap their index finger to select, or their middle finger to go back. To swipe, they move their thumb back and forth on their index finger, similar to a joystick.

It took some time to get used to. Eventually, I felt like a pro.

The Display lived up to the hype.
Henry Chandonnet is pictured in the Meta Ray-Ban Displays.

My Meta Ray-Ban Display demo was fascinating.

The Maps feature seemed helpful, as did the search function. The quality of the live transcription was more varied. But, above all, I was awed by the tech. The integrated screen was discreet, and I could see future use cases. Yes, I would love to watch Netflix on the subway without having to look down at my phone. Meta just needs to get there.

One fun moment: Walking me through the search functions, my Meta Lab guide asked me to pick a question of my own. I asked, “Who is the CEO of Meta?” The Displays brought up an older pick of Mark Zuckerberg, before he became the broccoli-haired Buff Zuck. I told my guide; he laughed.

Am I going to pay $799 for a pair of Displays? No. The tech is a bit too early for me, and I’m not sure the screen justifies itself just yet. (I’m more likely to buy the simpler AI Ray-Bans; I liked the music and photo options.) However, it was a promising sign of what’s to come in wearable technology.

Let’s tour the upstairs!
Meta's custom Ray-Ban cases are pictured.

Having finished both of my demos, it was time to tour the upstairs of the pop-up.

First up: the custom engraving bar. With printers in the back, customers could request custom cases for their glasses or get the New York-only specialty case.

Next to it was a café area, where customers could request coffee from Buddies in Williamsburg or massive black-and-white cookies.

This is also when I started realizing how much money Meta likely spent. From multiple art collections to food and case engravings — let alone the prime New York real estate — Meta spared no expense.

Spotted: the Meta Quest headsets.
Meta's Quest headsets are pictured.

The Meta Lab was almost entirely devoted to AI glasses. They covered the walls, both upstairs and downstairs, and the art was designed for use with the glasses.

But, tucked into a nook near the register, customers could find another Meta hardware bet: Meta Quest VR headsets.

Some of the glasses were hooked up to demo tablets.
A demo at Meta Lab is pictured.

In many ways, the Meta Lab felt like a hybrid of an Apple Store and a Sunglass Hut. Some of the glasses were connected to tablets for a demonstration, which was helpful when human Meta workers weren’t available to assist.

Except, Meta employees were everywhere. With only a few customers browsing the pop-up, many staffers were chatting among themselves. There was even a Meta elevator attendant whose job was to press 1 or 2.

It’s possible the Meta Lab was more overstaffed than under-trafficked.

One Meta AI use: creating custom stickers.
Meta Lab's

Part of the Meta Lab’s goal is to show customers new and exciting use cases for the company’s AI, beyond generating recipes and email drafts.

Using Meta AI’s image generator, the “Sticker Slam” offers customers the chance to create their own AI-generated images. I asked for my dog, Charlotte, with angel wings and a tiara. The machine nailed it.

Evan Mock designed much of the top floor.
Art designed by Evan Mock is pictured in Meta Lab.

Keeping with the skate theme, actor and skateboarder Evan Mock designed much of the top floor. The colors were all neon, and there were name plates plastered around a map of New York with Mock’s memorable spots.

The display featured some print magazines in which Mock was featured on the cover. This wasn’t the Lab’s first reference to magazines. Downstairs, one of the Meta AI prompts asked the glasses where to buy skateboarding magazines.

I spotted a copy of V Magazine, one of my first jobs in journalism. Print media isn’t dead!

Leaving the Lab, I felt hopeful for Meta’s hardware effort.
The Meta Logo is pictured in the design of the pop-up.

I prepared to leave the Lab, but not before marveling at the subtle Meta logo carved into the pop-up’s high wooden arch.

It led me to wonder: Could part of the Lab’s relative slowness during my visit have to do with the pop-up’s “Meta Lab” branding? American shoppers could certainly recognize the company’s mega-popular products, such as the classic blue Facebook logo or the rainbow Instagram camera. But how many could point out the Meta logo?

Indeed, the name Meta itself is still relatively fresh, dating back to 2021. Maybe a “Facebook Lab” would drive more foot traffic.

Regardless, the Meta Lab left me excited. The demos were thrilling, and the design was inventive. Meta seems happy with it, too. The Meta representative told me that the pop-up will be open for the “next few months,” but that they are hoping to make it “a more permanent location.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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How China Is Changing Its Social Credit System

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The often misunderstood system is more of a “sprawling regulatory infrastructure” than a universal social score, one analyst says.

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