
đ Good morning. Bostonâs iconic Citgo sign is going away â temporarily. The sign, which has been towering over Kenmore Square since 1965, is being relocated 30 feet higher and 120 feet east in a project that will cost $8m and keep the sign visible as the cityâs skyline changes. While the sign is down, it will get a little makeover: Each 11-foot-tall letter will be cleaned and repainted before being reinstalled, hopefully this winter. Because nothing says âhappy holidaysâ like a 60-foot neon petroleum logo.
NEWS FLASH

đ Lots of scary stuff lurks under the oceanâs surface⊠including a lack of WiFi. Researchers at the University of Florida developed magnetoelectric antennas that let robots communicate wirelessly underwater across nearly half a mile using only 10 watts of power, a feat given the ocean typically absorbs Bluetooth wireless signals. The tech could one day help robots conduct environmental monitoring, naval operations, and ocean infrastructure inspections without needing to surface just to call home.
đ Make sure you have all your belongings: Thatâs the advice passengers are given, but apparently do not follow. Uber released its annual Lost and Found Index, which this year included a 15-pound bowling ball, dentures, and a large marble duck. For the first time, the list also included items left in robotaxis. To get those back, owners must either pay an Uber courier a flat $15 fee or pick them up from wherever the cars are charged.
â Uh⊠what? Randy Pitchford, co-founder of Gearbox Software, posted to X that his friend found a Google Pixel Watch 5 while scuba diving in the Caribbean Sea. Google released its Pixel Watch 4 in 2025, but has yet to announce, let alone release, a follow-up. Pitchford said his friend contacted him because of his tech connections, and has since arranged for the device to be returned. Is this a real leak? A marketing gimmick? A hoax? Nobody knows, but Google isnât expected to announce anything until its Pixel event in August or September, per Engadget.
MORE NEWS TO KNOW
-
Wall Street, meet Claude: Anthropic filed plans for an IPO that could be one of the biggest AI IPOs ever, with a possible trillion-dollar valuation.
-
AI ainât cheap: Google parent company Alphabet plans to sell $80B worth of stock, including a $10B Berkshire Hathaway investment, to fund its AI infrastructure.
-
Oops: Hackers allegedly found a surprisingly easy way to access Instagram accounts: asking Metaâs AI chatbot to reset their passwords. Meta has since resolved the issue.
-
Fancy: Disney has a new robotic arm that carves marble statues, which are then refined by humans. Marble is apparently a good material choice when youâre dealing with Florida weather.
DECISIONS, DECISIONS...

Which AI tool should you use for coding?
We scrutinized these tools for speed. Ease of setup. The learning curve. Model quality. Use cases. And also, secretly, what my high school track coach once called âthe intangibles.â
But why not test-drive both yourself? OpenAI Codex and Claude Code are two of the hottest tools available, and AI expert Matt Wolfe just dropped six tips for choosing your assistant.
THE BIG IDEA

How much money does happiness cost in 2026?
Sixteen years ago, two researchers stumbled upon a surprising discovery: you could, in fact, put a price on happiness. Their finding â that happiness levels plateau after you earn $75k â made international news. The middle class was jazzed.
But that was then. This is now: inflation is up nearly 50%, the markets are steering toward a correction, and itâs never been more expensive to be alive. So how much does happiness cost today?
Hundred-thousand-dollar smile
A straight, inflation-based calculation puts 2010âs happiness at ~$112k in todayâs dollars.
But since then, other researchers have tried to attach an updated price tag to life satisfaction.
The ideal income point, as determined by research from Purdue University, varies depending on where in the world you live:
- $125k in Australia
- $105k in North America
- $70k in Southeast Asia
- $45k in Eastern Europe
According to Matt Killingsworth, a senior fellow at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and the guy who keeps the worldâs most robust happiness data, there isnât a ceiling after all.
âAs far as I can tell, more is more,â he tells The Hustle.
Academics have long argued that once you earn over a certain amount, your happiness gains are negligible or even turn into losses. But Killingsworth says the data doesnât bear that out, even with the longer hours more income generally requires.
âIâve already gone way past the threshold where they argue that occurs and thatâs not what Iâm seeing,â he says.
Control freaks
One noteworthy data point that does stand out to him, though, is that while people who make more are happier outside of work, theyâre certainly not any happier 9-to-5 than their fellow office drones.
âMoney seems to matter where we can spend it,â he says. âMoney buys you freedom over the things you want to do.â
Killingsworth suggests thinking about income in terms of agency. Control, it turns out, is one of the most important mechanisms linking money and happiness.
âIs higher income giving you freedom,â he asks, âor taking it away?â
Still, itâs possible there is a plateau and he just hasnât found it yet. His next study will seek to answer: Is there such a thing as too rich?
Weâre going to go out on a limb and guess no.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Who is still buying tandem bikes? Matter of fact, who is still making them? We went to find out.
NEWSWORTHY NUMBER

Miles between Boston Logan International Airport and its new remote terminal, where travelers can now go through check-in and security screening, then be shuttled straight to their gate. The first-of-its-kind terminal, which opened on Monday, aims to ease airport congestion by allowing passengers to bypass arrivals traffic and long security lines. But is it actually efficient?
The service, which is currently only available to Delta and JetBlue passengers between 5:30am and 4pm, requires a reservation and recommends coming close to three hours early for domestic flights. Plus, there are no liquids allowed on the 30-minute-plus bus ride.
Kinda sounds like just another stressful step to a day of travel, minus your morning car ride coffee.
HOW YOU HUSTLE
We donât need to tell you â our readers are amazing. We wanted to dedicate some real estate to a Hustler building something big.
Who: Madison Neri
What: Valoré
The elevator pitch: âValorĂ© is a social discovery app that surfaces hotel recommendations from communities you actually trust. Your friends, your favorite online groups, people with your taste. No paid placements, no gamed reviews. Just hotels worth staying at, found through people worth listening to."
The problem theyâre solving: âHotel discovery is broken. Review sites are flooded with fake reviews, search results are gamed, and influencer content is sponsored. There's no reliable method for finding a hotel you can trust, unless you happen to know the right people to ask. ValorĂ© makes those people findable.â
Origin story: âMy boyfriend and I both work full-time in fintech and travel whenever we can. But every trip started the same way: hours of me crowdsourcing, texting friends, scrolling influencer feeds, falling down travel blog rabbit holes, trying to figure out where to actually stay.â
One truly innovative thing theyâre doing: âInstead of aggregating reviews from anonymous strangers, ValorĂ© pulls recommendations from the specific communities you already belong to and trust.â
What are you working on? Tell us here.
AROUND THE WEB
đ
On this day: In 1943, the âZoot Suit Riotsâ â a violent clash between US sailors and anyone wearing the âzoot suitsâ that had become popular with young men of color â began in downtown Los Angeles.
⟠Thatâs interesting: The Guardian examines how the Savannah Bananas have grown from a small, strange baseball team to something bigger.
đ° Newsletter: Stacked Marketer brings you the latest marketing news and insights.
âïž Game: Mine for ore.
đ Aww: Zoomies.
SHOWER THOUGHT
Each person celebrates a new year twice a year if they also celebrate their birthday. SOURCE
Today's email was brought to you by Juliet Bennett Rylah, Katherine Laidlaw, and Singdhi Sokpo.
Editing by: Sara "In pursuit of happiness and $112k" Friedman.
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