Finding Your Next Match on Coffee Meets Bagel With a Video
When three sisters were frustrated by dating options, they decided to do something about it. In 2012, Coffee Meets Bagel was born. It's a dating app that prioritizes women, and also gives you a limited number of swipes per day.
Dawoon Kang is a co-founder of the app, and she joins Cheddar to explain the dating site's new video feature. CMB now includes a daily video question that users can choose to give a response to. Those responses offer the opportunity to get a glimpse of the user's personality and authentic self.
In a world with dating app saturation, CMB is trying to be different. Kang is hoping users will enjoy the ability to connect via video.
If you wince at the grocery store checkout, you’re not alone. Wall Street Journal reporter Jesse Newman breaks down why prices are so high – and not going down anytime soon.
An inflation gauge favored by the Federal Reserve increased in January, the latest sign that the slowdown in U.S. consumer price increases is occurring unevenly from month to month. (Getty Images)
Glen Smith, CIO at GDS Wealth Management, shares how investors can allocate their assets as the market broadens and why he’s eyeing June for the first potential rate cut.
After years of price increases for cars and trucks in the United States, costs are slowing and in some cases falling, helping cool overall inflation and giving frustrated Americans more hope of finding an affordable vehicle.
Missed out on the Nvidia wave? Oh course you did — you’re reading this article aren’t you, instead of luxuriating on a white-sand beaches of Bali. But here are at least four other promising semiconductor stocks to add to your portfolio.
Fresh off a successful funding round, co-founder of Lapse Dan Silvertown shares thoughts on regulation, privacy, and why the money for great startups is still out there.