Business
Amazon to buy AI company Bee that makes wearable listening device

Bee makes a FitBit-style wristband that sells for $49.99.
Amazon plans to acquire Bee, a startup that makes a $50 artificial intelligence-infused wearable, per a CNBC report, which said terms of the deal were not disclosed.
The report said that Bee, based in San Francisco, makes a $49.99 wristband that appears similar to a Fitbit smartwatch. The device is equipped with AI and microphones that can listen to and analyze conversations to provide summaries, to-do lists and reminders for everyday tasks, the report said.
Bee CEO Maria de Lourdes Zollo announced in a LinkedIn post on Tuesday that the company will join Amazon.
[Read more: Amazon reportedly restructures healthcare business]
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CNBC said Amazon spokesperson Alexandra Miller confirmed the company’s plans to acquire Bee but the company declined to comment on the terms of the deal.
Amazon previously had a health and fitness-focused product called Halo, which it shelved in 2023 as part of a broader cost-cutting review, per the report.
Business
US-China trade talks set for day two as TikTok deadline looms

US and Chinese officials will hold a second day of trade talks in Spain on Monday as the deadline for the Chinese owner of TikTok to find a buyer or face a ban in America looms.
The negotiations, led by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, are the latest attempt to end a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.
Top level trade delegations from Beijing and Washington last met in Sweden in July, where they extended their tariffs truce by another 90 days.
After initially calling for TikTok to be banned during his first term, Trump has reversed his stance on the popular video-sharing app and delayed the ban three times so far.
Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Trump said, “We may let [TikTok] die. Or we may… I don’t know. It depends. Up to China, it doesn’t matter too much.”
It came as expectations grow that the deadline, which is due to expire on Wednesday, will be extended for a fourth time.
Last month, Trump suggested that he would keep extending the deadline until a buyer for TikTok could be found and called national security and privacy concerns related to the app and its Chinese parent company ByteDance “highly overrated”.
The BBC has contacted the White House and TikTok for comment.
The app is one of the world’s most widely-used social media platforms, with around 170 million users in the US.
Business
I Landed a Job at an AI Startup. Here Are My Tips for Working in AI.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Lambert Liu, a software engineer. The following has been edited for length and clarity. Business Insider has verified his employment and academic history.
For most computer science graduates, it’s a no-brainer to work for Big Tech.
Most of my classmates were drawn to Big Tech companies like Google, Meta, and Amazon because they promised prestige, stability, and a structured career path.
But I found myself falling into a second group of college students, one that actively seeks job opportunities at startups for the steep learning opportunities and potential equity upside if the startup goes public.
I reached that decision after doing internships in both Big Tech and startups.
I did two internships at Google during my sophomore and junior years in college.
When I interned at Google for the first time, I really liked it. But when I went back for a second round, I thought my growth there was plateauing. I didn’t see myself working there in the long term.
At the end of my junior year, I did an internship at Replit, an AI software development startup. That experience was refreshing because I got to lead impactful projects. I realized I wanted to work at a startup, and that led me to my first job at Graphite, an AI code review platform.
Here are the top tips I have if you want to land a job at an AI startup.
Big Tech experience helps
If you are like me and want to give startups a shot after interning only at Big Tech, don’t worry. You don’t need past internship experiences at startups to work at one.
Interning at a Big Tech company helps demonstrate to employers that you have a strong overall technical foundation. You will know how to do great technical design and great testing. Your stint with Big Tech tells recruiters that you are capable of writing clean code and shipping reliably.
It’s good to have startup experience because you will be more used to dealing with ambiguity and thinking quickly on your feet. But that can be easily solved by working on your own personal projects, which takes me to my next point.
Build more projects
I personally worked on a lot of passion projects in my downtime when I was not working. Working on those projects not only developed my skills, but it also helped strengthen my approach toward solving problems.
In fact, those projects do not have to be AI-related. You can use AI tools to amplify your productivity as an engineer, but you should not limit yourself to just working on AI projects.
Building AI projects also isn’t a prerequisite to working in an AI startup. They generally look for great engineers, and whether you build projects with AI or not, there are many ways to demonstrate your thinking and technical skills.
LeetCode still matters, but not as much
Solving algorithmic and coding problems on LeetCode, an online learning platform, still matters when you are preparing for technical interviews at startups.
That said, there’s a lot more emphasis on one’s ability to deal with ambiguity and tackle non-technical areas like product thinking. This is especially the case since every engineer can use AI to write code.
Working on your own projects will help you strengthen your problem-solving skills. Having to build something new forces you to develop your perspective and taste for approaching problems, which will help you better handle the interview.
Get good at system design thinking
My job interview at Graphite was the first time I was ever asked about system design. That is not usually asked of new graduates. When it comes to system design, companies assess not only your technical skills but also your approach to problems.
I learned a lot about system design thinking when I took a course on human-computer interaction in college. I learned how to scope problems and then build a technical foundation to solve them. The course also gave me some hands-on experience when I built a project.
Foundational courses like algorithms and data science are important, but going into areas like human-computer interaction will be useful when you start interviewing.
Be a holistic engineer
If you want to excel at a startup, you must strive to be a holistic engineer above all else. You need to work at a fast pace. And on top of that, you have to show that you really care about your users.
You can start doing that now when you are interning. Show your bosses that you really care about your craft and want to make the best possible product.
Take ownership of your work as much as possible. At AI startups like Graphite, we move fast, so we are looking for hires who can cope with that velocity and produce high-quality work.
Do you have a story to share about working at an AI startup? Contact this reporter at ktan@businessinsider.com.
Business
Farmers are being squeezed – it’s testing their loyalty to Trump

Luke MintzBBC News and
Anna JonesPresenter of Corn Belt People

On a scorchingly hot day in the American Midwest, Tim Maxwell is voicing his fears about the future of farming.
The 65-year-old has worked the fields since he was a teenager. He now owns a grain and hog farm near Moscow, Iowa – but he’s unsure about its prospects.
“I’m in a little bit of a worried place,” says Mr Maxwell, who wears a baseball cap bearing the logo of a corn company.
He is concerned that American farmers aren’t able to sell their crops to international markets in the way they could in previous years, in part because of the fallout from President Trump’s tariffs.
“Our yields, crops and weather are pretty good – but our [interest from] markets right now is on a low,” he says. “It’s going to put stress on some farmers.”

His fears are not unique. US agricultural groups warn that American farmers are facing widespread difficulty this year, mostly due to economic tensions with China. Since April, the two countries have been locked in a trade war, causing a sharp fall in the number of Chinese orders for American crops.
American farmers are wounded as a result, economists say. The number of small business bankruptcies filed by farmers has reached a five-year high, according to data compiled by Bloomberg in July.
With all this economic pain, rural areas could well have turned against Trump. But that doesn’t seem to be happening.
Rural Americans were one of the president’s most loyal voting blocs in last year’s election, when he won the group by 40 percentage points over Kamala Harris, beating his own margins in 2020 and 2016, according to Pew Research analysis.
Polling experts say that in the countryside, he is still broadly popular.

Mr Maxwell says he is sticking with Trump, despite his own financial worries. “Our president told us it was going to take time to get all these tariffs in place,” he says.
“I am going to be patient. I believe in our president.”
So why do so many farmers and other rural Americans broadly continue to back Trump even while feeling an economic squeeze that is driven in part by tariffs – the president’s signature policy?
Farmers on a ‘trade and financial precipice’
If you want a window into rural America, the Iowa State Fair is a good start. The agricultural show attracts more than one million visitors over 10 days.
There is candy floss; deep-fried hot dogs on a stick for $7 (£5) – known as “corn dogs”; an antique tractor show; a competition for the biggest boar.
But when the BBC visited last month, there was another topic of conversation: tariffs.

“A lot of people say he’s just using tariffs as a bargaining chip, as a bluff,” says Gil Gullickson, who owns a farm in South Dakota and edits an agriculture magazine.
“But I can say: history proves that tariffs don’t end well.”
In April, what he termed “liberation day”, Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on most of the world, including a 145% tariff on China.
In response, China put a retaliatory 125% tariff on American goods – a blow to farmers in the American Midwest, sometimes known as the “corn belt”, many of whom sell crops to China.
Last year Chinese companies bought $12.7bn (£9.4bn) worth of soybeans from America, mostly to feed their livestock.
September is harvest season, and the American Soybean Association (ASA) has warned that soybean orders from China are way below where they should be at this point in the year.

Tariffs have fluctuated dramatically since they were introduced – and the uncertainty is proving tough for farmers, says Christopher Wolf, a professor of agricultural economics at Cornell University.
“China is just so big that when they buy things, it matters – and when they don’t, it matters.”
The cost of fertiliser has rocketed, too – partly because of trade disputes with Canada, which has raised the cost of potash, a salt imported from Canada by American farmers and used in fertiliser.
Jon Tester, a former Democrat Senator of Montana, who is a third-generation farmer, told a US news station earlier this month: “With all these tariffs the president’s put on, it’s interrupted our supply chain… it’s increased the cost of new equipment… and because of the trade and tariffs, a lot of customers have said to heck with the United States…
“The people who are new to agriculture, those young farmers who haven’t saved money for times like this, they’re going to be in trouble and a lot of those folks are going to go broke.
“And if this continues, a lot of folks like me are going to go broke too.”

American farmers already suffer from high levels of stress. They are more than three times more likely than average to die by suicide, according to a paper by a charity, the National Rural Health Association, which analysed a period before Trump’s presidency.
In a letter to the White House, Caleb Ragland, president of the ASA, warned of a tipping point: “US soybean farmers are standing at a trade and financial precipice.”
Trump: ‘Our farmers are going to have a field day’
Supporters of President Trump say that his tariffs will help American farmers in the long run, by forcing countries like China to come to the negotiating table and agree new deals with the US over agriculture.
And they point to other ways this White House has helped farmers. Over the summer, as part of Trump’s tax and spend bill, his administration expanded federal subsidies for farmers by $60bn (£44bn), and boosted funding for federal crop insurance.
In his annual speech to Congress in March, Trump warned farmers of a “little bit of an adjustment period” following the tariffs, adding: “Our farmers are going to have a field day… to our farmers, have a lot of fun, I love you.”

Sid Miller, commissioner of the Texas Department of Agriculture, is among those who have praised Trump for his “vital support”.
“We finally have an administration that is prioritising farmers and ranchers,” he wrote in a statement earlier this year. “They advocate for farmers, challenge China … and ensure America’s producers are receiving fair treatment.”
And it is possible the president’s tariff strategy could eventually work, according to Michael Langemeier, a professor of agricultural economics at Purdue University.
But he also worries that uncertainty is inflicting long-term damage. “Your trading partner doesn’t know exactly what your position’s going to be next year, because it seems like we’re changing the goalposts.
“That is a problem.”
Tariffs will make us great again
There’s an old adage in American politics that says people “vote with their pocketbooks” – and turn against politicians if they appear to harm their finances.
Yet despite financial pressures, the rural Americans we spoke to are firmly sticking with Trump.
Experts say they haven’t seen any evidence of meaningful change in support among rural voters since last year. A survey by Pew last month found that 53% of rural Americans approve of the job Trump is doing, far higher than the 38% figure for the country as a whole.
Though a survey by ActiVote earlier this month did find a small decline in Trump’s approval among rural voters from 59% in August to 54% in September. Analysts warn not to pay too much attention to those shifts, however, because the number of rural voters included in those polls is so small.
“The data I’ve seen suggests Trump is still heavily supported in rural communities,” says Michael Shepherd, a political science professor at the University of Michigan who focuses on rural politics.

For some farmers at the state fair, the explanation is simple: they believe the US president when he tells them that tariffs will help them in the long run.
“We think the tariffs eventually will make us great again,” says John Maxwell, a dairy farmer and cheese producer from Iowa.
“We were giving China a lot, and [previously] we paid tariffs when we sold to them. Let’s make it fair. What’s good for the goose is good for the other goose.”
Some may also hold onto hope that the president will bail farmers out. During Trump’s first term he gave farmers a $28bn (£20.7bn) grant amid a tariff dispute with China.
A case of selective blame attribution?
For Nicholas Jacobs, a politics professor at Colby College and author of The Rural Voter, there’s a deeper reason at play.
“It’s easy for an outsider to ask, ‘Why the hell are you still with this guy?'” he says. “But you have to understand that across rural America, the move towards Republicans long predates Donald Trump.”
Starting in the 1980s, he says, rural Americans started to feel alienated and left behind while cities benefited from globalisation and technological change.
What he calls a “rural identity” formed, based on a shared grievance and an opposition to urban liberals. The Republicans seemed like their natural champion, while he says the Democrats became “the party of the elite, technocrats, the well-educated, the urbane”.

Some repeat that sentiment at the state fair. Joan Maxwell, a dairy farmer from Davenport in Iowa, says that her area is too often viewed as “flyover country”.
“We are not looked at very positively for the most part from the media,” she says. “We’ve been called deplorables, uneducated,” – a reference to Hillary Clinton’s description of half of Trump’s supporters as a “basket of deplorables”.
Ms Maxwell added: “A lot of times they ignore us or make fun of us.”
Prof Shepherd, of Michigan University, believes there’s another factor: in his view, America has become so polarised – with voters from both sides entrenched in their camps – that many are willing to forgive much more than they would previously, as long as it’s a policy implemented by their own side.
He calls this “selective blame attribution… they might be really angry about some things that are happening, but they’re reticent to blame Trump for them.”
‘We’re giving him a chance – there’d better be results’
Mr Wolf has his own view on the “best case scenario” from here. “What I hope happens is that he [Trump] just declares victory and leaves it [tariffs] alone.”
But he warns that even if the policy is dropped, the damage to American farmers could be long-term due to the shake-up to supply chains. Some Chinese firms are now buying their soybeans from Brazil rather than America, he says; they may not quickly return.
Many of the analysts we spoke to believe that rural America’s support for Trump is not a blank cheque, despite their current support.

Mr Shepherd points to the Great Depression and rural “Dustbowl” of the 1930s, which forced millions of farmers to migrate to American cities, causing a long-term realignment in politics – though nobody expects it to get anywhere near that bad this time. The farm crisis of the 1980s also saw thousands of farms go under.
Back at the state fair, Ms Maxwell, the Iowan dairy farmer, makes this point clear.
“We’re giving him the chance to follow through with the tariffs, but there had better be results. I think we need to be seeing something in 18 months or less.
“We understand risk – and it had better pay off.”
Additional reporting: Florence Freeman
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