In 2022, over 20,000 Lithuanians returned to their country of birth from abroad. A high quality of life coupled with a booming entrepreneurial ecosystem and a collaborative mentality has contributed to what investors are calling a “reverse brain drain.” Many of their minds reemerge in the country’...
Read Also
- You Asked: The 8K chicken meets the 8K egg
- The rise of the audio-only video game
- US to impose new tariffs on Chinese clean-energy imports including EVs
- Timbers vs Sounders live stream: Can you watch for free?
- Apple’s new iPad Pro keyboard is a bigger deal than you think
- NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Sunday, May 12
- NYT Connections: hints and answers for Sunday, May 12
- NYT Strands today: hints, spangram and answers for Sunday, May 12
- Celebrate Mother’s Day with HBO, Max, and a lot of great movies and TV shows
- Latest iPad launch was marred by one big mistake. Here's how Apple can fix it
Latest TheNextWeb
- British Navy taps VR to train sailors in warship navigation
- Pussy Riot lawyer launches blockchain-based poll to challenge legitimacy of Russian elections
- This week in Dutch tech
- LLMs have become a weapon of information warfare
- TNW Podcast: Peter Sarlin on AI in Europe; let’s talk about carbon capture
- The key technologies fuelling chatbot evolution
- Dutch VC Capital Mills invests in German no-code startup Innoloft
- Meet the leader of LockBit, the ‘most active ransomware gang ever’
- Neuron-sized brain implant could help blind people see again
- Swiss startup unveils post-quantum cryptography library for devs