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Story

Current and older AtlasHour stories connected to Story. This page helps readers, search engines, and AI assistants discover related public articles.

technology

She had nothing at 15. At 55, she's China's wealthiest woman sitting at the world's top table with Elon Musk and Tim Cook; here's the story of Zhou Qunfei

Chinas richest woman, Zhou Qunfei, once worked factory shifts after leaving school at 15. Today, her billion-dollar tech company supplies Apple, Tesla, and Samsung. Her glass powers iPhones and smart vehicles worldwide. She built Lens Technology from poverty, loss, and survival. Now she sits beside Elon Musk and Tim Cook at global business meetings.

The Economic Times5/15/2026, 5:18:00 PM
world

How to actually own your morning (Without the chaos)

We’ve all had those "disaster" starts—hitting snooze five times, tripping over a shoe, and realizing you’re already behind before you’ve even found your keys. It’s exhausting. But here’s the truth: the way you handle those first few hours determines whether you’re running the day, or the day is running you.Success isn’t about waking up at 4:00 AM to do a triathlon; it’s about being intentional. It’s about protecting your energy before the rest of the world starts demanding it. Here is a realistic, five-step breakdown to help you build a morning that actually feels good.

Times of India5/15/2026, 9:55:22 AM
health

The silent killer behind sudden heart attacks: Why looking healthy no longer guarantees a healthy heart

A person who goes to the gym regularly, eats salads, avoids sugar, and looks perfectly fit does not usually fit the image of a heart patient. Butt hospitals across the world are seeing a worrying pattern. Young professionals, marathon runners, slim office-goers, and seemingly healthy adults are arriving in emergency rooms with sudden heart attacks. In many of these cases, one hidden condition sits in the background: hypertension.High blood pressure is called the “silent killer” because it rarely announces itself with loud symptoms. There is no fever, no obvious pain, and often no visible warning sign. But inside the body, the pressure slowly damages blood vessels, strains the heart, and increases the risk of stroke, kidney disease, and sudden cardiac events. According to the World Health Organization’s hypertension report, nearly 1.4 billion adults globally live with hypertension, and many do not even know they have it.

Times of India5/15/2026, 7:30:00 AM
health

SPMR College of Commerce hosts two-day Intl conference

Excelsior Correspondent JAMMU, May 14: Government SPMR College of Commerce, first ever in its academic history, inaugurated its prestigious two-day international conference on “Manoeuvering Business, Society and Culture in the New World Order”. The grand inaugural ceremony witnessed the presence of eminent academicians, policymakers, administrators, researchers, industry experts and students from across the country and abroad. Minister for Health & Medical Education, School Education and Social Welfare, Government of J&K, Sakeena Masood Itoo, graced the occasion as the chief guest. […]

Daily Excelsior5/14/2026, 10:07:25 PM