The whole week, across every sector, in one email.
Every Saturday, Wiiver Weekly ties the week back together, what moved across government, markets, and technology, and what happened to the stories that were still in motion when we covered them. One email. Free.
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What you get
Not another headline digest, a connected read of why the week mattered.
- The week’s crosscurrents. The handful of developments that moved across sectors, and what each means for the others.
- The loops, closed. The stories that were still developing midweek, what happened next, what it settled into, and what it now means. Substantial enough to be worth your time, short enough to finish with your coffee.
- All three sectors in one place. Government & Public Policy, Business & Markets, and Technology & Engineering, woven together rather than siloed.
- Judgment, not just aggregation. A named human’s read on what matters and why, the part software can’t do.
A sample of the format
Here’s the kind of cross-sector read each issue delivers.
An Oracle deal in media clothing
A $110B acquisition that looks like a media merger is really a cloud-infrastructure bet, and the part that decides it isn’t in the boardroom, it’s at the FCC. Here’s how the markets, the regulators, and the technology stack actually connect this week.
Illustrative sample. Real issues will link to that week’s published Crosscurrents.
Why it’s different
Most weekly recaps flatten the news into a list. Wiiver Weekly does the opposite: it connects the week’s developments across sectors, because that’s where the meaning is. It’s the same 3D, not 2D thesis behind everything we publish.
It also does something a digest can’t: it closes the loops. Our Crosscurrents often run on stories that are still moving, a deal awaiting approval, a rule still being written. Saturday is where we come back to them: what happened next, what it settled into, and what it now means across all three sectors. You don’t have to track the threads yourself; we do.
And it carries the same promise as our Crosscurrents: the judgment is human. Software helps us track the week; a named person decides what it means and stands behind it.
Written by Josh Lynwood
Wiiver’s founder, a decade-plus in strategy and operations, most recently at Deloitte, now doing the connecting he always wished the news would do. Every judgment in this email is his.