If you order something from Ukraine right now, be it a T-shirt or a vintage Christmas ornament, chances are it will arrive on time and in good shape. Not only is the country's mail service still operating, even as it grapples with an invasion by Russia, but the role of the post office has also changed. The mail has become a lifeline for Ukrainians who rely on it to receive pension payments, medicine, or to run online businesses as domestic jobs get disrupted. So how exactly is the Ukrainian mail system working right now? What operational and logistical changes has it had to make to keep going, and what does the service's future look like? In this episode, we speak with Igor Smelyansky, the CEO of Ukrposhta, about delivering the mail during a time of war.

Rory Johnston on How Oil Could Surge to Over $200 a Barrel
36:34

Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev on Tokenization and Prediction Markets for Everything
51:02

Henry Blodget on the Software Selloff Hysteria and the Problem for OpenAI
45:03