We’ve created an interactive that includes (literal) button pushing, true-life confessions and essays exploring our office culture.

Our writers take on a range of topics: the awkward, but essential, art of office chitchat, an analysis of how millennials and Gen Z-ers are going to fix the troubles of the workplace and ... poop shame.

We’d love to hear from you: How do you feel about your office’s culture? Do you dread chitchat or does it brighten your day? Email us at briefing@nytimes.com, and your answer may appear in a future newsletter.

Here’s what else is happening

Indonesia fires: Officials say that most of the thousands of fires in Borneo and Sumatra were set intentionally to clear the land for plantations for palm oil, a lucrative cash crop. A particularly dry season has made the fires some of the worst the country has seen in years.

Afghanistan: Two suicide bomb attacks, one on President Ashraf Ghani’s campaign rally in Parwan Province and another in Kabul, killed dozens of people less than two weeks before elections. Both bombings were claimed by the Taliban, delivering on its warnings that President Trump’s cancellation of peace talks would lead to an escalation of violence.

Ecuador: Officials are investigating a sprawling data breach that made available online the personal data of up to 20 million people, more than the country’s population. It was unclear whether anyone had gained access to the data when it was vulnerable.

Myanmar: Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the civilian leader and Nobel laureate once extolled as a champion of democracy, could face prosecution for crimes against humanity for military attacks against the Rohingya Muslims and other minority groups.