Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs has a problem: He's taken Apple into the phone business with the iPhone. Yet he has to rely on partners such as AT&T and Starbucks to provide the wireless connections he needs to make those phones useful.
Coaches do it. Moms and dads do it. Why can't your boss? Mike Robbins discusses the importance of showing your employees how much you value them.
The flip side of Apple's success is that Apple has started to seem scary.
But convincing hackers to give away information about bugs--some of which could easily help unscrupulous hackers spy, steal bank codes or hijack computers to issue spam or "malware"--is also getting trickier.
Myriad forces conspire to derail family businesses--not least of which are disinterested heirs.
Many fantastically rich people slip under the general public's radar. Including the world's second-wealthiest man
Answer these questions before building that empire.
The average rank of India's largest companies slipped from 1,257 to 1,276
Looking forward at the top destinations for 2007.
Dropping several thousand rupees on dinner is becoming de rigueur in India.