The satellite radio bigwigs remain optimistic despite Capitol Hill, FCC, and NAB objections, not to mention swooning stock prices.
Asia and Middle East cities are in the grip of serious tower mania, and are transforming 21st century architectural design in the process.
Slowing down China's high-speed economy is devilishly hard to do, and may even be beyond Beijing's control.
Business is growing fast and continues to draw investment, but making big bucks in a country smitten with small cars won't be easy.
In the future, the Internet is almost certain to look more realistic, interactive, and social -- a lot like a virtual world.
Launching any venture means confronting the possibility of failure. We examine the strategies three businesses employed in the crucial early years.
Locals disdain suds, but foreign brewers are betting they'll switch to the stuff.
Intel, Raytheon, and other companies are dabbling in technology that enables 3D conferencing, but will employees take to avatar exchanges?
India's fashion industry has ambitions for a design style mingling Indian craftsmanship and Bollywood-style cool to tempt buyers worldwide.
Houses designed to fit on postage-stamp-sized plots offer Japanese an affordable way to live in bustling, crowded, and hugely expensive downtown areas.
More architecture firms are offshoring. One California firm found outsourcing helped it cut fees by 30%.
Indian immigrants like Sai Gundavelli often arrive in the U.S. armed with scientific skills, a need to fund people at home -- and ambition.
A next-gen wireless broadband network will allow Koreans to use high-speed apps on their mobile handsets. And it's sure to power big growth.
No auto show displays or debuts more luxury cars than Geneva, but this year the theme is green.
Crumbling roads, jammed airports, and power blackouts could hobble growth.
By putting $10 billion into the country's infrastructure, Cayman Islands-based real estate investor Trikona Capital plans to do well by doing good.
An existence so dependent on computers and the Internet means a glitch can do more than delete your presentation -- it can roil the stock market, or black out 15 states.
To get listed overseas, companies are getting U.S.-traded outfits to buy them.
How an uncommon bureaucrat personally secured foreign funding and the cooperation of government agencies to build the Indian city's subway system.
BusinessWeek's first-ever ranking of 25 client-pleasing brands included JetBlue, until it got stuck on the runway.