Innovation is coming to the US from abroad these days, and foreign applications are coming faster and faster.
Now 40, The Peter Principle resonates even more today, when a lust for accomplishment has led an unprecedented level of incompetence.
Jack and Suzy Welch disagree with the President on points of policy but think he's earned an A thus far.
The credit crunch means that even a superstar director has to accept some pretty stiff financial terms.
Underemployed freelancers and involuntary part-timers are hidden casualties of the deepening recession.
Plenty of employees have visions of launching their own ventures. Layoffs are spurring some of them to make the plunge.
Singapore's emphasis on science education and a highly talented workforce puts it well ahead of the U.S. in a new global ranking of innovation leaders.
Fresh suitors have emerged, and a cleanup is proceeding under a board appointed by the government. But the fraud leaves a cloud over Indian outsourcing.
The smartphone maker debuts its new operating system, code-named Nova, at January's CES. Palm says its phones for it will bridge the BlackBerry-iPhone gap.
Despite carmaker drama in the U.S., and a failed deal with Chrysler, China's auto champ may be poised to go international.
A Deloitte survey found that the CEOs in the Asia-Pacific region are optimistic about their company's growth over the next 12 months, despite the economic downturn.
The tireless head of HP's personal computer division is vanquishing rivals Dell and Lenovo and making Wall Street happy. His secret? Innovation.
The most publicized measure of U.S. unemployment tells only part of the story.
The Detroit bailout isn't about saving the U.S. auto industry, it's about Democrats and Republicans jockeying for power.
The world was told the U.S. was a low-risk, high-return investment. But like the Wall Street trader's victims, we are learning the truth.
Indian info-tech companies that once specialized in basic work are now providing high-value tasks such as R&D and business transformation services.
Its response to the terrorist attacks will have a huge effect on its economic future.
In the wake of the Mumbai siege, business must weigh the persistence of political violence against the strength and promise of the Indian miracle.
The federal bailout calmed the market and seems to fence off Citi's toxic assets. But some investors wonder what it says about the state of other banks.
The U.S. is mortgaging its future by outsourcing technological inventions in exchange for short-term cash.