AOL paying for services for stock swaps
Unconventional business arrangements are coming home to roost for erstwhile Internet stars such as AOL Time Warner, with regulators zeroing in on bad barter deals.
Unconventional business arrangements are coming home to roost for erstwhile Internet stars such as AOL Time Warner, with regulators zeroing in on bad barter deals.
Amazon.com's CEO says it aims to be a source for anything you can buy, but not just a retailer. 'We're trying to invent something completely new.'
A big drop in stock prices has slowed the Internet acqusition frenzy.
HP wants to include more business-focused features on a cloud platform filled with more third-party apps and services.
The company has pledged to become carbon neutral by 2040.
Amazon's entry into the games console market could have a huge impact on Microsoft, Sony, Nvidia and AMD, as well as help to establish Qualcomm as the Intel of the post-PC era.
Some more thoughts on the uses of influence in measuring value in conversational markets.
The suspense is nearly over. In about an hour, Facebook will lift the veil on its plans to turn its social networking site into a platform that its makers hope becomes a pervasive ecosystem.
Technology companies fighting against changes in how stock options are expensed are battling the Federal Reserve Board, the U.S. Congress, investors and, now, each other.
On the heels of last week's coverage where I pointed out how the Uptime Institute's chief analyst Bruce Taylor had referred to salesforce.com as being unethical because, in his estimation, the CRM/SFA service provider experience two avoidable datacenter outtages in 2006, I've been e-mailing back and forth with salesforce.