BUSINESS REVOLUTION OF THIS CENTURY

Monday, March 12, 2007

naked capitalism: Private Equity's Image Problem

naked capitalism: Private Equity's Image Problem

www.360view4u.co.uk

Monday, February 05, 2007

Can we really have information free?

The vast majority of workers seek free information on the Internet. But many important business sources are not available for free on the Web. And because searches on the Web cannot be aggregated, finding useful information is difficult and time-consuming. The "free" information on the Internet actually comes at a substantial cost to the enterprise.

try www.360view4u.co.uk u will have lots of free information in no time

feedbacks are most welcome!!

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

CNN.com - Internet takes soldier into delivery room - Aug 9, 2005

"PARKERSBURG, West Virginia (AP) -- Sgt. William Hamrick II witnessed the birth of his daughter Monday. That may seem unremarkable -- except that Hamrick was 6,000 miles away in Iraq."

Monday, August 01, 2005

CNN.com - Spark newsflashes - Jul 4, 2005

CNN.com - Spark newsflashes - Jul 4, 2005

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Wired 13.08: The Birth of Google

Wired 13.08: The Birth of Google: "It began with an argument. When he first met Larry Page in the summer of 1995, Sergey Brin was a second-year grad student in the computer science department at Stanford University. Gregarious by nature, Brin had volunteered as a guide of sorts for potential first-years - students who had been admitted, but were still deciding whether to attend. His duties included showing recruits the campus and leading a tour of nearby San Francisco. Page, an engineering major from the University of Michigan, ended up in Brin's group."

Friday, July 22, 2005

BBC NEWS | Business | Coca-Cola still world's top brand

BBC NEWS | Business | Coca-Cola still world's top brand

Friday, July 01, 2005

BBC NEWS | Business | Lessons from Silicon Valley

"But Excite took the conventional view that the ads would come from the top 100 companies in the USA, the people who buy huge amount of TV time and blanket the newspapers and the magazines.

Google did not go for the big spenders. Google's squads of PhDs wrote algorithms that would make it viable for the company to take hundreds of thousands of ads from hundreds of thousands of small (or big) companies, and pop the ads up in highly relevant spaces close to the search lists."