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Wall Street & Technology September 23, 2005 Paul Allen |
BCP: Expect the Unexpected Whatever strategy organizations employ, it is clear that business continuity planning will require a long-term commitment. The London bombings may not lead to a material change in regulatory policies or institutions' internal plans, but they already have turned up the pressure for financial services firms to get their plans in order.  |
BusinessWeek October 3, 2005 Bremner & Dawson |
Reactors? We'll Take Thirty, Please Westinghouse, GE, and their nuclear rivals are chasing $50 billion in Chinese power-plant deals.  |
HBS Working Knowledge September 19, 2005 Mira Wilkins |
A Distinctively Dutch Investment in America The conclusion of an article in which this Florida International University professor and author looks for a distinctively Dutch "style" in where and how multinational enterprises have made investments in the United States.  |
Entrepreneur October 2005 Stephen Barlas |
Go South The greatest benefit CAFTA-DR offers smaller American companies is lower transaction costs in the region  |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Sep/Oct 2005 Scott Farb |
Exporting Capital As economies throughout the world continue to expand, the flood of real estate investment capital headed overseas has swelled to record levels. This unprecedented growth is expected to continue throughout the year and well into 2006.  |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Jim Wagner |
IBM, Red Hat Go Abroad With Linux IBM and Red Hat are looking to get more software developers and ISVs onto the Linux platform.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Stephanie Overby |
It's Cheaper In China CIOs are beginning to see China as a cheaper alternative to India. Nypro, a global plastics manufacturer, shares some lessons from its experiences over there.  |
InternetNews September 14, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Fujitsu Dips Into EMEA For $300M The computing giant will resell blade systems from Egenera throughout Europe, the Middle East and Africa.  |
The Motley Fool September 13, 2005 Rich Smith |
EU Is Still a Banana Republic More than a year after the EU promised to eliminate quotas on the volume of bananas that can be imported to the Continent from Latin America, and nearly a decade after complaints against the quota system were first voiced, Europe still hasn't embraced the principles of the free market.  |
BusinessWeek September 19, 2005 Jonathan Wheatley |
Brazil: Tired Of Being Just A Hill Of Beans The world's leading coffee exporter is starting to cash in on the gourmet craze.  |
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