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Salon.com November 28, 2000 Colin Stewart |
The art of innovation What Silicon Valley is trying to do now, Cezanne and Picasso achieved decades ago...  |
Wired December 2000 Frank Rose |
Vivendi's High Wireless Act CEO Jean-Marie Messier's deals with Vodafone and Seagram were a star turn on the European stage. As information becomes truly portable, a global media company paired with continent-wide distribution may prove an unbeatable combination....  |
CIO November 15, 2000 Eric Berkman |
Shark Repellent Discover how CIOs can help keep their companies out of court and the lawyers at bay...  |
CIO November 15, 2000 Lew McCreary |
Going with the Flow Information wants to be free. All Bob Metcalfe, the inventor of Ethernet technology, did was open the door...  |
CIO November 15, 2000 Emelie Rutherford |
Masters of the New Economy Words of wisdom and warning from the 10 top pundits on how businesses can thrive in the new economy...  |
CIO November 15, 2000 Ed Yourdon |
The Price Was Wrong Cheap prices can be an attractive way of getting attention in an established marketplace. The interesting question is, what happens when discounted prices are no longer sufficient? This is the dilemma facing dot-com companies who have abandoned discounts in order to turn a profit...  |
Inc. November 15, 2000 Paul B. Brown |
Book Value: Welcome to the New Economy, Act III Dot-coms have discovered that they have to make money, and the Fortune 1,000 have learned that E-commerce isn't all that hard. What happens now? A series of new books reinforce the point that if you don't understand what is going on, you are doomed to fight your last war...  |
Fast Company December 2000 Cheryl Dahle |
Natural Leader Rayona Sharpnack is a teacher and a mentor to some of the most powerful women in some of the most important companies around. Her message: Don't worry so much about what you need to know. Instead, figure out who you need to be.  |
Fast Company December 2000 David Dorsey |
Positive Deviant Jerry Sternin's job was to help save starving children in Vietnam. Faced with an impossible time frame, he adopted a radical approach to making change. His idea: Real change begins from the inside.  |
Fast Company December 2000 Jill Rosenfeld |
The Man Who Loved Chairs Rolf Fehlbaum, CEO of Vitra, really cares about chairs. His company is a celebration of what to some is the most mundane object in the office -- but to him is a source of passion...  |
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