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The Motley Fool April 13, 2005 Jeff Hwang |
EA's Latest Score: College Football The company signs exclusive deal to develop, publish, and distribute college football games.  |
The Motley Fool April 13, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
The iPod Distraction Factor One tragic accident can't kill Apple's recent revolution, but it can slow it down. Now that it is selling more iPod units than Macs and with its shares tripling over the past 12 months, the last thing Apple needs is the potential for activist groups to start cracking down on public usage of its iPods.  |
The Motley Fool April 13, 2005 Tim Beyers |
The Real Price of Spam A 30-year-old spammer is sentenced to nine years in prison. How will that compare to Bernie Ebbers' fate? He gets sentenced June 13 for an $11 billion fraud that bilked millions of investors. The feeling is that he won't be asked to serve nine years, let alone nine months.  |
The Motley Fool April 13, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Kraft's Forbidden Fruit Kraft sells its fruit snacks business to Kellogg on the cheap.  |
InternetNews April 12, 2005 Jim Wagner |
IronPort Parts With Bonded Sender IronPort sells its whitelist program to Return Path for shareholder stake and a spot on the board.  |
The Motley Fool April 12, 2005 Seth Jayson |
GM's Malibu Stacy Moment GM tries to shore up its brand when it should be shoring up the business.  |
The Motley Fool April 12, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Starbucks, Watered Down There's nothing surprising about Starbucks' acquisition of the bottled water company Ethos. Investors, take note.  |
The Motley Fool April 12, 2005 Bobby Shethia |
E*Trade, Lean and Mean for Round Two Banking bulwark makes E*Trade the best pick among online brokers. At 12 times trailing earnings, it stacks up well against Ameritrade's P/E of 15, and Schwab's P/E of 34.  |
The Motley Fool April 12, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Hollywood Robbery If you think that you can't teach an old economy company some new economy tricks, check out the latest online feature from Hollywood Entertainment.  |
HBS Working Knowledge April 11, 2005 Ken Cottrill |
IBM's Supply Chain for Deploying People Selling its PC unit to Lenovo was only half of IBM's "on-demand business" story. Now the company is employing the supply chain principles it once used for products to deploy its employees.  |
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