At Suzanne Lovell’s interior design firm, her office revolves around one particular wall.
(Reuters) — The big first-day pop in the social media giant’s share price that many analysts expected never happened. The highest the stock price hit on Friday, after opening at $42.05 per share, was $45.00. It closed at $38.23.
Despite the rumors, developers are focused on making apps — and money — from today's Android
Fully 95% of 600 businesses surveyed by Cisco permit the use of employee-owned smartphones and tablets at the office and found productivity gains for workers who use their own hardware.
(Crain’s) — The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority review is preliminary, according to the Wall Street Journal.
If regulators failed in their efforts to spot and contain the riskiness of trading activities at J.P. Morgan Chase, what does that say about the oversight of other banks? No one knows.
If you’re a Verizon customer upset that your next smartphone contract won’t include unlimited data, Sprint would like to remind you that you have an alternative.
HP is reportedly considering laying off 25,000 workers. The company called that report speculation.
(Crain’s) — The union representing pilots at United Continental Holdings Inc. has authorized a strike vote.
With Facebook’s long-anticipated IPO expected to hit on Friday morning, the company set its initial share price at $38 today.