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The Future of Internet Radio?
It's been a long, strange trip for Pandora, which created online radio that's cool, addictive, free, and - just maybe - a multimillion-dollar business.
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Special from CSMonitor.com
With Mobile Businesses, Home is Where the Shopping Is
Two-income couples, older homeowners and convenience spur the growth in at-home services, from pet care to computer repair.
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Why Amazon.com Could Be This Year's Most Important Startup
With its latest innovation - accepting tiny payments - the "World's Biggest Store" just might revolutionize the Web all over again.
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Celebrating Ayn Rand’s Business Bible at 50
Fifty years ago, Ayn Rand published Atlas Shrugged, a novel that became an all-time favorite read of business leaders -- and helped launch a new generation of entrepreneurs.
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The Forbes 400: The Wealthiest Americans
One billion dollars is no longer enough. The price of admission to this, the 25th anniversary edition of the Forbes 400, is $1.3 billion, up $300 million from last year. The collective net worth of the nation's mightiest plutocrats rose $290 billion to $1.54 trillion.
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New Math for Utilities: Sell Less, Earn More
Five states have adopted "decoupling" plans, offering electric-power companies incentives to conserve energy. Utilities in those states can make more money by selling less electricity.
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Who's Behind TheFunded.com?
TheFunded.com, which was launched in March, is at once a Zagat guide to VCs and a place for disgruntled entrepreneurs to gather. It's also something of a mystery: no one knows who runs the site.
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Philadelphia's School Of The Future--Brought To You By Microsoft
Across the country, talent-hungry corporations are trying to save our struggling public schools. Are they creating smarter kids--or a fleet of drones?
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Detroit Automakers Slide Into Housing Slump
U.S. vehicle sales were already losing steam before mortgage and housing jitters reached fever pitch in August. Now the auto sales outlook is becoming downright dismal, as more-cautious consumers delay nonessential purchases.
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From CSMonitor.com
At China's Huge Malls, High Prices and Few Shoppers
As investors continue to pour money into malls in Chinese cities, analysts say the signs of a real estate bubble are growing. Those analysts say empty malls are just one indicator of an overheating economy.
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An Environmentalist Switches Sides to Help Wal-Mart Go Green
Once the youngest president of the Sierra Club, Adam Werbach used to call Wal-Mart "toxic." Now the company is his biggest client. Does the path to a greener future run through Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters city for the retailing giant?
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Special from CSMonitor.com
Space Tourism Industry is Lifting Off
The first humans to take a swing around the moon in more than 35 years may not be NASA astronauts, but space tourists. Well-heeled space tourists, of course: a ticket to ride will cost $100 million.
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A Knight's Tale: Swoosh, You're the Boss!
Living a quiet life as an animator, Travis Knight never dreamed he'd work for his father. Then the Nike founder gave him an offer he couldn't refuse.
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