Business & Technology

The $8 Billion Man Battles Back

Numbers are mixed, the debt is deep. It’s open season on telecoms, and many CEOs are in the water. Can this intensely competitive chief executive sink the putt?  (Post-Newsweek Techway)


Internet Chernobyl?

Bad leadership, software bugs, and speed-demon viruses add to cyber threat

The nation’s fragile data infrastructure is getting weaker by the minute from an explosion of new software bugs, speed-demon viruses and ever-complex systems. Yet new emergency repair teams in Washington don ‘t have the right weapons or leadership to keep up, and corporate SWAT teams aren’t cooperating. (CIO Insight)


Spies Like Us

The Internet is rewriting the rules of corporate rivalry, and CIOs are forced to the front lines.

Corporate gumshoeing used to be outsourced to firms with 007-sounding names and to ex-CIA and NSA operatives. These days, snooping is in-house – and high tech. The company without ‘CI’ risks being left behind. (Ziff Davis Media)


The Knockout Deal

The sale of Proxicom is the latest milestone of Raul Fernandez, an Internet pioneer in perpetual overdrive. He plays boardrooms the way he plays tennis – hardly moving, hardly breaking a sweat, tuning in to the other person’s needs and vulnerabilities, strategically picking his shots. (Post-Newsweek’s Techway)


The Fall of the House of Schrader

William Schrader, a founding father of the electronic superhighway, once heralded as an ‘Internet mogul,’ grew PSINet into a Wall Street favorite. Then everything collapsed. (Post-Newsweek Interactive/Washington Techway)


Fortune Under the Desert

Mining company benefits from government bargain

Sagebrush everywhere: It doesn’t look like much. But big business profits from bargain-basement leases on such desert land. (Newhouse News Service)


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