Remember last year's gutter-icing, plow-jamming, snowfall-record-burying season?
Researchers at Marquette University say they have developed a first-of-its kind computer program that can measure bite characteristics
Not too many kids tell their parents who to vote for when they're 5 years old or ask their fourth-grade teacher to watch the presidential inauguration. But what would you expect from a 21-year-old superdelegate?
CNN.com's Nicole Lapin talks with 21-year-old superdelegate Jason Rae.
IN THE GLOBAL BATTLE for infotech supremacy, is America surrendering? Recent evidence suggests that the U.S. is at least thinking about giving up. I'm talking not just about America's ability to produce the fastest chip or most popular software but also about something potentially even more serious: the ability of all businesses to be world-class users of information technology. "As a nation we need scientists and engineers if we're going to be successful," says Microsoft research chief Rick Rashid. "All the new businesses are built around that." The trouble is that U.S. companies haven't developed nearly enough qualified chief information officers. And at the talent pipeline's beginning, America's kids have concluded that infotech is a dead-end field for nerd losers, and they're avoiding it like last month's ringtone.
Four years of late-night cramming and exam stress - for the Class of '07, it may have been worth it.
The howls of pain came quickly to the Cendant message board at Yahoo! Finance on April 15. After the market closed, the franchisor and erstwhile Wall Street darling issued a startling announcement,...
If you trade stocks on the NASDAQ market, chances are you haven't been getting the best prices. Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Justice investigations have found that NASDAQ de...