Word: corps
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Corp. analyst Tim Mui. IDC forecasts that in Europe alone, business users will buy 60 million phones this year. So what's Nokia doing about it? This week, chief executive Jorma Ollila unveils a prototype of the Communicator 9500, a device that ties more neatly and swiftly into corporate IT systems than any gadget Nokia has offered to date. Among the 9500's selling points is wi-fi circuitry that allows users to connect to the Internet in wireless hot spots and securely link up with business networks. Nokia will even trot out some major companies that have agreed...
...hiring of DePodesta was the first appointment made by Dodgers owner Frank McCourt, who recently bought the team from News Corp. for $430 million...
...powerful international support. It was Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's eldest son and the deputy chief operating officer of News Corp., who grasped her potential. Besides the books, published worldwide by HarperCollins, and the magazine, published by News Magazines in Australia (both divisions of News Corp.), Hay has a pan-Australian newspaper column, which reaches roughly one-third of the nation's population. All of this while helping Wilson on their farm near Sydney...
...European money is flowing into these funds, all of them report strong demand. Now that investors are back, Chinese companies are rushing to raise cash. This year will bring a bevy of highly anticipated IPOs, including Ping An Insurance, one of China's largest insurers, telecom company China Netcom Corp. and possibly China Construction Bank, one of the mainland's four largest banks. Accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers estimates that Chinese companies will raise $10 billion in IPOs in Hong Kong this year; about 50% more than in 2003. The big question, of course, is whether the current boom will last...
...facility continue to serve the non-undergraduates who currently make up more than half of the MAC’s patrons—though the MAC was intended primarily to serve undergraduates. Finally, let us assume that Harvard cannot now afford to spend the $30 million that HNTB Corp., a Boston consulting firm, recommended to former Dean of the Faculty Jeremy R. Knowles in May 2002 for complete MAC renovations—though $30 million is 0.15 percent of the University’s endowment...