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Word: profitably (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Harvard is a not-for-profit educational institution. Surely it understands that people who choose to work at a university should earn less than their counterparts at for-profit corporations. Harvard should follow Yale’s lead. If Dave Swenson earns $1 million each year for the truly superior work he does, Harvard should be truly ashamed of paying any in-house manager eighteen times what Swenson makes...

Author: By David B. Orr | Title: Harvard Endowment Managers Overcompensated | 2/17/2006 | See Source »

...going to need to give its users equally good guarantees on their network, ahead of ordinary Internet traffic.Other breaches of end-to-end are in the works as well. Some Internet providers, struggling in competitive and costly markets, have expressed discontent with Google’s soaring profits. After all, a big component of Google’s success is that Verizon and Comcast are willing to deliver all of Google’s ads to their millions of subscribers. Verizon, among others, has proposed charging tariffs on sites like Google and Amazon since these sites...

Author: By Matthew A. Gline, | Title: Net Stupidity | 2/14/2006 | See Source »

...word of mouth from early adopters to, eventually, your grandmother. Search became Google; google became a verb. The world fell in love with the fun, effective, blindingly fast technology and its boy-wizard founders. Ultimately, the company even found a business model--advertising--and last year made a profit of nearly $1.5 billion on revenue of $6.1 billion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Search Of The Real Google | 2/12/2006 | See Source »

...shares in deCODE as well. But those shares, which rose to a high of $65 in a frenzied run-up in 1999 and 2000, plunged to as low as $2 in the collapse of the dotcom bubble. They're around $9 today--and deCODE still hasn't turned a profit. Investors lost a lot of money, and the firm was forced to lay off scores of employees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Iceland Experiment | 2/12/2006 | See Source »

Then in 1998 the U.S. firm Hoffmann--La Roche agreed to pay $200 million for the right to develop drugs based on some of deCODE's data. The idea that a foreign company might profit from their personal information made many Icelanders balk. A woman named Ragnhildur Gudmundsdottir sued to keep her deceased father's medical records from going into the deCODE-run database, citing a right to privacy, and in 2003 Iceland's supreme court ruled in her favor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Iceland Experiment | 2/12/2006 | See Source »

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