Web 2.0 applications such as Twitter will unseat simple electronic mail as the No. 1 business communications tool. Pro or con?
Three years ago our cover story showcased the phenomenon. A lot has changed since then
IBM has been encouraging social networking among its employees with in-house versions of Web 2.0 hits such as Facebook and Twitter
In a conversation with Maria Bartiromo, MySpace's CEO talks about the social network's widening web of users
Ten questions to gauge how much you know about how social media has changed since 2005
In this excerpt from BW columnist Sarah Lacy's book, the co-founder of Netscape backs a social networking site named Ning
Which companies are logging the strongest growth, which industries are the hottest, and how the winners are faring in a treacherous economic climate
Starting with the A's, Amazon and Apple, our 2008 look at the technology companies still able to keep up with emerging-market competition
The 2008 BusinessWeek IT 100 includes 37 Asian names, and they're not sitting still. Nintendo leads the way, Bharti Airtel slumps, and LG makes the list
Among the companies from Europe, the Middle East, and Africa on the 2008 IT 100, nearly all are tied to mobile phones
Telefónica, Nokia, Ericsson, and other European companies in BW's IT 100 know the future is in emerging markets
Moving beyond Second Life marketing, many companies are infiltrating virtual worlds for employee meetings, mixers, and recruiting