Friday, July 25, 2008
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  12/03/01
The People's Company
eBay is run like a democracy, with customers playing a major role. But will that relationship become a casualty of the auction site's success?
 
  10/29/01
The Net As a Lifeline
A tough economic environment makes the Web even more important for companies attempting to cut costs, generate new revenues, and better serve customers
 
  10/01/01
The New Netrepreneurs
They're back, chastened, and vowing that this time they'll build companies out of bricks rather than straw. Plus: Tesco's online grocery success; Trying to save Drkoop.com; and more
 
  09/03/01
Rob Glaser Is Racing Upstream
In streaming media, his RealNetworks is battling hard to beat Microsoft
 
  08/06/01
Critical Errors at Critical Path
The e-mail handler focused on building the stock price, not the business. Now, Chairman David Hayden is mounting a "start-over effort"
 
  07/09/01
Innovation Drought
There's a harsh new reality in techdom: From networking and e-commerce to software and consulting services, the startups that have been fueling innovation in America are getting snuffed. Some deserve it, some don't. But with cash and willing entrepreneurs getting scarce, where will the economy get its juice?
 
  06/04/01
Wireless Web Woes
Telecom players have spent billions, but profits are still far off
 
  05/14/01
The Most Influential People in Electronic Business
What's a tech exec to do in the midst of what experts say could be the biggest slowdown in 15 years? These 25 heavy hitters offer bold advice: Don't just hunker down and wait it out. Now's the time to take aggressive steps--to invest, build, develop new products, and prepare for the upswing
 
  04/16/01
The Great Internet Money Game
How America's top financial firms reaped billions from the Net boom, while investors got burned
 
  03/19/01
Bloody but Unbowed
Ola Lauritzson's startup ran out of gas. Here are the lessons to be learned
 
  02/19/01
VC Shakeout!
Since the tech bubble burst, venture-capital firms have been getting hammered. The damage will be severe, and investors aren't the only ones who'll get hurt. How will the shakeout affect startups--and the economy?
 
  01/22/01
The Last True Believer
Last year, the tech meltdown vaporized $180 billion worth of Softbank's market cap. So is Masayoshi Son throttling back? Anything but. He plans to pour more money into Net companies, boosting his portfolio from 600 to 800
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