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Our world has rapidly gone from being connected to interconnected to interdependent. When the world is tied together this intimately, everyone's values and behavior matter more than ever, because our actions affect more people than ever and in ways they never have.
The workplace is getting more boring say experts, and studies suggest boredom can affect high-performers as well as those in menial jobs.
While the business world can be a hostile place, it doesn't often throw up situations where you'll literally find yourself with an arrow to your throat.
Recording traveling expenses can be one the most frustrating aspects of the business traveler's busy life on the road. Restaurant bills, train tickets, hotel receipts; they all have to be accurately accounted for.
Business Traveller goes tray-to-tray in a a challenge to create the perfect room service experience.
Analysts are predicting plane tickets will get more expensive as more airlines merge in response to deep-seated structural problems in the industry.
Born and raised in the Philippines to a businessman and a socialite model, Monique Lhuillier is today one of LA's most celebrated fashion designers, with a clientele that includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Kristen Stewart, Reese Witherspoon, and Scarlett Johansson.
Fortune's latest ranking of America's 500 largest corporations includes more women CEOs than ever before.
At the start of the 2012 Formula One season, with a driver pairing that comprised of a virtual rookie and a former world champion who had been out of the sport for two years, little was expected of Lotus.
MYB: The WSJ and NYT are also reporting that he told the board he's been diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
In the big scheme of consumer electronics, smartwatches can't match smartphones, tablets, or even ultrabooks in piquing public curiosity.
Weddings in Nigeria are colorful, creative and extravagant productions, with guest lists of up to 2,000 people considered standard.
CNN's Nina Dos Santos reports on the possibility of Greece leaving the eurozone and finds out how it could work.
CNN's Dan Simon looks back at Mark Zuckerberg, camera shy and sometimes awkward, in a 2006 interview with CNN.
CNNMoney.com's Julianne Pepitone looks at why Yahoo has gone through three CEOs in as many years.
Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International, will appear before the Leveson Inquiry into press standards on Friday to answer key questions about the phone-hacking scandal.
By 2023, hideously powerful technology companies like the Weyland Corporation will rule the world. At least that's the storyline in "Prometheus," Ridley Scott's much-anticipated prequel to "Aliens," which will be released next month.
When CNN's Pauline Chiou first visited the Cambodian Stock Exchange (CSX), the trading room was filled with new desks and computer monitors, waiting for someone to power them on. Now one stock is being traded. Will investors come?
CNN's Ali Velshi explains the subtle economic differences between stimulus and austerity measures.
The president of Emirates cites high fuels prices as the main culprit of their drop in profits.
IMF managing director Christine Lagarde explains that growth and austerity are not necessarily mutually exclusive.
For the first time, a Chinese bank wins approval to buy U.S. banks and take U.S. deposits.
The chairman of Angela Merkel's party discusses the importance of Greece having a stable government.
The arrest of a Nigerian politician who deposited millions of dollars of stolen money in UK accounts has raised questions about the role of British banks in corruption.
Facebook has raked in billions and will make a splash when its stock hits the open market next week. So, what are folks on Wall Street concerned about?
Just like entrepreneurs always improve their products, you need to always be improving yourself, says LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman.
Online retailers claim that stylish prescription frames can be purchased online for a fraction of the cost.
UK Business Secretary Vince Cable discusses shareholders exerting their power in deciding pay packages for CEOs.
European leaders are drawing up a series of crisis-fighting proposals to raise at an informal EU summit this week that have in the past been rejected by Germany putting further pressure on Chancellor Angela Merkel.
She likes Target, the Food Network and sun-dried tomatoes. She loves taking pictures of her dog Beast, and admits to checking her phone "every five seconds."
The events of the past few weeks have made increasingly probable what was once considered impossible: Greece may exit the euro.
The once-taboo topic of Greece's exit from the common currency is now being openly discussed. The country is now deep in financial and political crisis. So what is next?
CNN's Nina Dos Santos finds out where Greeks are sending their money after withdrawing it from banks.
Greece may be in the midst of an economic crisis but one company continues to sleep easy.
In the last decade of the 20th century, the Turkish lira fell in value 1,000 times against the U.S. dollar, meaning that tourists returning to that country after several years found that any old money they still possessed since their last visit had become almost worthless.
Now that Facebook is friends with Wall Street, this journalist is giving her timeline a rethink.
Every company has a hidden agenda, and tapping into it is the key to getting your dream job, says advertising guru Kevin Allen.
From high above the earth, an astronaut reveals the latest report card on the health of the planet, painting an alarming image of over-consumption and exploitation.
CNN's Becky Anderson takes a look at what would happen if Greece left the eurozone
China's Dalian Wanda Group and AMC Entertainment announced Monday a $2.6 billion deal to take over the U.S. theater group, forming the world's largest cinema chain, according to a new release on the deal.
Yahoo and China's Alibaba Group have agreed to a $7.1 billion deal in which the Hangzhou-based internet behemoth buys back half of Yahoo's 40% stake in the company.
"It's very important that Apple not become the developer for the world," Tim Cook, Apple chief executive, told analysts last month. "We need people to invent their own stuff."
Nasdaq OMX's chief executive admitted he was "embarrassed" by the delay in the opening trade of Facebook's initial public offering and revealed that the exchange was in talks with regulators over potentially millions of dollars of customer claims.
Concerns about whether debt-laden Greece will be forced to pull out of the eurozone, and what that would mean for a weakened European economy is the first topic on Saturday's agenda at the Group of Eight summit hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama, a senior administration official said.
Iran's finance minister believes oil prices could rise as high as $160 a barrel thanks to sanctions over its nuclear program, a prediction that comes just as the chief of the United Nations nuclear watchdog agency headed to Tehran on Sunday for high-level talks.
Samsung has admitted to concerns over "worrying" weakness in Chinese consumer spending as customer sentiment, damped by government austerity measures, turns against spending on technology products.
Facebook co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg married longtime girlfriend Priscilla Chan on Saturday.
SpaceX's launch of the first private spacecraft bound for the International Space Station has been rescheduled for next week after the mission was aborted Saturday a half a second before liftoff, the company said.
Wayne Sutton has been asking venture-capital investors and Silicon Valley executives a question that's not often broached here in the epicenter of the technology industry:
(CNN) -- FACETIME: Amr Moussa, Egyptian presidential candidate