Fed members are seriously considering changing their approach to announced expectations, to communicate an explicit “threshold” for inflation and unemployment.
Miami Marlin fans are furious after owner Jeffrey Loria shipped off the team's most valuable stars. They now have little reason to go to the hundred-million dollar stadium their tax money help build.
When he was 22, Michael Dell was the guy to sell you a PC or laptop by mail. Now it's services.
Seen from Taiwan, China's leadership change is a hopeful moment -- but not without some amusing twists.
A new decree in the United Arab Emirates will enforce stricter internet censorship to head off dissent.
The 3-6 Jets have been anonymously ripping Tebow in front of the media.
France is the only Western country to formally recognize Syria's new opposition coalition -- so far.
Thousands are recommending Pakistan's Malala Yousafzai for next year's Nobel Peace Prize, but not everyone will sign the petition.
Do box-office numbers mean anything? In the Columbia Journalism Review, media journalist Edward Jay Epstein challenged conventional wisdom that being No. 1 means a movie is a hit.
A sparkling new commuter train kicks off Kenya's ambitious infrastructure project, easing Nairobi's terrible traffic.
An $8.5 billion dividend by Verizon Wireless helps co-owner Vodafone, which could sell out to Verizon Communications.
News reports on the mushrooming scandal surrounding Gen. David Petraeus, the former CIA director, reveal frequent instances of misspellings. Name-related errors are actually among the most common mistakes in the news business.
Microsoft Corp., the world's top software company, ousted Windows VP Steve Sinofsky, 47, only weeks after shipment of Windows 8.
Nearly a year after Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG) spent $100 million on original programming for YouTube, the Web giant has not produced any household names.
When Cisco Systems reports 1Q results Tues., investors will likely wonder if it's signalling another quarter of slower growth.
Iraq has scrapped old plans for a Russian weapons deal, but says negotiations will go on.
Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG), a successful recipient of cash from venture capital funds, now wants to boost its own presence as a venture capitalist.
Now that Priceline.com has announced plans to acquire Kayak Software for $1.8 billion, the obvious question is who's next?
It's an open secret that Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is being probed over search. But Android could be a target, too.
David Cameron says the UK will work with Syrian rebels, a bold move that begs for collaboration from Barack Obama.
Qualcomm is scheduled to report higher fourth-quarter results Wednesday. Big question: clues for continued demand for current quarter and into 2013.
A top economic advisor to the Romney campaign appears to have jumped off the party ship, endorsing on Election Day an initiative critical of the Republicans and their presidential nominee.
Rumors flew in Russia as Vladimir Putin fired a staunch ally and ruthless reformist, Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov.
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) has been selling the iPhone 5 with the new A6 processor since Sept. 21. It may stop buying from Intel.
Syrian opposition groups are meeting in Doha, Qatar, this week in attempts to form a unified coalition against President Bashar al-Assad.
Both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney could have an enormous impact on monetary and fiscal policy.
Laos has announced plans to go ahead with its plans for the controversial Xayaburi dam on the Mekong River.
Sheryl Sandberg, COO and director of Facebook (Nasdaq: FB), joined the parade of insiders who have cashed in on the company's public status.
A new poll shows citizens of both Japan and China would overwhelmingly prefer a victory by U.S. President Barack Obama on Election Day.