Our annual snapshot of the 100 women with the most impact are top politicians and CEOs, activist billionaires and celebrities who matter. In roughly equal measure you'll find next gen entrepreneurs and media mavens, technologists and leaders in philanthropy — all ranked by dollars, media momentum and impact (see full methodology here).
Two years into an epically challenged tenure, Meg Whitman may yet emerge as Hewlett-Packard's best CEO since its founders.
German software giant SAP AG said Tuesday it plans to recruit people with autism to take make full use of their talents to process information.Autism is a developmental disorder characterized by difficulties in communicating, emotional detachment and rigid or repetitive behavior. But some people with mild autism can perform complex mathematical tasks much better than the average...
Startup ideas can be found in surprising places. We asked Thumbtack.com which opportunities are drawing the most interest from entrepreneurs and their customers lately.
Caterpillar's new B15 smartphone is rugged and good looking at the same time.
Yesterday afternoon, Microsoft debuted their new console, the Xbox One, at long last. We saw the controller, the box itself, a redesigned Kinect and some new features and games over the course of an hour.
The Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, told Congress that a premature tightening of monetary policy “would carry a substantial risk of slowing or ending the economic recovery.”
From a pet relocation service, a wine lifestyle marketer, to a scrap metal regenerator, America's urban core is home to a variety of fast-growing companies.
They came from multiple generations, women redefining and disrupting traditional notions of power. An Olympic gold metal winner with an inspiring mother-daughter story. A female fighting terrorists as the head of an FBI operation. As executive producer of the inaugural FORBES Women's Summit: Power Redefined, I wanted the 250 women (and some men) who gathered in New York on May 9 to hear the...
Rockefeller Foundation President Judith Rodin keeps an old New Yorker cartoon next to her desk. It features a group of men and one woman sitting around a table. The man at the head says, “That’s a really interesting comment, Miss Brown, maybe one of the men would like to make it now.”

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