Summit on Ethical E-Business.(Better Business Bureau of Silicon Valley)(Calendar of Events)(Brief Article)

From: The Online Reporter | Date: January 29, 2001 | Copyright information

The Better Business Bureau of Silicon Valley is having a conference on ethical e-business - Building Y...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

The changing dream.(Survey - Silicon Valley)
The Economist (US) ; IF YOU sit on the lid of progress, you will be blown to pieces. Henry Kaiser's aphorism, nailed to the wall in one of Palo Alto's cyberstores that connect you to the Internet, conveys the impression that those blown to pieces are likely to be those a long way from Silicon Valley and from the sort
New book tells secrets to Silicon Valley's success. (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service ; ... know, has its problems. But, as Saxenian points out, we also have remarkable strengths. (Write James J. Mitchell at the Mercury News, 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, Calif. 95190; call (408) 920-5544; or fax (408) 920-5917. Send Mercury Center e-mail on America ...
As Texas Microchip Industry Reaches for Lone Star, Silicon Valley Dips. (Originated from San Jose Mercury News, Calif.)
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News ; Aug. 29--Silicon Valley is losing its claim to fame to Texas. The Lone Star State is overtaking California as the largest computer chip producer in the United States. Although the technological power of the semiconductor industry hasn't shifted from Silicon Valley, the decline in manufacturing is
Deportation order; Silicon Valley.(Silicon Valley and visas)
The Economist (US) ; A place that loves globalisation hates a benighted visa raj SILICON VALLEY, as the old joke goes, was built on ICs--Indians and Chinese that is, not integrated circuits. As of the last decennial census, in 2000, more than half of all the engineers in the valley were foreign-born, and about half of
The Battle for California; Partisan Edge Is Elusive in Silicon Valley; Old Politics Doesn't Click In New Economy's Capital
The Washington Post ; For the past year, Floyd Kvamme, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, has devoted his spare time to George W. Bush's presidential campaign. He helped organize Bush's support here, has shuttled to Austin for strategy sessions and hopes to break a record tonight by helping to stage the biggest
Modesto, Calif., Firm Works on Map of Silicon Valley.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News ; Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News May 28 -- You won't find a welcome banner ... mapping its freeways and roads. Compass Maps is working on a revised Silicon Valley ... Wide Web site of the San Jose Mercury News, at http://www.sjmercury.com
HIGH-TECH PARADISE LOST PRICES, TRAFFIC HURT SILICON VALLEY
The Boston Globe ; MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. - When HotDispatch, a young Internet company founded in Cambridge, was asked by its investors to move to Silicon Valley, it was confirmation of the West Coast region's role as the epicenter of high tech. But a funny thing happened. All of HotDispatch's technical talent refused
In Silicon Valley, return to humbler tech dreams.(USA)
The Christian Science Monitor ; ... helicopter tours, massages, and hand-painted local pottery with chocolates. One evening, the dinner offered high-powered telescopes, maps of the night sky drawn specifically for that date and location, and a panel of astronomers and astrologers. Then, excess was ...
Tapping into the Silicon clique: the case of Silicon Valley provides valuable lessons for multinationals trying to exploit regional networks.(In depth: Silicon Valley)
European Business Forum ; Silicon Valley remains a byword for shared technical excellence--but the 'pull' of the region can take several forms. Many multinational companies use their operations there as a centre of sales and marketing activities for the US or North American market; others believe a mere presence in the
Silicon Valley's newly rich finally loosening purse strings for charity.(Nation)
The Washington Times ; PALO ALTO, Calif. - Some of the newly rich millionaires of Silicon Valley are at last starting to give to charity after years of building a reputation as the stingiest of U.S. tycoons. The biggest donation so far came from Netscape Communications founder James H. Clark, who gave $150 million of his