A chair that lets you stretch your legs without getting up
Urbio clears clutter off the desk and moves it to the wall
Backed by a computer model of a chip plant, his options contracts for costly equipment have helped Intel save $125 million
With cities growing faster than suburbs, the retailer has designed new stores for downtown shoppers
ShoeSense may liberate smartphone addicts from the strictures of social opprobrium
Jake Dyson wants to stop replacing LED bulbs
Former Apple Store chief Ron Johnson is trying to wean J.C. Penney shoppers from discounts. Its not going well
The Italian automaker and others are adding hybrid technology to elite cars
The 23-year-olds startup aims to change the way people interact with computers
The workshop chain is turning DIY mania into a growing franchise
A critic decides that Musks egomaniacal ways dont mean he wont deliver on his far-out ventures
Detroit eyes new fuel technologies being developed for tanks
His startup Jinni, and its Entertainment Genome, aim to do for film and TV what Pandora did for music
A trial in England shows the power of the long-range, high-speed technology
The company seeks to win back rights to its iconic logo from banks
Each chocolate you put back instead of eating is like a set of sit-ups for your self-control
His company Canonical has extended its open-source push to smartphones and cars
The Supreme Court and White House rein in patent owners who file frivolous cases
Suing around the globe
The startup has overcome tragedy to create a different kind of social network—one where you continue to own whatever you post
The MIT scientist is developing tiny robots—eventually as small as grains of sand—that will form into any device or structure imaginable
Frozen food innovator Clarence Birdseye changed the way we eat
A symbolic shift toward a pay-as-you-go economy, or just a way to make an extra 40 bucks?
The Harvard B-school professor and best-selling authors latest book tackles a new dilemma: the rarity of professional and personal success
Nature uses folding to manufacture some of its most intricate creations, from flowers and wings to protein and DNA. What if humans could do the same?
With a trove of electronic health data, his company EClinicalWorks aims to help communities and hospitals make better policy and treatment decisions
Startups once ignored intellectual-property issues; now they protect innovations early
Big marketers battle lookalikes as sales in the countryside boom
The White House tries to keep returning vets from being taken for a ride
Amid the e-book price war, publishers worry about Amazons print-on-demand technology
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