Athenians speak about what it's like to live in a country without hope
Money Moves, 5/24: Chocomize Co-Founder Fabian Kaempfer talks with Bloomberg’s Deirdre Bolton about the business of customizing chocolate
New cars feature access to Twitter, Facebook, and Google on the road
In honor of remote control inventor Eugene Polley, we recognize other influential but neglected inventors who have felt the sting of stolen glory
CME Group opens its first futures contract on an Eastern European crop
Finding distribution means convincing the right people of your product's sales potential. Avoid making claims you can't back up
Bob Maron has a few suggestions to start off your million-dollar watch collection
Schools cultivate ties with startups before they're big successes
Dave McClure's traveling venture capital show scours the world for promising startups
By Kerry Capell
It has been a decade since the Good Friday Agreement finally brought peace to Northern Ireland. Now, there's a new sense of optimism and economic prosperity. Three decades of sectarian violence between the mainly Protestant Unionists, who wish to remain part of Britain, and the predominantly Catholic Republicans, who don't, have left their mark. But the new political stability is helping to revive the North's economy.