
Tensions show no sign of easing ahead of President Xi Jinping’s upcoming meeting with Obama

Time has run out for Procter & Gamble's CEO as the company turns to a famed management star

Surprise, surprise: Target, Macy's, and 15 other retailers are suing Visa and MasterCard over card fees

The odd-job marketplace is getting traction with business customers

Net flow into debt hedge funds is the highest since 2007

Roel Vertegaal's PaperTab is like an iPad you can fold, spindle, or mutilate

Networks are staggering première dates to capture viewers and ad dollars

Jim Dean, the dean of UNC's Kenan-Flagler School, calls it quits for a more lofty title: provost

Rob Rhinehart is living on a substance he engineered to replace food, and he just raised more than $200,000 through crowdfunding to manufacture it
An addictive casual game that makes good use of the iPhone 3G’s accelerometer, a device that can tell whether the iPhone is oriented in landscape or portrait mode. Like Tetris, where players put falling shapes together like a puzzle, Trism challenges users to rearrange and match triangular shapes. But with Trism, the shapes drop into any of six directions.