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Forget 'What are your strengths and weaknesses?' If you want to get the real dope on prospective employees, ask job candidates these seven questions.
When it comes to understanding consumers and what they will want, Apple is one of the strategically smartest companies in the world. And the recently reported deal to acquire music streaming start-up Lala is another indication that the company is planning to become the central cloud for consumers. That raises some interesting questions about what [...]
Even smart people make financial moves that are downright illogical. Emotions and superstitions have a sneaky way of keeping you from rational financial decisions. But dumb choices can have serious, real-world consequences. Here are some of the biggest blunders we all make, plus tips from the experts on how to keep cool.
Nick Ut, Associated PressThe Rose Parade has plenty of eye-popping floats, including the Magic of Mardi Gras, created by FTD for the 2008 procession.
Stop and smell the roses,
Free Press, 462 pp., $30In 2003, the Library of Congress paid $10 million for the single surviving copy of the huge Waldseemuller world map of 1507, the first to recognize that the newly discovered lands across the Atlantic weren't part of Asia, but a separate continent, the long-rumored "fourth part of the world," which it called "America."
This purchase of America's "birth certificate," the highest sum ever paid for a historical document, inspired Atlantic Monthly writer Toby Lester to compile (the verb is apt) one of those offbeat, hybrid, labor-of-love books that comes along every so often and charms readers with its eclecticism and sheer love of knowledge.
"The Fourth Part of the World" begins and ends with the story of the Waldseemuller map, which was lost for