The annual marketing campaign pushing people to receive flu vaccinations is in full force. CVS Pharmacies is offering a 20% off shopping pass if you purchase a flu vaccine.
My friend Carolyn recently retired as a secretary of the business school at Loyola where I am employed as a professor. She was one of the sweetest and kindest persons I have ever met, and very helpful to me when I first arrived at Loyola in 2001.
Well, there's good and bad news wafting upward from the immolation of Volkswagen over its now-public end-running of the EPA's preposterously over-strict emissions rigmarole (more about that here and – audio clip – here).
Are viewers simply waiting for a new must-watch TV drama a'la Breaking Bad or Scandal to capture their attention? Or, are viewers simply leaving traditional TV viewing behind in favor of on-demand streaming a'la Netflix?
This could kill VW - until recently (until last week) the world's largest car company.
But unlike say the exploding Pinto fiasco this is not a story about defective cars. It is a story about defective public policy.
In a display of give and take, Boeing Co. unveiled its largest industrial investment in China and landed $38 billion worth of jet orders and commitments from Chinese carriers and lessors as the country's president visited Boeing's main factory.
Starbucks has expanded its Mobile Order & Pay service nationwide, allowing customers to place orders on mobile devices before they get to the coffee shop and skip the line.
U.S. stock-index futures fell, with raw-material shares dragged lower as commodities retreated, a selloff in biotechnology shares deepened and Volkswagen AG's diesel-emissions cheating scandal continued to rattle global auto stocks.
Volkswagen said on Tuesday that 11 million diesel cars worldwide were equipped with the same software that was used to cheat on emissions tests in the United States.
Moon Express' Bob Richards is very interested in commercial space efforts. When he spoke with SpaceFlight Insider earlier this week, he noted that more firms with an interest in private space efforts are emerging – and eyeing Florida's Space Co
It's not a secret that Tesla's oft-delayed Model X crossover will finally be in customers' hands this month, and now we've got an event to go along with the launch: next Tuesday, September 29th in Fremont, California -- home of Tesla's factory.
As long as hackers have sold their secret hacking techniques known as zero-day exploits to government spies, they've generally kept that trade in the shadows.
Tesla builds electric cars, but it also builds batteries -- and with the development of its Gigafactory in Nevada, in association with Panasonic, it plans to build a lot more batteries.
The meeting in California, which is developing regulations for driverless vehicles, suggest the technology giant is close to unveiling an autonomous automobile
Germany is one of the biggest players in the global auto industry, so it shouldn't be a surprise the Vaterland plays host to the planet's largest car show.
The Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) released its model framework for states to use in designing regulations and made it clear it wants to see state governments take a proactive and rigorous approach to licensing and supervising "virtual
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