01 / Yandex > > For mastering search. The internet search company Yandex is already three times more popular than Google in its home market (Russia) and this year, it made its move onto Google's international turf with the launch of an English-language search engine. One of Yandex's key advantages has always been the complexity of the Russian language, whose Lego-set of prefixes, roots and suffixes has forced it to be a step ahead in the nuance of its algorithms.
Read More »Category Archives: Professional Development News
Feed SubscriptionCan Harvesting Fog Bring Water To The Thirsty?
Almost 900 million people in the world live without access to safe drinking water--the kind of water that is safe enough to flow straight from the tap into your mouth (with maybe a Brita filter in between). For these people, walking hours each day to faraway and potentially contaminated streams and wells is a way of life, and not one that is particularly conducive to getting much done
Read More »The Beggar ‘Bot: Highest-Tech Solution Yet To Charity Fatigue
There's always a hand out-stretched begging for cash for a cause, it seems. And you probably rarely, if ever, give.
Read More »Massive Labs Prep Businesses For Acts Of God With Manmade Fires, Hurricanes, Hail
Professional pyromaniacs (fine, engineers) employed by the insurance industry are finding increasingly sophisticated ways to recreate horrific natural disasters--and their research is helping companies avoid millions in losses. As wildfires rage through Texas and the U.S
Read More »An Electric Trike In The Trunk Makes For The Ultimate Hybrid Eco-Car
Chinese car firm Geely has a gift for you in the trunk of its electric McCar vehicle: A tiny electric trike that's actually charged as you drive the bigger car. It could be the perfect vehicle to solve city traffic problems
Read More »A Starry Night on Sark Island
Photograph by Chris Floyd FORGET BLUE skies -- for a growing community of stargazing tourists, darkness is all they want. "People have never seen the Milky Way," says Rowena Davis of the International Dark-Sky Association, which identifies the earth's best locales for appreciating the heavens
Read More »When Venture Capital Was an Adventure
George Doriot, the father of venture capitalism, liked to quip "Someone, somewhere, is making a product that will make your product obsolete." Doriot died in 1987, but his ideas about venture funding can be seen to this day; Intel, Apple, and Cisco (to name a few) are some of the first companies to be funded by venture capitalists. The VCs that followed in his footsteps—including Tom Perkins, Arthur Rock, and Don Valentine—have, through their work, trailblazed a path of American innovation.
Read More »Big Business in Small Packages
Each day, Inc.'s reporters scour the Web for the most important and interesting news to entrepreneurs.
Read More »Building a Personal Brand
Former Wall Street Journal fashion journalist Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan was toying with the idea of writing a food memoir when she was laid off in 2009. She promptly landed a book deal and spent the next year traveling to Singapore to research what became the just-out A Tiger in the Kitchen
Read More »Ultrasound Provides Breakthrough In Brain Treatment
The blood-brain barrier keeps bacteria out--which is good. But for patients with brain tumors, it also keeps out life-saving medicine. A startup thinks it can fix that by using ultrasound
Read More »iFive: Amazon Cloud Woes, Samsung Sues Apple, Facebook’s "Like" Birthday, Apple Cloud Music Ready, Microsoft Patents Buying Apps
1. After its extended cloud services failure, Amazon's Web Services system is cranking back to life , bringing some of the web's big-names with it.
Read More »Social Media Abstinence Is Not Working
Banning kids from Facebook isn't realistic.
Read More »7 Ways to Green Your Business
Switching from incandescent to compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) is easy, affordable, and can cut costs right off the bat. CFLs use 75 percent less energy, saving up to $200 for every five bulbs replaced, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Plus, lighting expenses make up as much as 50 percent of the average commercial building's energy bill
Read More »Wanted: The Lavish Lego Clutch
Handmade in Italy and about $1,000 bucks each, these bags are not toys. Which makes them all the more fun to play with. Italian designer Mariasole Cecchi designed these peculiar objets one bored evening in Paris, using just a box of Legos, an old bag and some glue.
Read More »Google Launches Groupon Competitor, Groupon Poaches Google Exec For COO Job
After dangling a reported $6 billion offer in front of daily deal site Groupon (which it ultimately rejected), Google is pressing on with its own service. Today Google unveiled Offers , a new feature that will allow local businesses to show off deep discounts to consumers. Seemingly a direct competitor to Groupon and Living Social, Offers boasts of discounts of 50% off or more
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