Similar Articles |
|
CIO September 11, 2008 Stephanie Overby |
How IT is Helping the Railroad Industry Improve Efficiency and Service Railroads are poised for a comeback, thanks to rising fuel prices. IT provides the linchpin for a shipping model that integrates ships, trucks and trains. |
Popular Mechanics January 2006 Josh Dean |
The Train Welcome to tomorrow's computer-controlled, GPS-guided, ultra-energy-efficient transportation revolution. |
The Motley Fool November 26, 2010 Palash R. Ghosh |
Railway Stocks on Track for Long-Term Growth Buffett's buy created some interest, but the industry remains underfollowed -- and undervalued. |
TIME Asia August 16, 2010 Austin Ramzy |
Engines of Growth At a time when infrastructure in the U.S. and Europe is aging fast, China's railways may give it a competitive edge over the world's leading economies. |
BusinessWeek October 23, 2008 Emily Thornton |
Canadian National Railway's Timely Profits Canadian National Railway's CEO Hunter Harrison went against traditional freight train practice and successfully implemented a precise schedule of shipments. |
Chemistry World September 23, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
US chemical distribution threatened by rail safety crisis Chemical transport by train across the US may end on much of the nation's rail network in January 2016, due to delays adopting new rail safety technology. |
National Defense May 2011 Stew Magnuson |
Army Looks to Industry To Reduce Computer Energy Consumption The Army, along with the information technology companies that serve it, are looking at ways to reduce the energy footprint of data centers. |
BusinessWeek June 5, 2006 Steve Hamm |
Big Blue Shift IBM is reorganizing its global workforce to lower costs without skimping on service. |
AskMen.com Thomas Bey |
Top 10: Trains Train travel is hugely popular abroad, and these 10 trains have qualities that make them good rides, as well as good models for domestic adaptation. |
Inc. November 2005 Darren Dahl |
Railroads Buckling Under Record Traffic Amid rising fuel prices, more companies are turning to railroads as a cheaper way to transport goods. The surge in freight is so pronounced that it threatens to create a capacity crunch. |
America's Civil War Alan R. Koenig |
Railroad's Critical Role in the Civil War Railroads played a critical role to both sides during America's Civil War, in support of each side's armies and economies. |
BusinessWeek December 3, 2007 Jason Bush |
Paving a 'Road to Russia's Future' Putin is finally working on infrastructure, inviting international companies to bid on highway projects. |
Wired July 2006 David Wolman |
Train to the Roof of the World China's new 1,200-mile railway crosses some of the harshest terrain on the planet. Plug in your oxygen supply. All aboard the Tibet express. |
The Motley Fool October 25, 2011 Alex Pape |
High Oil Prices Benefit This Niche Industry Don't overlook the intermodal transportation industry. |
Wired January 2002 Wil McCarthy |
Runaway Train First railway track started doubling every 18 months. Then things really got weird... |
PC Magazine March 16, 2004 Peter Suciu |
All Aboard Before the jet age, rails connected the country. Many games have covered this golden age of travel, and one of the best is still Microsoft's Train Simulator. Although the newest release has been derailed until later in 2004, these other titles let you become a railroad robber baron--or just take a ride on the rails. |
BusinessWeek August 9, 2004 Jason Bush |
A Renaissance For Russian Science Student enrollments are up, and multinationals are chasing grads. However, without an influx of qualified teachers, Russian science may be living on borrowed time. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Steve Hamm |
A Second Wind For Big Iron? Forty years into the mainframe's run, there's a new vision of centralized computing |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Robb Mandelbaum |
Stop That Train! Electronically controlled railway brakes may finally displace a 150-year-old technology. |
The Motley Fool April 18, 2011 Jacob Roche |
How to Play the Coming Boom in Everything The 19th century called, and it wants its opportunity back. |
InternetNews February 16, 2005 Jim Wagner |
IBM to Sprout More Dev Centers Abroad The time is ripe for more centers, as enterprise software booms in China, Russia and Brazil. |
The Motley Fool November 1, 2011 Rebecca Lipman |
Railroad Stocks: Bill Ackman Thinks They're Undervalued Hedge fund guru Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Capital Management has a history of buying up companies he deems undervalued to turn them around. So investors are paying close attention to his newest target: Canadian Pacific Railway. |
Popular Mechanics April 9, 2009 S.E. Kramer |
Railroad Stimulus: How to Spend $14 Billion to Improve U.S. Rail There are many ways to improve the country's passenger-rail network. Experts agree that to get more people off the roads and onto trains, the government must pick and choose projects wisely. |
InternetNews October 1, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM Improves Transaction Monitoring in Tivoli Thanks to major advancements in its autonomic computing technology, IBM has updated its Tivoli management software, offering customers a map that identifies failures in Web transactions. |
InternetNews May 13, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM Launches Supercomputing Center Big Blue opens a European counterpart to its U.S. Deep Computing On Demand center in hopes of expanding business. |
Parameters Summer 2004 Justin Bernier |
The Death of Disarmament in Russia? Traditional arms control agreements with Russia, it seems, are as much a part of Cold War history as the Soviet Union itself. |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Jan/Feb 2007 Georgii Ivanov |
Russia Rising Russia's commercial real estate market is in an exciting phase of development, reflecting the Russian economy's dynamic growth. A growing economy and international investor interest point to a strong future. |
Finance & Development December 2011 Paul Collier |
Building an African Infrastructure Key political decisions are needed to build critical rail networks for a continent well suited to them |
National Defense December 2015 Yasmin Tadjdeh |
Russia Expands Military Presence in Arctic Russia is increasing its military presence along its northern border in the Arctic as sea ice melts and opens new water routes. |
BusinessWeek September 24, 2009 Carol Matlack |
The Peril and Promise of Investing in Russia It's still risky, but for global corporations, Russia country is simply too big -- and too rich -- to ignore. |
The Motley Fool September 17, 2004 Bill Mann |
Guangshen Railway to Double Capacity The railway, funded by the Chinese government, offers impressive corporate communications, conservatism and payout policies. With a yield of more than 4.4%, it offers a nice dividend, too. |
Macworld December 2004 Peter Cohen |
Railroad Tycoon 3 Designed for Macs running OS X 10.2 or better, this expansive strategy game lets you build your own railroad empire -- if you can handle the rough track along the way. |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Beyond Blue Never mind computers and tech services. IBM's radical new focus is on revamping customers' operations -- and even running them. |
Finance & Development June 1, 2001 Harry G. Broadman |
Competition and Business Entry in Russia Reforming anticompetitive business structures and lowering barriers to entry are key to Russia's post-privatization reform program... |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2008 Steve Hamm |
International Isn't Just IBM's First Name IBM has built a global network for client services and in the past three years has hired 90,000 people in low-cost countries. |
InternetNews April 15, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Moscow Mimics Mumbai Russian software firms look to siphon outsourcing business from India by playing up their education system. |
BusinessWeek August 1, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Two Pillars Of IBM's Growth Look Shaky A better second quarter for IBM hides challenges in mainframes and services. |
InternetNews November 29, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Big Blue Opens Doors to Real-Time Software Seeking a way to provide customers with more hands-on opportunities to test its management software, IBM opened the doors to a new on-demand technology center Monday. |
Salon.com September 12, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
How Big Blue fell for Linux When open-source developers and IBM took gambles on each other, free software showed it can flourish in the heartland of corporate computing. |
National Gardening Art Edelstein |
Garden Railroading Add a model train to your garden and enjoy two hobbies at once... |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 |
Canadian National: The Making Of A Track Star Canadian National Railway Co.'s chief talks about why the railway is the industry's most profitable. |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Jim Wagner |
IBM, Red Hat Go Abroad With Linux IBM and Red Hat are looking to get more software developers and ISVs onto the Linux platform. |
The Motley Fool March 7, 2008 Saibal Saha |
China's Olympian Infrastructure Plans Huge projects stretching far beyond 2008 beckon companies from around the world. |
Finance & Development September 1, 2000 Andrei Nesterenko |
The Modernization Challenge Facing President Putin Having established and strengthened basic market and democratic institutions during the 1990s, Russia became an emerging market country that badly needs a modernization breakthrough. How can the government of President Vladimir Putin attain this goal? |
Pharmaceutical Executive January 21, 2014 William Looney |
Russia's Bet on Biopharma Can innovation trump ideology? Russia faces a stark choice in betting on the visible hand of government in promoting a "world class" biopharmaceutical sector |
BusinessWeek February 3, 2011 Lyubov Pronina |
Dreams of an iPad Economy for Russia Russia's President has hopes for a new tech corridor near Moscow, but can the country overcome corruption, lack of innovation, and a slow-moving state sector? |
InternetNews September 23, 2004 Erin Joyce |
IBM Gearing Up For BPTS In order to serve companies that are looking for answers to serious computing and internal IT problems, IBM has opened a new supercomputing center on its Somers, N.Y. campus called the Center for Business Optimization. |
Popular Mechanics February 16, 2010 Stephen Joiner |
Is Bigger Better? 'Monster' Trains vs Freight Trains Union Pacific quietly ran a record-setting "monster" freight train over its Sunset Route, from Dallas to Long Beach, using the 3.5-mile-long behemoth during a one-time test of new distributed-power configurations that may help make long trains even longer. |
The Motley Fool December 7, 2006 Rich Smith |
IBM: International Business vs. Sub-Machine Guns Big Blue got a taste of the Russian justice system when troops from an "unidentified" law enforcement agency raided its offices. |
The Motley Fool November 29, 2004 Rich Smith |
Toyota Says "Da" Automaker to set up shop in Russia. But while this may be the first Japanese plant in Russia, it won't be Toyota's first foray into Eastern Europe. |