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Multibillionaire professor David Cheriton has bankrolled a startup called Apstra, which has been working on software for managing networking devices from multiple vendors. He has funded 20 companies to date.
Many investors are starting to position themselves for a reversal of a recent market rally.
Apple fired a broadside at what remains of the PC industry last week, when its marketing chief claimed the company’s new iPad Pro is aimed at anyone still using an old PC. Still, it isn’t clear Apple’s iPad Pro can deliver on that goal—at least not yet.
An Iranian charged with hacking the computer system that controlled a New York dam used a readily available Google search process to identify the vulnerable system, said people familiar with the investigation.
Bonanza Creek Energy's finance chief is leaving amid a broad restructuring; Tesla's vice president of finance is returning to prior employer Amazon.com.
Accenture raised its guidance for the year after the consulting company easily topped expectations in its latest quarter.
The hedge fund plans to nominate directors to replace the entire board, Starboard said in a letter, setting the stage for a battle over the future of the faded Web giant.
Monsanto named a longtime manager of its seed business to head the company’s ambitious push into computerized farming services, as the unit’s prior leader, David Friedberg, steps down to focus on ventures, such as a quinoa-focused restaurant and agricultural robots.
JR Rivers, a high-profile figure in a movement to reduce the cost of networking hardware, is giving up the chief executive job at Cumulus Networks to a top lieutenant.
Following up on the release in recent years of larger-display smartphones that broke sales records, Apple Inc. on Monday is expected to go small, announcing a successor to the 4-inch iPhone 5s. The move comes as the company grapples with slowing growth of its flagship product, as well as a dedicated core of users who remain loyal to the smaller format.
Worries of a coming shakeout are rippling through the ranks of Silicon Valley’s tech workers. Recruiters say prospective hires are sizing up highly valued startups and the stock awards that come with them, wary of boarding a sinking ship.
A roundup of venture-capital news and analysis from VentureWire and around the Web.
The adoption of public cloud, even among financial services and health-care companies, has picked up in the last six to nine months, industry experts have told CIO Journal repeatedly in recent weeks
Institutional investors who screen target firms for their environmental and social impacts and governance practices are finding success through engagement with companies.
A former partner at venture capital firm Sequoia Capital who was sued by a woman who claimed he sexually abused her responded with a countersuit that alleges she attempted to extort him.
Nearly three years after his historic disclosure to journalists of classified documents, Edward Snowden says time and experience are vindicating his actions.
Venture-capital firm Sequoia Capital said it parted ways with longtime partner Michael Goguen in the wake of allegations he sexually abused a woman and failed to follow through on a $40 million settlement.
It seems that this skills gap, which is at the top of the agenda for many CIOs, reflects a much deeper problem in the U.S., where workers rank last among 18 industrialized countries when it comes to using technology to solve problems. The consequences of that emerging competitive disadvantage are energizing the volatile undercurrent of this year’s presidential race