Fishers courts, wins technology businesses
Fishers has become a mecca for tech companies—but it didn’t happen overnight and it didn’t happen by accident.
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Fishers has become a mecca for tech companies—but it didn’t happen overnight and it didn’t happen by accident.
Here’s a summary of the outcome of major legislation in the 2016 General Assembly.
The 39,000-square-foot historic courthouse on the square in Noblesville could be turned into co-working space, a community center or something else after the county expands its adjacent judicial center.
The coding projects came as part of the first-ever #INCapitolHack, which kicked off Indy Chamber’s Hack Indiana series.
Drawing on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, TechPoint’s “2015 State of Tech Talent in Indiana” report said there are 26,000 IT and non-IT positions in the tech industry, as well as 2,400 computer-related sole proprietors or freelancers.
M.T. Ray will be responsible for attracting talent to the High Alpha team and helping portfolio companies land leaders and employees.
The Zionsville-based retailer continued to grow but saw profit plummet after it moved beyond its core business of selling sports caps.
Fishers City Council member Pete Peterson has been removed from the executive role, and Carmel City Council member Laura Campbell has been appointed the new chair.
A federal judge rejected ex-attorney and convicted fraudster William Conour’s bid to reduce his prison sentence Wednesday but lifted the condition of supervised release after he serves his time.
Plus thoughts on the Phoenix Theatre’s thriller ‘On Clover Road’
Salesforce and some of its competitors have been using their Indianapolis operations to help forge a new industry—the creation of cloud-based digital dashboards known as “marketing clouds.”
Stressing neither slavish authenticity nor pandering conventionality, Nada fills another hole at Circle Centre
The state tournament has taken many twists and turns since the historic outcome of 1956.
Mitch Roob's comments were accurate, based on logic, common sense, sound economic and free market principles and reflective of the desire of an overwhelming majority of Hoosiers—all factors that have been barred from the annual debate in the Statehouse.
I would only note that it is very telling when the Democrat front-runner for the presidency feels like she has to issue an apology to her supporters for saying nice things about former first lady Nancy Reagan.
The doing away with coal is completely devastating to our economy and puts an undue hardship on all citizens.
By November, a majority will tire of Trump’s traveling show. To avoid a blowout, The Insulter-in-Chief will have to do more than continue to insult his opponents and make razor-thin policy statements that double as bumper stickers.
According to the very apologetic caseworker, insurers deny approximately 50 percent of requested moves to acute rehab. There doesn’t seem to be a pattern for these refusals, which are issued without seeing the patients or consulting with their doctors.
If national security is secondary to Tim Cook, I can do without my iPhone.
Merit selection would be a radical change from the current election system, which a federal appeals court last year declared unconstitutional.