ALTOM: Laptops evolve to include ports of all sorts
If you’ve purchased a laptop lately, you may have noticed it has a few new things in it, most visibly ports that now come in a rather bewildering variety of types and purposes.
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If you’ve purchased a laptop lately, you may have noticed it has a few new things in it, most visibly ports that now come in a rather bewildering variety of types and purposes.
I’m feeling very thankful that I have the opportunity to work alongside such wonderful people. Many CEOs feel the same way.
Focus on what you do best and get to know your partners’ strengths and weaknesses, Kevin Bailey, a co-founder of Slingshot SEO, told attendees of the TechPoint summit this month.
Minnesota-based Life Time Fitness is buying the two sites that will remain open. One is in Fishers and the other is near 96th and Meridian streets in Indianapolis.
So far, the efforts of government haven’t been enough to reverse the relative slide in wages and incomes. Too few firms are using the playground Indiana has created.
“Blueprint 2” calls on well-meaning church and charity groups to stop delivering food directly to homeless camps. Professional outreach teams report that this enables people who may have addictions or mental health problems to continue living outside.
Crossroads Industrial Services will team up with a service-disabled veteran to win new business from defense contractors.
The Indianapolis-based firm has pledged to add a total of 300 workers by 2015.
Federal transit data suggests passenger fares would generate about one-fourth of the money needed to operate a suburban rail and expanded bus system proposed for the region.
The basic idea behind risk parity is to reduce the weight of stocks and increase the weight of bonds to balance the volatility.
Two of Sanjay Patel’s hotels landed in bankruptcy in November. Four others filed for Chapter 11 protection last year.
The cascading revelations about Pennsylvania State University’s storied football program surely will continue to repulse and sadden us. But within the horror of the events are many lessons, economic and otherwise.
An Ohio-based company is recalling its Smucker’s Natural Peanut Butter Chunky product sold in Indiana and numerous other states. J.M. Smucker Co. announced the peanut butter could be contaminated with salmonella. The 16-ounce jars have the “Best if Used By” dates of Aug. 3 and Aug. 4, 2012, and production codes 1307004 or 1308004.
Two suspects were taken into custody Thursday morning after gunshots were fired during an apparent robbery attempt at a west-side check-cashing business. The incident happened just before 10:20 a.m. at the Check N Go in the 100 block of Girls School Road. It is believed officers fired the shots when apprehending the fleeing suspects.
More than 23,000 Catholic teens from across the country will gather in Indianapolis starting Thursday for what organizers call a three-day experience of prayer, community and empowerment. The National Federation for Catholic Youth Ministry conference is expected to have a local economic impact of more than $17 million and fill more than 6,000 hotel rooms at 65 local hotels. About 800 volunteers provided by the Archdiocese of Indianapolis will help with the event.
Angie’s List Inc. shares rose as much as 44 percent in their trading debut Thursday after the company raised $114 million Wednesday in its initial public offering. The stock closed the trading day up more than 25 percent, at $16.26 per share, after rising as high as $18.75 early in the morning.
Board members of the south-side German American Klub could be on the hook for more than $20,000 in unpaid rent at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. The bill is from 2008 and 2009, when the club experimented with holding its annual Oktoberfest at the fairgrounds, instead of German Park. The Indiana State Fair Commission goes to […]
The Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Bren Simon doesn’t have legal standing to challenge a judge’s decision not to recuse himself from overseeing the court fight over her late husband Melvin’s $2 billion estate.
Noble of Indiana CEO Clint Bolser told supporters in an e-mail Wednesday about his upcoming move to South Bend-based Logan Center, which also serves adults with developmental disabilities.