Apple Inc1 to 11 of 250 results |
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by Team Apple Insider 05.23.2013 19:25 |
Apple's iAd for iPhone and iPad gained a bit more legitimacy this month as it received accreditation from a major advertising body, making it the first mobile platform to achieve the distinction. |
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by Team Mashable 05.23.2013 19:25 |
Think Apple's retina-display MacBooks are pretty cool? Then you might like the HP Envy TouchSmart 14, Hewlett-Packard's new ultra-high-resolution laptop. |
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by Team Mashable 05.23.2013 19:25 |
Jon Stewart derided a Senate panel's kid-gloves treatment of Apple Inc.’s testimony on its complex corporate tax structure.
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by Team Techcrunch 05.23.2013 17:25 |
The immersive drawing app for tablets has won Apple's Design Award, a Crunchie, and was most recently honored at Time Inc.'s 10 NYC Startups To Watch party. |
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by Team Techcrunch 05.23.2013 17:25 |
Barely a month or two after launching the Y Combinator-backed photo-sharing service Popset, the team realized they were solving the wrong problem. |
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by Team Forbes 05.23.2013 17:25 |
With all these stories about Apple doing the Double Irish and Google seemingly using a Dutch Sandwich (both methods of moving profits around so as to reduce the tax paid upon them) it's worth noting the most important point about the corporate income tax. |
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by Team Forbes 05.23.2013 17:25 |
Microsoft's largely unsuccessful 8-month campaign to market Windows 8 and its new Surface tablets got a reboot at last with a new spot that takes direct aim at Apple's category-leading iPad. The commercial is somewhat ironically titled "Less Talking, More Doing". |
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by Team Reuters Finance 05.23.2013 15:23 |
SAN FRANCISCO/DUBLIN (Reuters) - Apple has operated almost tax-free in Ireland since 1980, welcomed by a government keen to bring jobs to what was then one of Europe's poorest countries, former company executives and Irish officials have said. |
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by Team Reuters Technology 05.23.2013 15:23 |
SAN FRANCISCO/DUBLIN (Reuters) - Apple has operated almost tax-free in Ireland since 1980, welcomed by a government keen to bring jobs to what was then one of Europe's poorest countries, former company executives and Irish officials have said. |
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