Technology has played a central role in white-collar workplaces for decades, with a screen in front of every employee; now devices like Microsoft HoloLens is putting technology in the hands of workers who don't sit behind a desk
Blow-by-blow account of the now very public conflict between the airline's co-founders Rahul Bhatia and Rakesh Gangwal
An effort at Twitter to forbid "dehumanizing" tweets was scaled back after criticism and debate, and for now focuses only on those directed at religious groups
When Chandrayaan-2 makes a soft-landing on the moon later this year, it will become only the fourth country in the world to do so, after US, former USSR and China
The Byju Raveendran-led online learning app provider expects to use the fresh round of funding to "aggressively" expand its business and deepen its technologies
Forbes India in conversation with Hitesh Oberoi, CEO & Managing Director of Info Edge (India), on how the profitable Rs 1,098-crore online classifieds conglomerate is harnessing data and AI (artificial intelligence) across businesses like recruitment, real estate, matrimony and education.
The job cuts are a show of decisiveness at the expense of workers and a tacit answer to the question most asked by analysts and investors Monday: Deutsche Bank's plan looks good on paper, but can managers pull it off?
Art work of Jim Davis's comic strip from 1978 will feature in a series of auctions in the US, as Davis's company Paws Inc., faces downsizing at its headquarters. Davis tells all about Garfield in this interview
FanMojo was relaunched in 2018 after a series of gaffes and it's turning out to be a good bet. Will the fantasy sports startup find its mojo?
Soon after the US women soccer team won their 4th world cup, fans in the stadium in France started chanting 'Equal pay'. The conversation has now spilled over to social media, with American leaders like Elizabeth Warren and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez sharing their views
Tech giants like Facebook and Google thrive on data collected from its users and customers. Now Andreas Mundt, Germany's top anti-trust enforcer, is showing lawyers and anti-trust officials how to use the same valuable data to take on these companies