Related Blog Posts
Google, Apple most admired in Silicon Valley
15 hours ago ago from Business news
Among most-admired companies in Silicon Valley today, there is Apple Inc. , Google Inc. and everyone else. That s what results show from the most recently completed weekly online survey done by the Silicon Valley-San Jose Business Journal. The unscientific poll was conducted between Dec. 15 and Dec. 22. Apple was picked by 35 percent of the respondents and Google was picked by 22 percent. Cisco Systems Inc. was the only other ...
Related contentIMMIGRANT OF THE DAY: RAJUL SHETH - PING PONG GURU
21 hours ago ago from Greg Siskind on Immigration Law and Policy
Often, when there is a great concentration of businesses focused on a specific industry in a particular geographic location, the area is called the Silicon Valley of and then you fill in the blank. That s a tribute to Silicon Valley in Northern California which is the home to many of America s great tech companies - Google, Apple, Intel, etc. For example, Charlotte is the Silicon Valley of banking. Nashville is the Silicon Valley of hospital ...
Related contentChief Information Officer Named at the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
14 hours ago ago from Insurance News Today -Top Insurance Industry News
The Board of Directors of the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco has appointed Ned Moran as Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer. Mr. Moran is responsible for ensuring that all information systems and services meet the Bank’s operational and strategic objectives. He has over 23 years of information technology experience in the financial services industry. Before joining the Bank in December 2008, Mr. Moran was the ...
Related contentRelated News
Boards Mature With Firms
22 hours ago ago from Wall Street Journal
BY PUI-WING TAM Many Silicon Valley companies have matured into large, slower-growing entities in recent years. Now that maturity is showing up in their boardrooms as well. Since 2003, following the debut of the Sarbanes-Oxley regulations, many Silicon Valley companies appear to have shifted the composition and roles of their boards to be more in line with their peers in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, say industry experts. ...
Related contentRelated Videos
Nothing to see... move along.
