Election ground war: bayonets vs drones
The 2012 race comes down to a haulage story. Which campaign can haul the greater number of likely voters to the polls and make sure they pull that lever, tick that box or click that mouse.
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This was the year that Euro 2012 dominated Google search but everyone was talking about the Olympics on Twitter.
It may be hard to imagine using the web without Google, but the internet’s short history has seen many giants rise and fall.
The parents of a baby who died in a midwife-led maternity unit have called for improvements after an inquest jury found she would probably have survived at a hospital with obstetricians.
The 2012 race comes down to a haulage story. Which campaign can haul the greater number of likely voters to the polls and make sure they pull that lever, tick that box or click that mouse.
Apple paid less than 2 per cent on its profits to the taxman outside the US, despite its overseas profits surging by more than 50 per cent, documents reveal.
Pearson and German media group Bertelsmann agree to merge their Penguin and Random House businesses to tackle the challenge of digital publishing. But can the companies reconcile their wartime pasts?
With the US election too tight to call, politicians hope A-list stars like Scarlett, Clint and Beyonce can convert fans into voters in a two-week overdose of bling politics.
The boss of Apple apologises to customers after its maps application receives thousands of complaints over inaccurate information.
The last product Apple co-founder Steve Jobs worked on before he died is set to be launched today.
Electronics giant Samsung plans to challenge a US court ruling awarding more than $1bn (£665m) in damages to Apple over a patent dispute.
HMV slumps to an annual loss of £16.2m – but the troubled music retailer says its recovery is on track as it ramps up sales of electronic devices.
As Britain gets ready for next month’s Olympics, a new survey finds London is the most expensive city in the world for an evening out.
Jeremy Hunt’s former aide Adam Smith is to make his second appearance at Leveson, after it emerged that the culture secretary favoured News Corp’s bid for BSkyB weeks before he was put in charge.
Computer-maker Hewlett-Packard is cutting 27,000 jobs to save $3bn a year but worried UK staff won’t know their fate for months because the cuts will not be fully implemented until October.
Alex Thomson blogs ahead of the Olympic torch relay beginning in the UK.