1. How Facebook IPO Impacts Social Business Space →

  2. The story of the ‘secret’ room at Pixar, frequented by Steve Jobs and many other celebrities - The Next Web →

    (Source: thenextweb)

  3. http://blogs.hbr.org/bregman/2012/04/coping-with-email-overload.html →

  4. The Biggest Mistake You (Probably) Make with Teams - Tammy Erickson - Harvard Business Review →

  5. The Hidden Skills in Your Most Reliable People - Art Markman - Harvard Business Review →

    This is an interesting post every project team lead should read.

  6. To Build Trust, Competence is Key - Linda Hill & Kent Lineback - Harvard Business Review →

  7. 5 Stealthy Ways to Find a New Job with Social Media →

    5 Stealthy Ways to Find a New Job with Social Media
    Gerrit Hall is the CEO and co-founder of RezScore, a free web application that reads, analyzes and grades resumes instantly. Gerrit has successfully combined his passion for computer science and the careers space by helping job seekers write the best resume possible. You can connect with Gerrit a…

  8. CNNMoney Tech Tumblr: The No. 1 place you're most likely to lose your phone is... →

    cnnmoneytech:

    If you’re in a coffee shop in Philadelphia, keep a good eye on your cell phone.

    A study by mobile security company Lookout released on Thursday found that most phone thefts or misplacements happen between the hours of 9 p.m. and 2 a.m., in coffee shops, and in Philadelphia.

    The other…

  9. The Real Leadership Lessons of Steve Jobs - Harvard Business Review →

    His saga is the entrepreneurial creation myth writ large: Steve Jobs cofounded Apple in his parents’ garage in 1976, was ousted in 1985, returned to rescue it from near bankruptcy in 1997, and by the time he died, in October 2011, had built it into the world’s most valuable company. Along the way he helped to transform seven industries: personal computing, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, retail stores, and digital publishing. He thus belongs in the pantheon of America’s great innovators, along with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Walt Disney. None of these men was a saint, but long after their personalities are forgotten, history will remember how they applied imagination to technology and business.

  10. Do You Have to Be Rude to Manage Like Steve Jobs? →

    Walter Isaacson, biographer of Steven P. Jobs, writes that Mr. Jobs is being misunderstood when people say he was a jerk. In an article in Harvard Business Review titled “The Real Leadership Lessons of Steve Jobs,” Mr. Isaacson says Mr. Jobs’s “petulance and impatience were part and parcel of his perfectionism.”