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In This Issue of Condé Nast Portfolio

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January 2008
Cover Story

Spy vs. Spy

A consultant gets his garbage snatched off his suburban curb, and Wal-Mart execs are caught philandering. It's all in a day's work for the ex-C.I.A. (and K.G.B.) agents taking corporate espionage in disturbing new directions. Read More
Features
The End of Media as We Know It

The End of Media as We Know It

The curly-haired comic's website Funny or Die aims to rewrite the rules of making money in showbiz—and avoid the fate of so many previous attempts at online-content distribution. Read More

Picture Imperfect

Picture Imperfect

Kodak C.E.O. Antonio Perez on getting passed over for the top job at H.P. and on his second act: saving the film giant from digital-age decline. Read More

Rock Stars of Tech

Rock Stars of Tech

Bono wants to be a tech mogul. Elevation Partners' Roger McNamee wants to be a rock star. Inside the unlikely private equity team that plans to turn around Forbes and Palm. Read More

Related: Roger's World
Running the Numbers

Running the Numbers

A photographer's large-scale images reflect America's out-of-control excess with a troubling beauty. Read More

China's Next Revolution

China's Next Revolution

As real estate values skyrocket, officials are seizing the homes of urban residents, sparking a wave of protests. Read More

1964: Eye Phone

1964: Eye Phone

More than 40 years before the iPhone, Bell's Picturephone offered the first video calls. Read More

PLUS ...
 
COLUMNS

The Coming Oil Crash

The price of oil is poised to nose-dive. Here's why economic realities could lead to a dramatic drop. Read More

Related: Crude Awakening

Wall Street's Next Crisis

The subprime shakeout is mostly over. Now it's time to brace for more fallout—in commercial real estate. Read More

 

The Phony Populist

His capital gains tax plan looks like Clinton's and Obama's, and his health insurance plan looks like Romney's. Why should business fear President Edwards?
Read More

London's New Arrival

With a capacity of 12,000 bags an hour (and retail from Coach, Krispy Kreme, and Tiffany & Co.), an $8.6 billion terminal may put an end to Heathrow hell. Read More

Related: INTERACTIVE FEATURES Terminal 5
 

Wall Street Family Values

Giving begins at home—in this case, at the homes of the Weills, the Kravises, and the Icahns. A look at the top 50 Wall Street family foundations and who doles out the most.
Read More

What's Drudge Worth?

If Facebook is valued at $15 billion, how about the Drudge Report? Putting a price on an enigmatic and enduring Web phenomenon. Read More

 
CULTURE INC.

The Maverick and the Maestro

With pressure mounting to attract subscribers and fill seats, the new general manager of New York's Metropolitan Opera is going after blue-chip talent like conductor Lorin Maazel—who returns to the Met's podium after a 45-year absence. Read More

The Mad Money Men

An upstart studio owned by John Malone's Liberty Media might take a few lessons from its first movie, a caper about a gutsy profiteering scheme. Read More

 
PLUS ...
 
BRIEF

No Obligations

What's wrong with social responsibility?
Read More

INTERACTIVE FEATURES Driving Force

How automakers snag the top spots at the Detroit car show. View Interactive Feature

 
PLUS ...
 
IN PLAY

Oh, Sand Trap, Where Art Thou?

G.P.S. devices for the golf course, the ski slope—even the jogging route. Read More

Davos, Switzerland

The best bars, bistros, and bakeries to hit during the World Economic Forum's annual meeting. Read More

 
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