Sprint, Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile CEOs Square Off in New Orleans

There is no steel cage match, unfortunately, but the heads of the Big 4 carriers are sharing the stage in a panel moderated by CNBC’s Jim Cramer.
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Huh? After Spending $278 Million, Salesforce.com Backs Out of San Francisco Campus.

What’s behind Saleforce’s decision to pull back from developing a new corporate campus in San Francisco? Maybe it has to do with ballooning operational expenses?
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Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff to Investors: “Trust Me” (Video)

In the wake of earnings results that missed the expectations of analysts, Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff took to the airwaves again to defend his company’s strategy.
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Marc Benioff on Salesforce.com's "Monster Quarter" and the Road Ahead

After announcing earnings results that inspired an exuberant after-hours pop in its share price, Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff appeared on CNBC’s Mad Money.

First Casualty of ATT Deal: T-Mobile Drops From CTIA Panel

A panel of the Big 4 carriers set to kick off the CTIA trade show in Orlando is down to three as T-Mobile CEO had dropped out, Mobilized has learned.

Video: Marc Benioff Answers His Critics, With A Little Help from Jim Cramer

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff took to Jim Cramer’s “Mad Money” show to answer some criticisms about the way he’s running the company and to bang the drum on cloud computing.

“South Park” Takes on Facebook (And Jim Cramer)

How is it possible that it’s 2010 and “South Park,” which specializes in up-to-the-minute satire, just ran its first Facebook-themed episode? But here it is, with a CNBC “Mad Money” parody thrown in for good measure.

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The Street.com Soars; Cramer Makes Some Dough

Well, you can bet that Jim Cramer is going to be in a good mood on Mad Money this afternoon. Cramer, you might remember, is chairman of TheStreet.com, and among the company’s largest holders, with a 12 percent stake as of the company’s last proxy filing.

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For Getting the Skinny on Apple Stock Hijinks Alone, BoomTown Hearts Jon Stewart

While the fireworks were great, the most important thing that “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart elicited out of CNBC’s most famous stock jester, Jim Cramer, was the admission of using the malleable press to float fictional rumors about companies in order to make money on the negative news. While Cramer at first tried to deny he did it, Stewart had the videotape of the “Mad Money” host talking about the practice, specifically in regards to Apple. Kind of puts all those Steve-Jobs-Is-Dead-Right-Now rumors from a few months ago into a new light? While we all know Jobs has been quite ill, grave-dancing rumors written without any serious reporting have also been a troublesome issue, because it was clear greedy short-sellers played a large part in stoking the fear about his immediate demise back then.
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