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The 5th Annual Fast 50

The 5th Annual Fast 50 46. The Quick Fix Michael C. Howe MinuteClinic Previous | Next Welcome to drive-thru health care: It's conveniently located inside your local Target, CVS pharmacy, or supermarket; it's quick, ...READ»

The 5th Annual Fast 50

The 5th Annual Fast 50 6. Growing Body Parts Anthony Atala Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine Previous | Next At this moment, more than 90,000 patients in the United States are awaiting organ transplants. ...READ»

The 5th Annual Fast 50

The 5th Annual Fast 50 19. Robot To Surgery! Gary Guthart Intuitive Surgical Previous | Next Doctors only began using surgical robots, or "surgibots," in endoscopic procedures like gall-bladder removal in 2000. But ...READ»

The 5th Annual Fast 50

The 5th Annual Fast 50 32. Anticancer Antibodies Jennie Mather Raven Biotechnologies Previous | Next At age 50, Jennie Mather left biotech giant Genentech, where she was the first female staff scientist, to start ...READ»

Why You Should Include a Joker in Every Brainstorming Session

The Fast Interview: John Morreall on the link between humor and innovation, why authoritarian bosses fear humor, and the funniest CEO in America.READ»

Five Trends That Will Transform Society

Author Richard Watson examines emerging patterns and developments and society, politics, science and technology, media and entertainment, and other industries in his book Future Files: A History of the Next 50 Years -- and makes educated, and witty speculations as to where they might take us.READ»

Why We'll Take Longer Baths in the Future

Prediction is a dangerous game -- the future is never a straight linear extrapolation from the present. Unexpected innovations and events will conspire to trip up the best-laid plans -- but it's better than not thinking about the future at all. Futurist Richard Watson explores the future and innovation in this, the first chapter of his latest book Future Files: A History of the Next 50 Years.READ»

Office Life -- On the Record

The creators of OverheardintheOffice.com share their unique insights on office humor, office life, and why truth is almost always funnier than fiction.READ»

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The Hours

Why is the "If you eat lunch, you are lunch," culture still with us?READ»

Do You See What I See?

Each of us sees the world through our own lens, says one diversity consultant. You can't move beyond your own biases if you don't recognize them. Take this test to see how your belief systems compare with others'.READ»

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