Attend The Inc. 500 Online Conference

Posted by on Mar 29, 2006 | 5 Comments

Inc. 500 Online Conference Beginning March 31st, the online conference features live and on-demand Webcasts of speeches and sessions from business leaders at the Inc. 500 Conference being held in Savannah, GA.

Speakers include Bill Clinton and Bernie Marcus, the co-founder of Home Depot.

Online Registration is free. Inc.com is a daily resource center for Entrepreneurs.

Listen as these leaders discuss the issue of entrepreneurship in America, and offer practical insight into running a business.

Speakers include:

The Honorable William J. Clinton
Former President of the United States

Bernie Marcus
Co-founder, The Home Depot

Scott Cook
Founder and Chairman of the Executive Committee, Intuit

Ping Fu
Inc. magazine’s 2005 Entrepreneur of the Year

Norm Brodsky
Inc. Columnist, and CEO, CitiStorage

[tags]entrepreneurship,inc. 500,webcast,bernie marcus. william j. clinton,scott cook,ping fu,norm brodsky[/tags]

  • http://twitter.com/MichaelHostiuck Michael Hostiuck

    What do you recommend for defragmenting on a mac?

    • http://twitter.com/MOSHONAS Zack Moshonas

      iDefrag, Its an amazing piece of software!

  • uberRegenbogen

    The geek in me takes exception to equating fragmentation with disorganisation. To the OS (specifically the filesystem driver) the blocks of a file are always organised; it knows exactly where it all is—no matter how scattered. Fragmentation is not an unsound condition; it is merely sub-optimal per mechanical concerns. Rectifying it is never actually required—merely desirable in certain situations (particularly in OSes that make no effort to mitigate it).

  • http://twitter.com/torroella88 Carlos Torroella

    Do we need to use defragmenting thing in linux?

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=681289821 Bob Snyder

    There’s an even more important reason NOT to defrag an SSD. Because of the limited read/write cycles, a daily or even weekly defrag run on such a drive will kill it very quickly by using up those read/writes and leaving large chunks of memory which can no longer be written to. Defragging an SSD = BAD IDEA.