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Wheels of Fortune By CHARLES P. ALEXANDER For more than a century the heart of the financial world was a physical place called Wall Street, where slips of paper littered the floors and shouted bids to buy and sell filled the overheated air. And the most famous repository of wealth was Fort Knox, where soldiers guarded mounds of gold bars deep inside Kentucky's rolling hill country.
Wall Street and Fort Knox are still there, of course, but their mystique is fading fast. Not even James Bond's nemesis Auric Goldfinger would try to rob the fort anymore; bullion is in a two-decade-long slump. Nowadays, real money doesn't glitter or clink. It blinks across the world's computer screens. More wealth is createdor destroyedin an instant than J.P. Morgan could have comprehended. Net-savvy investors are reaping the rewards and assuming the risks of controlling their financial destiny.
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Will the 21st century produce more important innovations than the last? Who will be the top inventors? Tell us if you agree with TIME's choices.
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Do you know the next Einstein? Is your neighbor working on the next great health breakthrough? If so, e-mail us the name of your nominee, explaining in 50 words or less why we should choose him or her.
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PHOTOS: Amy Domini by STEVE LISS FOR TIME, Peter Freudenthal Photo Courtesy of meVC, Jean-Pierre Gloton by SERGE PICARD/VU, Richmond McCoy by JONATHAN SAUNDERS FOR TIME, David Pullman by MICHAEL GRECCO FOR TIME, Gerald Putnam photo illustration by AARON GOODMAN FOR TIME |
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