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for bored mindz

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AMD new specs
2008-01-26 22:25:00
AMD talks specs on Fusion, continues to release nothingPosted Jan 25th 2008 2:03PM by Nilay PatelFiled under: Desktops, Laptops At this point we've heard so much and seen so little of AMD's Fusion hybrid CPU / GPU chip that we're honestly starting to consider it vapor -- AMD first announced it in 2006, after all. Still, the company's VP of marketing chatted up PC World about new Fusion chips today, saying that a 45nm notebook-optimized version codenamed "Swift" based on the Phenom core would be the first off the line. That doesn't line up with the last roadmap we saw out of Sunnyvale, which had the first Fusion chip based on the workstation-class Bulldozer core, but hey, we'll let AMD say whatever it wants, just as long as see some actual chips sometime soon.source : engadget.com
More About: Specs
MacBook Air review
2008-01-26 22:24:00
MacBook Air reviewPosted Jan 25th 2008 4:44PM by Ryan BlockFiled under: Features, Laptops It fits in a manila folder, you can slide it under a door, and if you threw it hard enough you could probably chop someone in half with the thing. It's the thinnest, and if we may say so, sexiest laptop around today: the MacBook Air. But looks aren't everything to everyone, and despite all the rhetoric about being a no-compromises ultraportable, Apple did leave plenty on the cutting-room floor in its quest to make an absurdly thin ultraportable that doesn't skimp on a full size keyboard or roomier 13-inch display. But, as many potential buyers have been asking themselves since last week, is the Air right to be your next machine? Read on, we'll tell you what we think.source : engadget.com
More About: Review , Macbook , Macbook Air
Patent granted on smartphones
2008-01-26 22:23:00
Patent granted on smartphones, everyone suedPosted Jan 25th 2008 11:58PM by Joshua TopolskyFiled under: Cellphones What would you do if the US patent office gave you the go-ahead on a far-reaching, non-specific application filed for a "mobile entertainment and communication device"? If your answer was that you would immediately draw up lawsuits against almost every major electronics manufacturer that even looked at a smartphone funny, you get a cookie. Yes folks, as impossible as it is to believe, the holders of the aforementioned patent have just sued Apple, Nokia, RIM, Sprint, AT&T, HP, Motorola, Helio, HTC, Sony Ericsson, UTStarcomm, and Samsung... amongst others. So eager was this company to sue, in fact, that legal papers were filed a day before the patent was granted, and subsequently had to re-submitted. The real sucker-punch here is that the patent simply combines a list of prior technologies jumbled into one product, a practice which has recently been ruled against by t...
More About: Smartphones , Patent
Solar WiFi
2008-01-26 01:58:00
Sun Don’t Shine on Solar WiFi Town Posted by samc on January 25th, 2008 St. Louis Park, Minnesota, has abandoned their innovative Solar Powered WiFi hotspots that they installed in the past year, reports the Star Tribune. Some $1 million worth of radios, poles and solar panels, erected because the city lacked rights to utility poles, will now be scrapped. “The contractor’s default forces St. Louis Park out of planned citywide wireless Internet project,” says a notice on the city’s wireless site. In testing what Arinc had built, the city found that small portions of the network functioned well, providing a high-speed connection. But in other areas, the solar panels were placed in spots where they did not get enough light to power the radios’ batteries. Salvaging The groundbreaking solar-powered, citywide wireless service could cost another $3 million, on top of more than $800,000 the city already has spent, reports the paper. “We’re going ...
More About: Wifi
Vermont Fiber Co-op
2008-01-26 01:55:00
Vermont Fiber Co-op Posted by samc on January 25th, 2008 Twenty two towns in rural Vermont are planning a regional fiber-optic network. It could be ready by the end of 2009, reports MuniWireless. The East Central Vermont Community Fiber Network, ValleyFiber, Vermont Telecommunications Authority and Vermont Rural Broadband Project are participants. The East Central Vermont Community Fiber Network announced the plan this week. The Vermont Telecommunications Authority would provide credit and regulatory assistance. Low-interest loans would allow the $70 million, subscriber-funded network to achieve a positive cash flow in four to six years. The Institute of Local Self Reliance issued a report, Municipal Broadband: Demystifying Wireless and Fiber-Optic Options reviews the merits of just such networks. Earlier attempts to serve rural areas with broadband, including state-funded pilot wireless systems, have fallen short of fiber-optic’s technical advantag...
More About: Vermont , Mont
AT&T hotspot
2008-01-26 01:48:00
AT&T hands out free hotspot access to broadband customers, ups its bandwidthPosted Jan 24th 2008 2:35PM by Joshua TopolskyFiled under: Wireless, Networking AT&T, continuing to be the open, giving, and free-wheeling loony that it is, has decided to bestow cost-free access to its 10,000+ WiFi hotspots (for its broadband subscribers, that is). Effective immediately, if you're tossing money the company's way for any high-speed access, you can hop onto wireless networks in retail shops, restaurants, and airports free of charge... provided they're AT&T networks. We know its a lot to handle, but get this -- the telco has also upped the speeds of its U-verse service to a whopping 10 Mbps downstream / 1.5 Mbps upstream configuration, undoubtedly warming the hearts of AT&T subscribers hankering for a little more bandwidth to sustain their ever-increasing 'net needs. It's like the holidays all over again.source : engadget.com
More About: Hotspot
WD 320GB per platter
2008-01-26 01:47:00
Western Digital intros 320GB-per-platter 3.5-inch hard drivesPosted Jan 24th 2008 3:04PM by Donald MelansonFiled under: StorageIt looks like Western Digital's hard drives are about to get a good deal denser, with the company now rolling out its first 3.5-inch WD Caviar drives based on 320GB-per-platter technology. That, as the company points out, is the very same areal density seen recently in WD's 160 GB-per-platter 2.5-inch Scorpio drives, which topped out with a total of 320GB of storage due to the obvious size constraints. While the 3.5-inch drives have plenty more room to grow than their smaller counterparts, Western Digital seems to be starting things out slow, with only a single-platter 320GB drive available at the moment. That'll apparently be followed by upgrades across WD's various product lines throughout the year, including drives at "additional capacity points.," Unfortunately, the company doesn't seem to be ready to specify exactly what those points may be just ye...
Apple wants to light up your iPod
2008-01-26 01:46:00
Apple wants to light up your iPod touchpad?Posted Jan 24th 2008 7:10PM by Paul MillerFiled under: Portable Audio Apple's been known to cover all its bases in the patent department, meaning this is certainly no guarantee we'll be seeing light-up iPods in the near future, but all the same we can't ignore the fact that a patent just popped up that has Apple postulating on backlit click wheels. While having a comet of light following your finger around the wheel is certainly interesting -- if potentially annoying -- things get more intriguing with the possibility of multitouch, but the patent isn't clear enough to tell if that's exactly what Apple is driving at. It's all well and good, but in these heady touchscreen days, are clickwheels slowly going the way of the dinosaur button?source : engadget.com
More About: Apple , Ipod , Light
Mylo 2 on sale
2008-01-26 01:44:00
Sony mylo 2 on salePosted Jan 25th 2008 8:59AM by Evan BlassFiled under: Handhelds All five of you who have been waiting patiently for Sony to upgrade its mylo Personal Communicator should be pleased to learn that the revised internet tablet has finally gone on sale at SonyStyle. With its high-res 3.5-inch touchscreen, 1GB of storage, and improved Flash support, the $299 mylo 2 does indeed offer a number of attractive feature bumps over its predecessor -- however, we're still a little wary of how Sony's positioned this product in the market. But hey, what do we know: apparently they pushed enough first-gen units out the door to give this restyled number a shot. Starts shipping on the 28th, in either white or black, says Sony.source : engadget.com
More About: Sale , Mylo
2,240 police officers, 460 patrol cars, 1 helicopter mobilized for car chas
2008-01-24 15:25:00
2,240 police officers, 460 patrol cars, 1 helicopter mobilized for car chase in Osaka Rate this News: A little bit out of topics but WOW ! Let's imagine that, 1 helicopter, 460 Police patrol cars over 2240 police officers just in order to catch a guy by car... And even with an army of men it took the a stunning 2 hours to catch the guy who intact crashed into a bridge column...And here you are the most interesting part of the all story, is that this "gentleman" just drove in Osaka by night without stopping at any traffic light.... Now if the Japanese government can put 2240 officer to chase an average joe, let's imagine what will happen if they have to find a terrorist.Note : The photo below are not related to the event. Related Links: Japan Today source : akihabaranews.com
More About: Cars , Helicopter , Officers
Sharp 3.44cm thick LCD
2008-01-24 15:15:00
Sharp unveil 21 new LCD TV with the Amazing X Series of 3.44cm thick Rate this News: This afternoon Sharp invited us to the launch of their new line-up of LCD TV with the AQUOS X Series, E Series and D Series.While the E and D series are somehow common we will focus our attention to the stunning X Series which is available in 37, 42 and 47” and has a thickness of only 3.44cm !All X Series TV are of course Full HD (1920x1080), has a Double-Speed LCD (120Hz), offer an amazing contrast ratio of 15000:1 and 12-bit BDE color value rendering, a 1Bit Digital amplifier and 3 1.3a HDMI input.Anyway here you are over 30 pictures of this press conference ! source : akihbaranews.com
More About: Sharp
Large-Scale Cheap Solar Electricity
2008-01-24 15:13:00
Friday, June 23, 2006 Large -Scale , Cheap Solar Electricity A well-financed California startup is promising to build a solar-cell factory that could finally make solar power affordable. By Kevin Bullis This week, Nanosolar, a startup in Palo Alto, CA, announced plans to build a production facility with the capacity to make enough solar cells annually to generate 430 megawatts. This output would represent a substantial portion of the worldwide production of solar energy.According to Nanosolar's CEO Martin Roscheisen, the company will be able to produce solar cells much less expensively than is done with existing photovoltaics because its new method allows for the mass-production of the devices. In fact, maintains Roscheisen, the company's technology will eventually make solar power cost-competitive with electricity on the power grid. Nanosolar also announced this week more than $100 million in funding from various sources, including venture firms and government grants. The compa...
Nano Flakes Solar Cells
2008-01-24 15:11:00
Nano Flake s May Revolutionize Solar Cells ScienceDaily (Dec. 19, 2007) — A new material, nano flakes, may revolutionise the transformation of solar energy to electricity. If so, even ordinary households can benefit from solar electricity and save money in the future. If researcher Martin Aagesen’s future solar cells meet the expectations, both your economy and the environment will benefit from the research. Less than 1 per cent of the world’s electricity comes from the sun because it is difficult to transform solar energy to electricity. But Martin Aagesen’s discovery may be a huge step towards boosting the exploitation of solar energy. "We believe that the nano flakes have the potential to convert up to 30 per cent of the solar energy into electricity and that is twice the amount that we convert today," says Martin Aagesen who is a PhD from the Nano-Science Center and the Niels Bohr Institute at University of Copenhagen. During his work on...
More About: Nano , Solar cells
Nanosolar Panels
2008-01-24 15:11:00
Nanosolar Ships First Panels December 18, 2007 Posted by Martin Roscheisen, CEO After five years of product development – including aggressively pipelined science, research and development, manufacturing process development, product testing, manufacturing engineering and tool development, and factory construction – we now have shipped first product and received our first check of product revenue. We are grateful to everyone who supported us through all these years and the many occasions where there appeared to be mile-high concrete walls in our path; the unusual intensity and creativity of our team deserves all the credit for achieving this major milestone today. Our product is defining in more ways I can enumerate here but includes: - the world’s first printed thin-film solar cell in a commercial panel product; - the world’s first thin-film solar cell with a low-cost back-contact capability; - the world’s lowest-cost solar panel – which we believe wil...
More About: Nanosolar
HiRISE Camera Mars
2008-01-24 15:00:00
HiRISE Camera Details Dynamic Wind Action On Mars "HiRISE keeps showing interesting things about terrains that I expected to be uninteresting," said HiRISE principal investigator Alfred McEwen of the UA's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. by Staff Writers Phoenix AZ (SPX) Jan 24, 2008 Mars has an ethereal, tenuous atmosphere at less than 1 percent the surface pressure of Earth, so scientists working on The University of Arizona's High Resolution Imaging Experiment, or HiRISE, are challenged to explain the complex, wind-sculpted landforms they're now seeing in unprecedented detail. The HiRISE camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the most powerful camera to orbit another planet, can see 20-inch-diameter features while flying at about 7,500 mph between 155 and 196 miles above the Martian surface. HiRISE is giving researchers eye-opening new views of wind-driven Mars geology. One of the main questions has been if winds on present-day Mars are strong enough to form and change...
Aircell vs Row44
2008-01-24 14:59:00
Aircell Vs Row44: Two for Two Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 Southwest Airlines is installing WiFi on at least four of its planes by this summer using Row 44, a satellite-based service, which is also being tested by Alaska Air. If Alaska’s test is successfull, it intends to equip its 114-aircraft fleet by the end of 2009. Meanwhile Aircell, a terrestrial-based system which uses 92 ground-based cell towers across the United States, is being tested by American Airlines. American has finished installing the Aircell technology on the first of 15 Boeing 767-200s that are used mainly for transcontinental service. “Pending successful connectivity trials on B767 aircraft, American could extend Aircell’s in-flight broadband service to the remainder of its domestic fleet,” American said in a press release Tuesday. Satellite-based services are required for transoceanic flights. Air France is trialing OnAir while Qantas is testing AeroMobile which fe...
Satellite Radio Merger
2008-01-24 14:57:00
Satellite Radio Merger Tonight? Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 Will Sirius Satellite Radio and XM Satellite Radio merge? Regulators may be set to make a decision about the merger today, says a CNN Money blog. Briefing.com”, a site that is widely followed by traders, is citing an unnamed report Wednesday morning saying that “XMSR-SIRI merger could receive approval from DoJ and FCC tonight.” That isn’t much in the way of any real information. but don’t tell that to Wall Street. Shares of XM were up nearly 4 percent in mid-morning trading while Sirius’ stock gained more than 5 percent. The proposed $4.6 billion deal is awaiting regulatory approval from antitrust lawyers at the Justice Department, as well as from consumer advocates at the FCC. The merger of these two former Satellite radio rivals would likely create a single satellite radio entity in the United States in excess of 14 million subscribers. Don’t hold your breath for lower ...
More About: Satellite
700MHz Auction
2008-01-24 14:55:00
700MHz Auction Tomorrow Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 The FCC’s 700 MHz auction starts tomorrow. Auction 73 includes 1,099 licenses in the 700 MHz Band. A total of 62 MHz will be auctioned with 6-22 MHz per license. RCR News and Blog Runner have complete coverage. The NY Times says it is expected to include multibillion-dollar bids from the nation’s two biggest wireless phone companies, Verizon and AT&T, as well as Google. Frontline, which was expected to bid on 22 mhz for shared public safety/public service use, closed it’s doors last week. That could leave an opening for Verizon, which could pick up the $5B tab. Building out that space could cost another $10B, but government-backed rural subsidizes could help pay for that effort. In addition, Verizon is a subcontractor in the giant $10B dollar federal IWN project to install thousands of 700 MHz towers in every community in the United States. The Project 25, 2-way radios, would b...
Rumsfeld Talks
2008-01-24 14:53:00
Rumsfeld Talks Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 Private media does not get up in the morning and say what can we do to promote the values and ideas that the free Western nations believe in. It gets up in the morning and says they’re going to try to make money by selling whatever they sell. The way they decided to do that is to be dramatic and if it bleeds it leads is the common statement in the media today. They’ve got their job, and they have to do that, and that’s what they do. We need someone in the United States government, some entity, not like the old USIA. I think this agency, a new agency, has to be something that would take advantage of the wonderful opportunities that exist today. There are multiple channels for information. The Internet is there, pods are there, talk radio is there, e-mails are there. There are all kinds of opportunities. We do not with any systematic organized way attempt to engage the battle of ideas and talk about...
More About: Rumsfeld
SpaceShipTwo
2008-01-24 14:51:00
SpaceShipTwo, White Knight Two designs unveiled: aren't they cute?Posted Jan 23rd 2008 4:20PM by Evan BlassFiled under: Transportation As expected, Sir Richard Branson has just unveiled the final designs of SpaceShipTwo and White Knight Two, Virgin Galactic's planned commercial "spaceliner" and its corresponding carrier plane. At today's American Museum of Natural History launch event, Branson once again reiterated his lofty expectations for space tech in general and the six-passenger vehicle in particular, promising to promote privatization and more widespread research by offering outside organizations access to its launch system schematics. So far, Virgin has reportedly signed up 200 committed passengers willing to pay $200,000 for a 2010-or-later suborbital flight, but for now, all they can do is look at the pretty pictures in the gallery below.Gallery: SpaceShipTwo, White Knight Two designs unveiledsource : engadget.com
Via 64bit processors
2008-01-24 14:49:00
Via launches Isaiah: 64-bit low-power, high-performance processorsPosted Jan 24th 2008 1:57AM by Ryan BlockFiled under: Desktops, Laptops Via's on the CPU warpath today, announcing a new line of 64-bit 65nm processors, dubbed Isaiah. The little Bible-themed chip-maker that withstood the AMD-Intel duopoly where others, like Transmeta, folded, is claiming that their new architecture, developed in conjunction with subsidiary Centaur, is four times as efficient as current generation Via CPUs, while remaining pin-compatible with C7 chips, as well as retaining the same thermal envelope (read: they don't make any more heat). Available in clock speeds up to 2GHz (to start) with FSBs at 800 and 1,333MHz, dual 64KB L1 caches, 1MB L2 cache, and Adaptive PowerSaver energy reduction technology, expect these chips to start showing up in the first half of this year. Those interested in geeking out further on Via's new gig can hit some of the technical details after the break.source : engadget.com
More About: Processors
Dell Ubuntu - the revolution is on the way!
2008-01-24 14:48:00
Dell's XPS M1330 with Ubuntu pre-load in Germany, onlyPosted Jan 24th 2008 7:56AM by Thomas RickerFiled under: LaptopsWhoa Dell, what's this? An exclusive, XPS M1330 in Germany sporting an Ubuntu 7.10 pre-load with full DVD and webcam support? Where's the Stateside love, yo?[Thanks, Roland K.]source : engadget.com
More About: Dell , Revolution , The Revolution
BSNL WiMAX rollout!
2008-01-24 14:47:00
Indian telecom company to rollout massive WiMax networkPosted Jan 24th 2008 8:05AM by Nilay PatelFiled under: WirelessEven as Sprint tentatively rolls out the XOHM network here in the States, the largest Indian telecom company is planning to build a mobile WiMax network covering three states on the subcontinent capable of serving 250 million people. State-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited is leaning on Soma Networks to build the broadband-speed network in response to government requirement that 20 million broadband lines be in service by 2010. The WiMax rollout will first hit the largest and most-connected states, but BSNL is planning on extending the network if things go well. Soma says it's shipping thousands of base stations to get the network operational at full speed, and that when it's done, 400 Indian cities will be covered, with downstream speeds of 1.5 megabits per seconds. No word on when that might be, but the race is officially on, Sprint.source : engadget.com
More About: Wimax
OS/2 Open Source?
2008-01-23 18:46:00
IBM Won't Open -Source OS/2 Posted by kdawson on Tuesday January 22, @01:02AM from the big-blue-meanies dept. wikinerd writes "Following an online petition in November 2007 by members of an OS/2 online community to open-source OS/2, IBM answered by sending a letter via FedEx making it clear that OS/2 is going to remain closed-source, citing business, technical, and legal reasons. An earlier petition in 2005 that had attracted over 11,000 signatures met a similar response. Both petition letters to IBM Corp. can be viewed at the OS2World.com library. The End of Support period for OS/2 passed by in December 2006, and the given IBM's response the future for OS/2 doesn't look bright, unless re-implementation projects such as Voyager or osFree attract the necessary critical mass of operating system developers."source : slashdot.org
More About: Open Source , Open-Source
IBM patents motorists
2008-01-23 18:45:00
Your Rights Online: IBM Patents Pricing Motorists Off Highways Posted by kdawson on Tuesday January 22, @02:03PM from the prior-art-stuck-at-the-tollbooth dept. theodp writes "Self-professed patent reformer IBM snagged a patent Tuesday for the Variable Rate Toll System, which covers the rather anti-egalitarian scheme of pricing motorists off of the roads by raising tolls as congestion increases. 'Congestion pricing of traffic is emerging as a completely new services market for IBM,' boasted Jamie Houghton, IBM's Global Leader for Road Charging."source : slashdot.org
DVB-T Taiwan deployment
2008-01-23 18:41:00
More than 2 million 6MHz DVB-T receivers with NTSC output now deployed in Taiwan 12 December 2007The most recent figures from the Taiwan DTV Committee indicate that sales of DVB-T receivers have now passed the 2 million mark in that country. Whilst this reflects the success of DVB-T deployments around the world, Taiwan is particularly significant for having chosen to adopt the DVB-T system for digital terrestrial television in an environment where the NTSC system is used for analogue television, with 6MHz channel bandwidths.More than 50 million DVB-T receivers have now been deployed around the world. It is common for proponents of competing systems to argue that DVB-T is only deployed in in 8MHz countries. However, DVB is proud to publicly state that DVB-T was, from the start, designed to operate equally well in 6, 7 and 8MHz environments and is deployed in countries with all three variations.Services were launched in Taiwan with Single Frequency Networks. The lates...
More About: Deployment
700 MHz Auction
2008-01-23 18:41:00
700 MHz Auction Begins Tomorrow Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 23, @11:00AM from the ya'll-ready-for-this dept. necro81 writes "On Thursday, after much speculation and wrangling, the FCC will begin auctioning licenses to the coveted 700 MHz band that will be vacated by analog TV in 2009. The NY Times has a good summary of the players (AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, Google, et al.), how the auction will work, how Google has already scored an open networks victory, and what it could all mean for consumers. The auction will go on for several months, but you can keep tabs on the bids at this FCC site."source : slashdot.org
SuperBowl XLII
2008-01-23 18:36:00
Super Bowl XLII Posted by samc on January 22nd, 2008 The undefeated New England Patriots and the New York Giants clash head-on at SuperBowl XLII in Phoenix, Arizona on Feb. 3. The Super Bowl stadium (wikipedia) in Arizona is ready with an advanced wireless system. Actually, several, says writer John Cox in Network World. The University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, offers Wi-Fi, as well as support for five different cellular carriers, and a separate, dedicated 450MHz public safety net. The stadium holds up to 63,400 fans, and is home to the Arizona Cardinals football team. “We wanted to build the most technologically advanced stadium in the NFL, or even the world,” said Mark Feller, senior director of technology for the Arizona Cardinals. “All events have wireless needs,” he said, noting that the 1.7 million-square-foot stadium is expected to host more than a million visitors in its first year. Feller and his team turned to Cel...
More About: Superbowl
AT&T WiFi
2008-01-23 18:35:00
AT&T: WiFi Free with DSL Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 AT&T today announced that more than 10 million AT&T broadband subscribers will soon have free unlimited access to the company’s nationwide Wi-Fi network, which AT&T claims, is the largest Wi-Fi network in the United States. The offer delivers an annual saving of $60 for AT&T broadband customers, and an annual saving of nearly $240 compared with AT&T Wi-Fi costs for consumers who do not have an AT&T broadband plan. The free Wi-Fi offer will be available to new and existing customers who subscribe to any of AT&T’s broadband services with downstream speeds of up to 1.5 Mbps, 3.0 Mbps, or 6.0 Mbps. Free Wi-Fi access was initially provided to the company’s higher-speed broadband customers last year. AT&T offers wireless Internet connectivity at more than 10,000 U.S. locations, including retail stores, restaurants and airports from coast to coast. Compet...
More About: Wifi
Motorola : 2007
2008-01-23 18:34:00
Motorola: Zzz… Posted by samc on January 23rd, 2008 Motorola reported disappointing results for 2007 and forecast a loss for the first quarter of this year as the company released its fourth quarter earnings yesterday. Investors punished Motorola shares after it reported earnings. The stock price recently stood at $10.37, down about 16% on the day, and earlier hit a 52-week low of $10.03. Motorola’s mobile devices revenues in the fourth quarter of 2007 were down 38 percent to $4.8 billion, compared to the same quarter last year. The division recorded an operating loss of $388 million in the fourth quarter, compared to operating earnings of $341 million in the same quarter last year. For the full-year 2007, Motorola reported mobile devices revenues of $19 billion, which is down 33 percent compared to 2006. The device business made an operating loss of $1.2 billion in 2007, compared to operating earnings of $2.7 billion in 2006. Motorola shipped 40.9 m...
More About: Motorola
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