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...what rocker Sheryl Crow did for the iPod. The stylish device holds 3,000 songs and doubles as a phone. It can fetch tunes from mobile networks and wireless Internet connections; iPod can't. But the $910 price will probably turn off consumers unless mobile operators subsidize it. IDC analyst Paolo Pescatore wonders if the show was a "last gasp" effort to regain hipness. Nokia lost market share a year ago, but although it's been scratching back lately, growth in the handset sector is skidding. Ollila predicted Nokia will sell 40 million music phones this year, but for Nokia...
...will improve, too: it will offer clients IBM's upscale laptops, in addition to its own line of cheap desktop computers. And then there's the IBM name. "They are going to ride the coattails of the IBM brand," says Bryan Ma, a Singapore-based analyst at consulting firm IDC. "Nobody outside of China knows who Lenovo...
...Because flash players are so inexpensive?we found some for $35 on the comparison-shopping site BizRate.com?manufacturers are making nearly three times as many of them as they are hard-drive-based models, according to research firm IDC. Most play both MP3 and Windows Media files and run on a single AAA battery, which lasts about 12 to 20 hours. FM-radio tuners and audio-record features are often built in (and rarely found on hard-drive players). Flash players weigh about 28 g, compared with 170 g for an iPod...
Because flash players are so inexpensive--we found some for $35 on the comparison-shopping site BizRate.com--manufacturers are making nearly three times as many of them as they are hard-drive-based models, according to research firm IDC. Most play both MP3 and Windows Media files and run on a single AAA battery, which lasts about 12 to 20 hours. FM-radio tuners and audio-record features are often built-in (and rarely found on hard-drive players). Flash players weigh about 1 oz., compared with 6 oz. for an iPod...
Virtually nonexistent even a decade ago, the market for digital cameras grew to $17 billion in 2003, and sales are expected to soar 39% this year, according to research firm IDC. And since introducing in 1996 the DSC-F1, one of the first affordable digital cameras, Sony has gone on to capture an industry-leading 18%. Canon is close behind with 16%, and Olympus and Kodak have 13% and 12%, respectively...