The solar industry is reeling, yet renewed growth is just around the corner for those companies that develop and install solar projects if they can stay alive.
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Quantenna plans to use its new funds to shift from the lab to real-world customer engagement. But can the startup make up for lost time?
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Notebook PC makers hesitant to adopt flash/hard disc drive.
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The Super Bowl could drive prices of high-def sets lower than ever.
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iSuppli estimates Apple’s iPhone could squeeze out margins near 50 percent.
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Outsourcing and captive companies are beginning to provide huge value-adds to the designs made in India.
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AMD jumps eight spots to become the world’s No. 7 chip supplier, while Intel declines.
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Hewlett-Packard continues to beat Dell as the world’s No. 1 PC vendor.
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Demand for flat-panel displays will extend beyond the holidays and into the first half of 2007.
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TI chips could bring sub-$30 handsets worldwide.
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The contract electronics maker posted impressive earnings, but investors aren’t so upbeat.
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Mac maker has found a way to cut parts cost on its new nano.
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The phone makers make market advances, while Samsung and LG shipments decline.
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Infineon slices the size of the offering of its DRAM subsidiary.
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KKR and two others take over Europe’s no. 3 chip maker.
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Figures from iSuppli underscore economic relations between Chinese and Western companies.
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Digital protection technologies could be a $4.7-billion market if industries can resolve their differences.
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LCD sets will surpass traditional screens by 2010 as prices get lower and consumers get used to them.
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The Japanese company was the only one not to suffer declining NAND flash memory revenue, unlike Samsung.
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Rising interest in home networking technology means wired—not wireless—products will increase tenfold by 2010.
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