Mobile phone maker wields ax after announcing 3,000 job cuts in October; total fourth quarter charges of about $189M.
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Credit crunch will postpone U.S. carrier plans to build new networks friendly to European phone makers while Apple, RIM, and even Motorola are at the border.
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While cell phone shipments soared in the third quarter, Motorola lost its U.S. market share crown to Samsung.
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CPU performance, power-savings called keys to transition from mechanical disk drives.
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South Korean electronics giant withdraws $5.85B acquisition offer as flash memory glut clouds forecast.
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The Korean electronics manufacturer loses ground on currency, but is propelled by mobile phone sales.
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After company fails to hit anticipated $900 price point for Macbook, shares slide.
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Investors push shares 5 percent lower on same day company announces minor price cuts, tweaks to Macbooks.
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Analyst sees $900 laptops as ‘lifesaver’ for Apple; sub 3-pound laptops part of Korean firm’s push into U.S. market.
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South Korean handset maker is best-seller with touch-screen phones, but Apple's iPhone and RIM models show gains.
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Online real estate search firm is moving beyond the PC by offering its house hunting services on mobile phones and GPS devices.
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European heavyweights will combine their wireless chip businesses to save on R&D in maturing wireless market.
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Blackberry doubles U.S. market share as LG challenges Motorola's leadership; carriers cut prices and soften contract terms.
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Watch out Google, Linux, and iPhone. Cell phone leader will purchase Symbian's remaining assets for $411M and offer the code for free.
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Alliance--which includes Cisco, Alcatel-Lucent, Samsung, Sprint Nextel, and Clearwire--aims to cap costs.
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More than a year after its initial announcement AT&T launches its mobile TV service. Did the public’s poor response to earlier efforts cause the delay?
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Celebration has a distinct South Korean flavor as Samsung and LG gain ground, while consumers hang up on Apple, Motorola, and Sony Ericsson.
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In breaking up the company, executives concede that selling to the mass market is not the same as pitching to IT.
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Report says established vendors are dominating the emerging wireless market, but don't count out VC-backed WiMAX specialists.
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The Korean mobile phone maker, now No. 5, sees a chance to grab market share from No. 3.
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