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BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 Einhorn, Balfour & Reinhardt |
Cell Phones: The Big Boys Are Back In China With more than 300 million cell-phone users, China is a market that the likes of Motorola, Nokia, and Samsung can't afford to lose. |
BusinessWeek March 27, 2006 Einhorn & Lakshman |
Nokia Connects These days Nokia is making all the right moves in the key markets of China and India. |
Fast Company March 2004 Hout & Hemerling |
China's Next Great Thing Though China's factories fill our shelves, it has yet to produce truly powerful global companies or brands. That's about to change. |
BusinessWeek December 9, 2010 Bruce Einhorn |
The Chinese Handset Wars Are On After years of lagging multinational rivals, Chinese handset makers are growing fast. Now they're aiming for Western markets. |
BusinessWeek November 8, 2004 Roberts et al. |
China's Power Brands There is tremendous excitement in China about the establishment of power brands, but a good dose of fear about their staying power |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
China.Net China will soon be No. 1 in Web users. That will unleash a world of opportunity |
BusinessWeek November 17, 2003 Dexter Roberts |
TCL's Boss Talks Strategy The fast-rising Chinese electronics maker's Tomson Li explains his expansion plans for domestic and global growth. |
The Motley Fool December 2, 2004 Ben McClure |
Motorola Slips Samsung steps around Motorola in the mobile phone market, pushing the company out of the No. 2 slot. But does the market shift really matter? |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Bremner, Tashiro & Roberts |
Japan's Joyride On China's Coattails Soaring exports to the mainland are the driving force behind Japan's first sustained recovery in a decade |
Wired February 2001 David Sheff |
Betting on Bandwidth Edward Tian has a pipe dream for China. It's called democracy... |
BusinessWeek November 7, 2005 Andy Reinhardt |
Cell Phones For The People Mobile phone companies may make the most money by going downscale. |
InternetNews September 13, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Motorola Strengthens Commitment to China Telecom The mobile specialist will combine two existing facilities in the country's capital for the price of $90M. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China Goes Shopping Billions of dollars, euros, and yen have been invested to build up companies on the China mainland in the last decade. Now Chinese companies, flush with cash and in command of the world's lowest-cost manufacturing plants, are doing some foreign investing of their own. |
BusinessWeek November 14, 2005 Andy Reinhardt |
Cell Phones For The People Developing nations can be gold mines for mobile companies that go downscale. |
Inc. March 2005 Ted C. Fishman |
How China Will Change Your Business Fourteen things every entrepreneur should know about the capitalist explosion heading our way. But don't assume that conceding China's rise means conceding to China. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Roger O. Crockett |
Motorola: "A Shot of Adrenaline" Will a slew of new phones put an end to its slump? |
Wired August 2002 David Sheff |
Enter the Dragon China will soon be the biggest PC market in the world, and everyone wants a piece of it. One problem: A homegrown powerhouse called Legend. |
BusinessWeek May 3, 2004 Bremner et al. |
Headed For A Crisis? China's economy is overheated, its banks are shaky, and hot money continues to pour in. Can the new leaders rein in a runaway financial system? |
The Motley Fool September 27, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Motorola Goes On the Cheap The handset maker wins a contract to provide cheap phones to emerging markets. |
BusinessWeek November 21, 2005 |
Motorola's New Mission in China China chief Michael Tatelman on how the handset maker is integrating the country's consumers and designers into its global strategy. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Roger O. Crockett |
America Zooms In On Camera Phones Suddenly, the market is hot -- and Asian companies are grabbing it first. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2005 Kumagai & Hood |
China's Tech Revolution How technology is driving the country's economic boom, and what that means for the world. |
BusinessWeek September 6, 2004 Andy Reinhardt |
Cell Phones: Don't Count Linux Out It's catching on slower than expected, but more mobile-phone companies are signing up. Indeed, behind the scenes, Linux is picking up steam. |
BusinessWeek April 26, 2004 Roger O. Crockett |
Cell Phones: Who's Calling The Shots? Users don't care who makes their phones, they care more about style, size, and service. |
Entrepreneur January 2004 Joshua Kurlantzick |
Promised Land More and more American entrepreneurs are embarking on the road to China -- and many have already found their fortunes. |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Andy Reinhardt |
Can Nokia Get The Wow Back? To turn profits around, it's making cooler phones, cutting prices, and moving into new businesses. |
BusinessWeek March 25, 2010 Dexter Roberts |
Closing for Business? Western companies are finding themselves shut out as Beijing promotes homegrown rivals |
BusinessWeek November 14, 2005 Dexter Roberts |
Go West, Westerners With growth slowing in the crowded and costly coastal centers, Beijing is urging business into the hinterlands |
BusinessWeek July 4, 2005 |
The Chinese Are Coming! China is definitely asserting itself in the global marketplace. But will the Chinese turn out to be the shrewdest of dealmakers -- or just the buyers of last resort for ailing companies? |
InternetNews September 23, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Cisco, AMD Raise China Bets Two major IT firms, network equipment developer Cisco and computer chipmaker AMD, announced separate investments in China today. |
InternetNews March 21, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Motorola to Serve Saudi Network The company will build a nationwide wireless push-to-talk system for businesses and government users in the Middle Eastern nation. |
Wired November 2005 Frank Rose |
Battle for the Soul of the MP3 Phone Consumers want an iPod phone that will play any song, anytime, anywhere. Just four little problems: the cell carriers, the record labels, the handset makers, and Apple itself. The inside story of why the ROKR went wrong. |
InternetNews February 9, 2004 Alexander Wolfe |
Nokia Tightens Symbian Embrace The wireless phone player expands its stake in the wireless device platform company formed to parry Microsoft. |
The Motley Fool June 4, 2004 Seth Jayson |
Dueling Fools: Nokia No Way Former cell-phone heavyweight champ Nokia's tragic blunders may keep it in the cellar for quite a while. |
InternetNews July 25, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Motorola Thins Out The RAZR Line Motorola's new line of Razr handsets is slimmer than ever, and the company hopes the they will expand the customer base of its already popular line of cell phones. |
InternetNews February 24, 2004 Alexander Wolfe |
Motorola Smartphones Take Flight Microsoft's cellular OS gains some altitude as part of the announcement at the 3GSM show. |
InternetNews August 31, 2010 |
Motorola Brings More Android Phones to China Motorola hopes the trio of new releases with Android mobile OS will catapult it back to the top in a market it dominated for years. |
BusinessWeek February 14, 2005 Andy Reinhardt |
Will Rewiring Nokia Spark Growth? CEO Jorma Ollila's plan for the phone giant: go after both economies of scale and innovation. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2009 Roger O. Crockett |
Motorola Has a Lot Riding on Android Phones New phones equipped with Google's Android operating system may come to market too late to save Motorola's mobile phone business. |
BusinessWeek January 19, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
Worrying About China Is it growing too fast? Can Beijing hold the financial system together? Will economic reform materialize? |
BusinessWeek November 6, 2006 Bruce Einhorn |
A Dragon In R&D China's labs may soon rival its powerhouse factories - and multinationals are flocking in for tech innovation. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Moon Ihlwan |
Korea's China Play They're partners now. But in the future, China will dominate this powerful relationship |
CIO September 1, 2002 Xu & Varon |
The China Syndrome Companies hoping to do business in China will have to play by China's rules. The world's largest market hasn't changed, even with the country's joining the World Trade Organization last year. |
BusinessWeek November 21, 2005 David Rocks |
China Design How China is becoming a global center for hot products. |
BusinessWeek July 30, 2007 Jack Ewing |
Why Nokia Is Leaving Moto in the Dust Phones for high- and low-end consumers, a great supply chain, and lots of cash -- the Finnish company has it all (except the iPhone). |
InternetNews March 10, 2004 Alexander Wolfe |
Worldwide Mobile Phone Sales Surge Gartner study sees demand continuing (in 2004), as Motorola plans multimedia strategy. |
InternetNews January 25, 2008 |
IDC Sees Handset Growth in Single Digits For '08 IDC predicts inventory issues and less sales this year for mobile phones. |
BusinessWeek May 9, 2005 Josey Puliyenthuruthel |
Why Handset Giants Are Dialing Up India Electronics manufacturing in India? Taxes have dropped, there's less red tape, and the market is booming. |
Home Toys April 2003 Michael Cai |
The Chinese Telecom Market Still Promises Tremendous Opportunities China's telecom carriers market will gradually open to foreign investors, in the order of value-added services, basic mobile services, and basic fixed telecom services. |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Roberts & Rocks |
China: Let A Thousand Brands Bloom Multinationals are competing with local companies for a more discerning Chinese consumer. |