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BusinessWeek May 14, 2007 Bruce Einhorn |
The Tech Dragon Stumbles China's upstarts are finding life in the big leagues tougher than they reckoned. |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Will ThinkPads Still Be ThinkPads? Many ThinkPad buyers may be concerned about the future. IBM is a familiar partner of Corporate America. What does the shift in ownership to a company partly controlled by the Chinese government mean? |
The Motley Fool January 7, 2011 Travis Hoium |
First Solar Gets Solar Off on the Right Foot Recent project sales show First Solar is still a leader in solar. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Steve Hamm |
Big Blue's Bold Step Into China It doesn't take a genius to see why IBM's sale of its $10 billion-a-year PC business to China's Lenovo Group Ltd. relieves a huge headache for Big Blue. Teaming with Lenovo spells opportunity -- if it can meet the big challenges ahead. |
The Motley Fool April 11, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
The ThinkPad Evolves Lenovo targets the PC market with ThinkPads in Best Buy stores. The electronics company may be exhibiting savvy strategy here, but whether that exposure will be enough to convince consumers to ante up is another story. |
The Motley Fool July 22, 2010 Kurt Bakke |
Apple to Become World's Second Largest Chip Buyer in 2011 Apple passes Samsung, Nokia, and Dell. |
PC Magazine January 12, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Big Blue Sells PC Unit Lenovo will take over, but PCs will stay IBM-branded for some time. |
InternetNews April 11, 2006 David Miller |
Lenovo Reaches Small Business Through Retail Lenovo announced on Tuesday that it is partnering with electronics retailer Best Buy to sell Lenovo computers at select stores across the U.S. |
IndustryWeek May 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
The Chips Are Up The top 10 high-tech manufacturers spent $85 billion on semiconductor chips in 2006. |
The Motley Fool October 21, 2009 Eric Jhonsa |
Dell's Painful Two-Front War Multiple rivals are squeezing the former PC leader in different ways. |
The Motley Fool May 30, 2007 Tom Taulli |
Foolish Book Review: "The Lenovo Affair" Author Ling Zhijun shows how, in just 20 years, the company went from a fledgling startup to a global player in technology. |
The Motley Fool August 19, 2011 Becca Lipman |
Chinese Solar Gives American Solar a Run for Its Money Do you think bullish times are ahead for these solar names? |
BusinessWeek April 2, 2007 Bruce Einhorn |
Grudge Match In China HP and Dell are exporting their rivalry and starting to challenge Lenovo. |
The Motley Fool April 8, 2010 Rich Smith |
Is Lenovo Palm's White Knight? No. For the last time, no! |
The Motley Fool September 23, 2009 Tim Beyers |
The Next Big Market for PCs? Chinese citizens are taking advantage of a massive $586 billion government stimulus program to buy PCs. Increasingly, they're buying American. |
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. |
InternetNews December 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Shifting Strategies Among PC Players Dell and HP should make price cuts and trade up offers now that IBM is pursuing its Power/Linux strategy, say analysts. |
The Motley Fool November 20, 2009 Anders Bylund |
Delve Into Dell's Misery Dell is falling behind the competition. The third quarter should have been a solid success but came in closer to a limp squib. |
The Motley Fool March 8, 2011 Cindy Johnson |
China PC Share: You Can't Always Get What You Want Market share is a zero-sum game ... who will be the loser(s)? |
BusinessWeek July 5, 2004 Einhorn & Culpan |
Chipmaking Titans Under Seige? Upstarts and giants alike are taking on global leaders Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and United Microelectronics Corp. |
The Motley Fool January 18, 2011 Travis Hoium |
Chinese Solar Subsidies Are a U.S. Necessity Politicians should tread carefully when vilifying Chinese solar subsidies. |
The Motley Fool September 16, 2010 Travis Hoium |
Not Everyone's Happy About Solar Growth in China United Steelworkers union files a formal complaint over Chinese solar subsidies. |
The Motley Fool October 14, 2011 Harsh Chauhan |
Looking Beyond Dell's Buyback Would it be wiser for Dell to spend money on R&D rather than buybacks? |
The Motley Fool August 28, 2008 Tim Beyers |
Trump in the Dell Dell announces four new sub-$500 systems to be sold in China, India, and other emerging economies -- 20 countries in all. |
The Motley Fool January 20, 2005 Tim Beyers |
Good Outlook for PCs A solid 2004 drives predictions for strong, but slower, growth in computer sales this year. |
The Motley Fool April 7, 2004 Bill Mann |
The Big Tech Scramble Doesn't this bother anyone? It seems every consumer technology business is suddenly focusing on areas it didn't used to. |
The Motley Fool July 19, 2010 Eric Jhonsa |
Is Dell a Buy? A growing enterprise business makes the company a hidden value. |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2011 Travis Hoium |
Solar Earnings Roundup A look back at how solar manufacturers stacked up in the third quarter. |
The Motley Fool March 16, 2006 Rich Smith |
Dueling Fools: Dell Bull Rebuttal Dell's so good, so efficient, and so well known that its reputation and brand name enable it to sell computers at higher prices than others can charge. Dell shareholders then reap the benefits of that pricing power. |
The Motley Fool January 27, 2011 Travis Hoium |
An Unlikely Boost for Solar Stocks New Chinese regulations may save solar from itself. |
BusinessWeek May 9, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Lenovo and IBM: East Meets West, Big-Time Lenovo's deal for IBM's PC unit led to a merger of talent, and a threat to Dell. |
InternetNews December 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Dell Dismisses IBM's PC Demise Asked about reports that IBM is selling its PC unit, Michael Dell says his company will grow by boosting sales in China and Europe rather than acquisitions. |
The Motley Fool January 5, 2005 Selena Maranjian |
Dell's Scary Efficiency Even when companies get huge, they can keep growing quickly. As you evaluate various companies as possible investments for your portfolio, ask yourself how driven they are to keep improving. |
InternetNews March 9, 2005 Clint Boulton |
U.S. Committee OKs IBM-Lenovo Deal The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) agrees to let IBM continue its PC division sale to China-based Lenovo. |
Entrepreneur May 2005 Mike Hogan |
Home Stretch Will the move into home electronics by PC-makers like Apple and Dell leave thin support for business PCs? |
The Motley Fool August 20, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Make a Hard Left, Dell! It's time for a drastic change of direction at Dell. |
The Motley Fool November 18, 2009 Toby Shute |
Another Peppy Chinese Solar Report Canadian Solar joins the ranks of other Chinese solar shops stomping domestic players. |
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 December 12, 2005 |
A Tough Sell For Lenovo Lenovo chairman Yang Yuanqing says a U.S. base will help the Chinese PC maker's IBM deal pay off. |
The Motley Fool August 11, 2005 Jack Uldrich |
Big Blue Didn't Sell Its Soul Maybe IBM's move to shed PCs made sense after all. Researchers there recently announced that they have developed a way to carry a powerful, personalized virtual computer from one PC to the next. |
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. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2004 David Drickhamer |
Manufacturers Like Us When asked to identify the focus of their market strategy, Chinese manufacturers listed "high quality" first, followed by innovation, service and support, and low cost. For U.S. manufacturers, innovation straggled in a distant seventh. |
InternetNews December 10, 2004 Paul Shread |
It's The Margins, Stupid For IBM, the decision to sell its PC business had as much to do with profitability as it did Big Blue's growing focus on business services and solutions... Stocks closed Friday with modest losses... Motorola lost on worries of a Nextel-Sprint merger... etc. |
Wired April 2004 Frank Rose |
Hello, Ningbo Motorola is losing its hold on China's mobile phone market. The little local startup that has Moto's number: Ningbo Bird. |
The Motley Fool February 29, 2008 Anders Bylund |
Dell Is Building a Global Comeback Dell is sidestepping the slow domestic economy by growing at breakneck speed abroad. |
The Motley Fool January 19, 2012 |
How to Play the Tech Giant's Earnings Venerable tech giant IBM reported its quarterly earnings after market close today, and the numbers appeared pretty impressive. |
The Motley Fool February 25, 2011 Travis Hoium |
Investors See Clouds Over First Solar First Solar failed to impress investors with fourth-quarter earnings, but they weren't all that bad. |
TIME Asia June 28, 2010 Austin Ramzy |
Striking Observations Labor unrest is part of life in China's factory towns, and yet there is something different about this summer's strife that will have broad implications for the global economy. We are witnessing nothing less than the beginning of the end of China's role as the sweatshop of the world. |
InternetNews July 8, 2004 Erin Joyce |
China Eases Taxes on U.S. Chipmakers The semiconductor industry is hailing a trade deal between the United States and China ending China's tax policy that effectively priced U.S. exporters of integrated circuits out of China's $19 billion integrated circuit market. |
The Motley Fool September 22, 2005 Melanie Hollands |
Dell Ups the Ante Dell's decision to sell TVs is a threat to others in the television marketplace. Dell currently trades at 16 times 2007 earnings, a premium to its peers. So why buy it? Doesn't Dell's current premium limit its potential for additional upside? |