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Fast Company December 2003 Charles Fishman |
Dial 1 for...No Good Reason We've adapted, consciously or not, to a small oddity of our phone system: When you make a long-distance call on a landline phone, you need to dial 1 before the number. On most wireless phones, the 1 is superfluous. Here's why the landline works the way it does. |
BusinessWeek August 2, 2004 Larry Armstrong |
Presto! Your Desk Phone Is A Cell Phone You can have landline and cell service from all the phone jacks in your home. |
The Motley Fool June 2, 2004 Rich Smith |
Trailblazer or Burnout? The Wall Street Journal contends Nokia is off on a lark while CNET sings the company's praises. |
The Motley Fool August 31, 2006 Selena Maranjian |
Weak Branding in Cell Phones A new survey suggests that cell-phone makers might want to focus more intently on strengthening and differentiating their brands, lest consumers start to consider cell phones mere commodities. |
The Motley Fool June 24, 2010 |
Are the New Motorolas a Buy? Our analysts look at Motorola's solution to splitting itself up. |
The Motley Fool June 25, 2008 Rich Smith |
Pax Nokia ... Shattered Instead of working in conjunction with its partners, as it has for so many years, Nokia is buying them out. All of them. |
The Motley Fool March 20, 2008 Rich Smith |
Sony Ericsson Sounds the Alarm Sony Ericsson warns that it is indeed experiencing a slowdown in sales of its high-end cell phones -- one big enough to cut its Q1 profits in half. |
Fast Company April 2006 Chuck Salter |
At One With Our Cells A 2005 survey of 3,000 cell-phone users, ages 15 to 35, in 15 countries revealed an almost frightening culture of dependency. |
The Motley Fool December 14, 2004 Chris Mallon |
Nokia's Back on Top Past is prologue as Nokia ends the year 180 degrees from where it began. Investors should be pleased that the company's network and multimedia units generated positive operating profits through the first nine months of this year. |
Fast Company April 2000 John R. Quain |
Cell Sites Check out the chart below to decide which of the four major cell-phone service providers best suits your needs. |
The Motley Fool October 15, 2004 Rich Duprey |
TV Anywhere Qualcomm wants to turn your cell phone into a mobile television. |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 |
Jorma Ollila, Nokia Nokia Chairman Jorma Ollila upped the ante against rival Microsoft Corp. by licensing Nokia's interface software to cell-phone competitors. He's become a leading force in building the mobile Internet. |
Fast Company April 2000 John R. Quain |
Dial 'W' for Web You've got email on line one and the Web on line two. The new generation of wireless technology makes your cell more than just a phone. Here are seven smart phones that will get you online without a line. |
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. |
The Motley Fool September 8, 2004 Rich Smith |
Nokia Goes Hollywood The handset maker rushes in where providers fear to tread with a prominent product placement in a movie that negatively portrays cell-phone service in the U.S. |
The Motley Fool May 24, 2004 Rich Smith |
Telecoms Want Money for Nothing The cell-phone companies want to publish your unlisted number. |
BusinessWeek August 5, 2010 Joel Stein |
America's Most Exclusive Club In the ultimate power move, there are people who don't own a cell phone. And they're making the world work for them. |
The Motley Fool October 20, 2008 Rich Smith |
Nokia Goes Downmarket Yet the stock goes upmarket. Go figure. |
BusinessWeek October 13, 2003 Irene M. Kunii |
What's Playing in Japan Nokia's Corp.'s N-Gage may be this season's most anticipated new toy in Europe. But the Japanese have their own games to play. At the annual Tokyo Game Show in mid-September, NTT DoCoMo Inc., Japan's biggest cell-phone operator, wowed crowds with some two dozen titles. |
BusinessWeek October 6, 2003 Catherine Yang |
Commentary: Wireless: Answer the Call New FCC rules could really expand cell-phone use -- if carriers play it right. |