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July 6, 2008 9:51:44 AM CDT


Stories related to: consumer electronics

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Stories 1 - 20 of 29

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  • June 2008
    • Forget Batteries —Get Ready for Fuel Cells

      Forget Batteries &mdash;Get Ready for Fuel Cells

      Think fuel cells are just for cars? Think again. Their real value may be to power portable electronics such as laptops and cell phones. Fuel cells that use methanol, rather than gasoline, could replace batteries in electronics. They last much longer and take just a moment to refuel—and they're greener and possibly safer than batteries, reports the Economist . More »

    • Skip the Ties and Tools: Dads Want Gadgets

      Skip the Ties and Tools: Dads Want Gadgets

      Lose the power tools and the landscaping implements this Father's Day, ABC News suggests. The kind of cutting edge Dad really wants can't be found at the hardware store. Among them: For dads who want media at their fingertips, the enV2 by LG hosts music and video via V CAST and sports a QWERTY keyboard for only $129, with a phone contract. More »

    • New iPhone GPS Would Rock Nav System World

      New iPhone GPS Would Rock Nav System World

      Apple is likely to announce the addition of GPS to the iPhone tomorrow—and that’s bad news for makers of portable satellite-navigation systems, Wired reports. It could also be a dangerous distraction for those on the road, as drivers increasingly turn to tiny mobile-phone screens for directions. The number of users of GPS-enabled phones is expected to quadruple by 2011. More »

    • Most Returned Electronics Aren't Broken

      Most Returned Electronics Aren't Broken

      Just 5% of the electronics that consumers return to stores actually don’t work, though often the buyers believe they’re broken, a new study says. In 68% of cases, “they thought it was defective when it wasn't, or there was an expectation gap,” an executive of the firm releasing the study told PC World . US electronics returns cost $13.8 billion in 2007. More »

  • May 2008
    • US Slams EU Over Tariffs on High Tech

      US Slams EU Over Tariffs on High Tech

      The US butted heads with the European Union today over import tariffs on more than $70 billion worth of computer screens and other technology products, Reuters reports. "The EU should be working with the United States to promote new technologies, not finding protectionist gimmicks to apply new duties to these products," said a trade representative. More »

    • Sony Deal Ends Cable Box Era

      Sony Deal Ends Cable Box Era

      The days of set-top cable boxes are surely numbered, thanks to Sony, the first consumer electronics company to close a deal to produce TVs that need no accessories to receive digital cable signals. The memorandum of understanding, signed by all the major cable companies, doesn’t just apply to Sony; other electronics companies have been invited on board too, Reuters reports. Sets should be available by Christmas. More »

    • 'Lifelike' Sony TV Wows Viewers

      'Lifelike' Sony TV Wows Viewers

      Sony’s new XEL-1 television is neither plasma nor LCD: it uses organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology, and “its picture is so incredible, Sony should include a jaw cushion,” David Pogue writes in the New York Times . Sony is the first to sell TVs using the system, which is "like looking out a window. With the glass missing,” Pogue notes. More »

  • April 2008
    • Broken Tech Becomes Gold Mine, Literally

      Broken Tech Becomes Gold Mine, Literally

      No matter how broken it is, your old cell phone is still valuable to some people. That’s because it, like most electronics, is loaded with copper, iridium, gold, and other commodities that are becoming more expensive by the day. “To some it's just a mountain of garbage, but for others it's a gold mine," one recycling-plant manager tells Reuters. More »

    • Samsung Head Indicted for Tax Fraud

      Samsung Head Indicted for Tax Fraud

      The chairman of electronic giant Samsung will stand trial for tax evasion and breach of duty after special prosecutors alleged corruption in South Korea's largest industrial corporation. Lee Kun-hee was indicted in Seoul today for evading $114 million in taxes and for incurring losses at Samsung while installing his son in leadership positions, Bloomberg reports. Nine other execs at Samsung were also charged with crimes. More »

    • North American TV Sales Drag Philips Down

      North American TV Sales Drag Philips Down

      An expanding health-care sector in China couldn’t help Royal Philips Electronics offset poor television and video sales in North America, as the world’s leading lighting company reported core profits fell 28% in the first quarter, Reuters reports today. The company said it expects the global economic slowdown will continue to hurt its consumer-electronics sales. More »

    • Blockbuster Makes $1.35B Bid for Circuit City

      Blockbuster Makes $1.35B Bid for Circuit City

      Movie-rental chain Blockbuster went public today with an offer to buy struggling consumer electronics retailer Circuit City for between $6 and $8 a share, reports the Wall Street Journal. Blockbuster made the offer—worth up to $1.35 billion—in February, but said Circuit City hasn’t opened its books. Circuit City closed at $3.90 Friday. More »

    • Cuba Loosens Limits on Home Ownership, Salaries

      Cuba Loosens Limits on Home Ownership, Salaries

      Raul Castro continues to lighten up on some of Cuba's least popular restrictions, ending salary caps and allowing retiring state workers to take title to the homes they live in. Government employees, including members of the military, sugar and construction workers, doctors, and teachers, will now be able keep their places after retirement, and legally pass them on to their children, the AP reports. More »

    • New Gadget Strikes a Chord

      New Gadget Strikes a Chord

      One less thing is standing between you and a perfect jam session: tuning your electric guitar. A newly launched battery-powered compact device that mounts on the instrument's body is accurate to within 2% of a note, reports the Seattle Post-Intelligencer . "It's just a dream, being able to pick up the guitar and see whether it's in tune or tune it quickly," says a beta user. More »

  • March 2008
    • Cuba Ends Cell Phone Ban

      Cuba Ends Cell Phone Ban

      The Cuban government said today it will lift restrictions on mobile phones for the first time, the BBC reports—a sign new leader Raul Castro is following through on reform pledges. Cell phone service will be made generally available next week; service fees will have to be paid in foreign currency, however, effectively narrowing access to richer Cubans. More »

    • iPod Touch Paves Way for Pocket PCs

      iPod Touch Paves Way for Pocket PCs

      Take Apple’s iPod Touch, give it a little more innovative juice, and you get the next big thing in handhelds, blurring the line between consumer electronics and computers, writes Arik Hesseldahl in BusinessWeek . The Touch, now considered the “flagship” iPod, can already run the major media formats—music, movies, etc.—and access Wi-Fi. With a few changes, it could become a full-fledged computer in your pocket. More »

  • February 2008
    • Polaroid Out of Instant-Photo Biz

      Polaroid Out of Instant-Photo Biz

      The Polaroid photo company, whose familiar white-bordered snapshot has become an "icon," is leaving film behind to zoom in on digital equipment, Bloomberg reports. The Massachusetts company was founded in 1937 and in 1948 released the first instant camera, pulling in huge profits—but with the popularity of digital cameras, Polaroid has faced “a technologically driven decline,” said COO Tom Beaudoin.  More »

    • Apple Boosts Memory on Hot Gadgets

      Apple Boosts Memory on Hot Gadgets

      Apple released new iPhone and iPod Touch models today that cost $100 more than their predecessors and have double the memory. The new iPhone boasts 16GB of memory, and the new iPod Touch has 32GB; each costs $499. "For some users, there's never enough memory," an Apple VP told the San Jose Mercury News . More »

  • January 2008
    • TV Makers Scoff at Your Puny Recession

      TV Makers Scoff at Your Puny Recession

      Who cares if there’s a recession? The Super Bowl’s on! Even after the worst retailing Christmas in years, the makers of flat-panel, high-definition TVs are confident their trendy product will keep selling, spurred by falling prices and prime tube-watching events like the Olympics. One market-research firm is predicting LCD sales will jump 27% worldwide. More »

    • TV Content Stars at Vegas Show

      TV Content Stars at Vegas Show

      Televisions were all over the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, including some of the biggest, thinnest ones around, showing the crispest pictures ever, the New York Times reports. But exhibitors' focus was much more on what viewers will be seeing on those TVs, with several manufacturers unveiling deals with media and Internet outlets to put content on its sets.  More »

    • A Rocky 2008 Forecast for Consumer Tech

      A Rocky 2008 Forecast for Consumer Tech

      As the tech industry prepares for two huge events—the Consumer Electronics Show and Macworld— MarketWatch ’s Therese Poletti takes a look at the year ahead, and has little nice to say about consumers’ continued appetite for buying. Few big products are expected to debut—“the commonly stated mantra for expectations is ‘evolutionary, not revolutionary’”—and recession fears may well be realized in 2008. More »

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