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Word: chips (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...stores open for at least 12 months shrank 2.7% from the year before. The company has suffered declining profits for six of the past seven quarters and just lowered its earnings expectations for 2002. Wall Street's indigestion over the news pushed McDonald's once dependable blue-chip stock down to a seven-year low, helping sink the Dow Jones average close to a four-year nadir...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can McDonald's Shape Up? | 9/25/2002 | See Source »

...year, Nantero expects to produce a commercial prototype for a chip with "nonvolatile random-access memory" (NRAM), which means its chips won't forget how to run all its programs when the power is switched off. The technology uses arrays of 2-nm strands of carbon atoms, called carbon nanotubes, that convey electrons faster than copper and are 100 times as strong as steel at a fraction of the weight. Pairs of tubes store data by locking together when a current runs through them and stay together even when the computer power is switched off and back on. The tubes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nanotechnology: Very small Business | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...said, can cost $700 a month - far more than she can afford on her $42 pension check and $1,200 from Social Security. Those tiny bottles of glaucoma drops alone cost $95 every two weeks. She couldn't pay for them without the $400 he and his brother chip in every month. "If we were passing Medicare today," the man added, "we would never pass it without (including a benefit for) prescription drugs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Placebo Effect | 8/21/2002 | See Source »

...said, can cost $700 a month--far more than she can afford on her $42 pension check and $1,200 from Social Security. Those tiny bottles of glaucoma drops alone cost $95 every two weeks. She couldn't pay for them without the $400 he and his brother chip in every month. "If we were passing Medicare today," the man added, "we would never pass it without [including a benefit for] prescription drugs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Placebo Effect | 8/12/2002 | See Source »

Larry Puglia, manager of the T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth fund, likes hospital companies Tenet Healthcare and HCA, the HMO firm United Healthcare as well as select financial services stocks, including fund company Franklin Financial Advisors. He also believes Starbucks will benefit from retirees with time on their hands--he's long decaf. His fund is 50% driven by age-wave considerations, which are the main driver at the Muhlenkamp Fund. Those two funds are one-stop investments for the trend. Other funds guided by shifting demographics include AIM Dent Demographic Trends, Fidelity New Millennium, Morgan Stanley 21st Century...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Surf the Age Wave | 8/12/2002 | See Source »

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