Word: gartner
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...simply listen passively to what radio DJs play,” according to Derek A. Slater ’05-’06, co-author of a report that will be released today by Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society and the Gartner Group, a research firm. Slater wrote in an e-mail that listeners “want to be DJs too, sharing their tastes online through playlists and creating their own downloadable radio-style shows. In this way, they might take away the power of radio and other traditional tastemakers...
...this year, and as all the losses are in-conference, Yale currently sits at the bottom of the ECAC standings. It has used three goaltenders this year, and freshman Alex Richards has earned the most playing time with a .908 save percentage and a 2.05 GAA (senior Josh Gartner has allowed 5.91 goals per contest in 91:21 of playing time, and junior Matt Modelski allowed four goals on 11 shots in 23:35).Richards played nearly a game and a half during the Bulldogs’ two losses last weekend.The Bears, meanwhile, are 2-2-0 in front...
...however, Sharp is happy to go it alone, hoping that it's strong enough technologically to maintain a leadership position without a partner. It's a gamble but not an unreasonable one, says Gartner analyst Paul O'Donovan. "Sharp is able to stand alone because it has unique intellectual property," he says. "Being that much more advanced, they don't want to share that with anybody else...
...still is the best-selling MP3 player in the world, and Apple had introduced it only 11 months earlier. Jobs was proposing to fix something that decidedly was not broken. "Not very many companies are bold enough to shoot their best-selling product at the peak of its popularity," Gartner analyst Van Baker says. "That's what Apple just did." And it did that while staring right down the barrels of the holiday retail season...
...like Nokia and Motorola build into their hybrid phones a technology that will route wi-fi-initiated calls over mobile networks. And then there's the ultimate weapon: price cuts, which could make the underlying technology irrelevant. "At the end of the day, it's a pricing game,'' notes Gartner analyst Martin Gutberlet in Munich. Many mobile operators, for example, now provide virtually free intra-office calls. This fall, several will offer free calls that stay on the operator's own network within a country, says Gutberlet. But eventually, most operators will be forced to join the VoIP revolution. Some...