Word: motorolas
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...were a big concern. Wen accepted the 19-gun salute he received on the South Lawn of the White House, then fired his own volley, gently reminding his hosts that China is the fastest-growing market for America's exports. There are U.S. companies that agree. Multinationals such as Motorola and Caterpillar have invested heavily in China and strongly oppose protectionism targeted at China...
...what is fast emerging as a corporate morality play, Breen (the good) has set out to methodically reform the Tyco that Kozlowski (the bad) left in disarray. To Wall Street's approval, Breen, formerly president of Motorola, is having considerable success at a company that under Kozlowski had come to represent corporate greed. Tyco's share price has more than tripled, from a low of $8.21 when Breen took over in July 2002. The mountainous debt Kozlowski amassed is steadily being paid down. Tyco is heading back into solid profitability this year, having lost money in 2002 and narrowly avoiding...
...download onto your computer and use to create a 30-second snippet of any MP3, WAV or MIDI file. It works on most AT&T, Cingular, Sprint and T-Mobile phones, and it's free until Jan. 1, when the company will start charging $15. MotoMixer, available on some Motorola phones, lets you create your own mix of one of several songs by adjusting the drums, brass and other instruments directly on the phone. It costs $2 a song...
...some exports irritate certain U.S. firms. In October, China responded to U.S. pressure by reducing a tax rebate for firms selling abroad. Multinationals operating in China complained. "Foreign companies were hurt disproportionately because so many are set up for export and expected that rebate," says a senior executive of Motorola, which sells Chinese-made mobile phones around the world. Sales from foreign companies operating in China account for more than half of China's exports. That has made U.S. businesses especially wary of American protectionism, and small U.S. firms trying to compete with China tend to receive little sympathy from...
Aiming its Ready Link push-to-talk service at Generation Y, Sprint has launched three Sanyo handsets, including the rugged RL2000 ($300) and the video-camera-equipped VM4500 ($380). Playing Cyclops to Sprint's Wolverine, Verizon put out the conservative Motorola V60p ($150), a modified two-year-old executive model with a tiny black-and-white screen...