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...Creative Labs is introducing wireless headphones and an adapter for its Zen Micro that uses a technology called magnetic induction for a clean signal and long battery life. The kit will be available this spring for $150, possibly along with a universal wireless kit for other MP3 players. Motorola and Toshiba are both launching wireless wraparound headphones that use Bluetooth wireless networking to connect to laptops and cell phones, and HP recently introduced a similar pair, primarily for use with its iPaq PDAs. When MP3 players eventually add Bluetooth connectivity to their features, partnering them with one of these headsets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Getting Plugged In | 1/12/2005 | See Source »

Perhaps the coolest wireless device, however, is a snowboarding jacket from Burton, which teamed up with Motorola for the design. Like a previous BURTON JACKET, it connects to an iPod to jam music on the slopes. But this beauty can also route phone calls to the headphones hidden in the hood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Getting Plugged In | 1/12/2005 | See Source »

...kbps and often higher. The new VCAST service makes Verizon the first U.S. carrier to push 15-frames-per-sec. video and high- quality stereo music to the cell phone. LG'S VX8000 will support VCAST at launch, and three more phones, from Samsung, UTStarcom and Motorola, are expected. For $15 a month on top of a standard calling plan, customers can download an unlimited stream of files to the phones or pay extra for premium content. Highlights will include music videos, Doppler weather radar, 3-D games and video clips as much as five minutes or longer, among them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Getting Plugged In | 1/12/2005 | See Source »

...Thomas Samsung's a no-Show Mobile phones rang a merry tune this Christmas - especially stylish varieties like NEC's "clamshell," Britain's top seller. Good looks and funky features helped South Korea's Samsung Electronics grab 13.8% of the global market in the third quarter of 2004, ousting Motorola as the world's No. 2 behind Nokia. But Samsung doesn't want to show off about it. The company announced that, for fear of copycats, it will no longer demonstrate its cutting-edge handsets at trade shows like the CeBIT fair in Hanover in March. Samsung values "protecting state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bizwatch | 1/2/2005 | See Source »

...early '90s as a wireless specialist. Today, he and other UWB proponents are honing a standard they hope will assure that all UWB devices communicate in the same way. Wisair is part of a large contingent backing one proposed standard, while Freescale, the chip company carved out of Motorola, backs another. The existence of competing standards means that market forecasts vary. Gartner analyst Stan Bruederle says the UWB market will hit a modest $400 million in 2008; San Diego research firm ON World predicts a $1 billion market by then. Yaish subscribes to the more bullish estimate. "UWB technology signals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Future Focus | 12/6/2004 | See Source »

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