Word: motorolas
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...Olympics. Virtually every global company is staking out ground. "If you're serious about growing, you've got to be there," says Dallas-based management consultant William Dunk, who adds that individual investors would do well to take their cues from the likes of Coca-Cola, GM, IBM, Motorola and P&G. All are committed to China...
...Quite a change from Christensen's early career, when he worked first at Britain's Psion, once a leading provider of handheld computing devices. Then he co-founded Symbian, a joint venture involving Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, Matsushita and Psion, which still has a shot at being the dominant operating system for so-called smart phones...
Indeed, after two years of embarrassing delays and technical glitches, Bluetooth consumer products are finally trickling out--mainly as cell phone, computer and PDA attachments made by companies such as 3Com, Palm, Compaq and Motorola. Simon Ellis, chairman of marketing for Bluetooth SIG, says 9 million Bluetooth chipsets will be shipped this year. But most Bluetooth-enabled consumer hardware will be out next year. Meanwhile, Bluetooth is earning its stripes in industrial applications. UPS, for instance, announced a $100 million plan last month to use Bluetooth in ring scanners for package sorters and Wi-Fi in its world-wide mobile...
...stations for Ericsson, are based in places like Silicon Valley and Sweden, where top talent is available. Its most labor-intensive operations are still in China, where Flextronics mostly makes comparatively simple electronic products, from PC parts for Dell and mouse assemblies for Microsoft to cell phones for Nokia, Motorola and Ericsson...
...compete against larger rivals Solectron and Flextronics. SCI, with $9.1 billion in sales last year, mainly assembles PCs and telecom gear, using relatively low-paid labor in countries like Mexico and Malaysia. Sanmina manufactures more complex switches, routers and optical-networking equipment for the likes of Cisco, Alcatel and Motorola, often using skilled labor or factories equipped with robots and lasers. If the merger is approved, as expected, by shareholders and regulators in the U.S. and Europe, the combined company will employ 50,000 workers at 100 plants in 21 countries...