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...Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm, estimates that 7 million cellular telephones could be operating by 1990. General Motors is helping, at least with top-of-the-line models. In March, Buick began offering a cellular phone as an option, at $2,900, on Rivieras sold in the Chicago area. Motorola, the company that first put two-way radios in police cars in 1938, is marketing a portable version that lets callers remove the devices from their cars. People can thus take the phone indoors and use it just like that one over there on the wall. -By John S. DeMott...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bells Are Ringing on the Road | 5/7/1984 | See Source »

...another repeat of a vote last year, the committee supported a resolution opposing the sale of electronic eqipment by Motorola to South African military or police...

Author: By Robert M. Neer, | Title: ASCR Passes Nuke Weapons Criteria | 4/6/1984 | See Source »

Workers seem pleased with the changes the new technology has brought. "When people come into the Police Department now they can really say. 'You guys have come a long way,'" says Communications Clerk Carl A. Tempesta, a department worker since 1978. Tempesta gestures to the $250,000 Motorola communications console he sits behind, installed in 1979, and computer by his right hand. "They say, 'Hey! This is a police department!' It makes the university campus police a professional organization," he says...

Author: By Robert M. Neer, | Title: Fighting Crime in the Computer Age | 12/3/1983 | See Source »

What's in it for the corporate sponsors? For some it maintains status, tradition and pre-eminence in their field; Coca-Cola has supported the past twelve Olympics. Others want to strut their stuff. Motorola is providing radio communications, and a spokesman boasts, "If this system were given to a third-rate world power, it would make them a second-rate world power." Buick will put out a limited line of 10,000 Centuries called the Olympia-and charge $406 extra. All the backers expect to benefit on the bottom line from the Games' luster and class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Well Worth It | 10/17/1983 | See Source »

...microprocessor, which is expected to have its peak sales in about five years and has twice the computational power of the 16-bit chip that is the current industry pacesetter. Western Electric, Hewlett-Packard and NCR Corp. have already unveiled 32-bit chips in hopes of passing Intel and Motorola in the microprocessor race...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Chips Are Flying Again | 9/19/1983 | See Source »

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