Word: synch
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Craving more than monochrome? The display's the thing on Toshiba's Gigabeat MEG F20--a gorgeous, 2.2-in. color screen that can crisply handle JPEG images, slick menu icons and even animated graphics that pulsate in synch with your music. Unlike the Sony and Apple players, which are closely bound to the companies' Sony Connect and iTunes Music Store, the Gigabeat can download songs from most music sites, and there's a forthcoming $449 version with an enormous 60 GB of memory...
...REITs will return more along the lines of 8% to 10% in 2005; if interest rates rise dramatically, the figures will be even more modest. Still, no matter what happens in the short term, REITs can play a valuable role in any portfolio. Since they don't move in synch with bonds or even many stocks, they provide diversification in uncertain times. Many financial planners suggest keeping about 5% of your total portfolio in REITs or REIT mutual funds. One recommended by fund tracker Morningstar: T. Rowe Price Real Estate. --By Barbara Kiviat
Ultimately, the out-of-synch nature of Daschle's career may have been the most critical factor in Thune's victory. For three terms Daschle managed to pull off the balancing act of being a high-profile, left-leaning Senator in a low-profile, right-leaning state. South Dakota tipped further to the right in 2004, however, and Daschle knew it. His campaign frequently touted a study that showed the Senator agreed with President Bush about 70% of the time and aired a spot showing Daschle and Bush hugging on the floor of the House in the wake...
Upsizing is the theme of the $400 Tungsten T5. With an enlarged screen and 256 MB of internal memory, it's a better desktop-to-go than its predecessors. Managing your files is easier too: instead of using complicated, time-consuming software to synch up documents, you can just drag them from PC to PDA and back again.--By Wilson Rothman
...China, Nike is hardly viewed as the ugly imperialist. In fact, the company's celebration of American culture is totally in synch with the Chinese as they hurtle into a chaotic, freer time. In July, at a Nike three-on-three competition in the capital, a Chinese DJ named Jo Eli played songs like I'll Be Damned off his Dell computer. "Nike says play hip-hop because that's what blacks listen to," he says. "The government doesn't exactly promote these things. But we can all expose ourselves to something new." That sounds pretty close to a Chinese...