Word: tracks
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...marketing--is the Razr. Nearly a year after the wafer-thin phone was launched, sales are still accelerating. Motorola sold 6.5 million Razrs in the third quarter of 2005. In that period, the Razr accounted for 1 in 25 phones sold by any major carrier. The Razr is on track to surpass the best-selling phone of all time, Motorola's StarTAC. If that phone, the world's first clamshell, was Motorola at its geek-chic best, the Razr is just chic. Initially sold in silver, a black Razr made its debut as a gift to nominees at the Academy...
...entertainment to Harvard. We hope that by increasing our communication efforts with the student body, we will ensure the success of future HCC events.The goal of the HCC is to foster a sense of community through campus-wide entertainment events. Recent initiatives have included rock concerts in the Gordon track, free hip-hop events in Lavietes Pavilion, and comedy shows in Sanders Theatre. After each of these shows, we received positive feedback from students.Three years ago, administrators believed that students could not produce a concert. Now, they are more supportive than ever, but we still face many obstacles in bring...
...where the spit will hit the fan. Corporations so far have tended to focus on relatively low-value projects like predicting the next quarter's sales. Google, for example, has been conducting an internal market to predict project-completion and product-launch dates. But given the market system's track record, corporations are about to move to bet-the-ranch-type decisions. "We're about to have a Cambrian explosion of the technology," says Servan- Schreiber...
With first-place Brown on the fast-track to the championship—they play the dregs of the Ivy League in Dartmouth and Columbia in their final two games—something novel is about to occur in the Ivies. For the first time in six years, it looks like neither Harvard nor Penn will be hoisting a championship trophy at the end of the season...
...intermittently reached from within Chinese borders.Of course, firewalls aren’t perfect, but the Chinese government has mechanisms in place for catching would-be circumventors as well: they log even traffic they don’t block, and have been installing surveillance cameras at internet cafes to track down those who are trying to access objectionable content. What happens to those who get caught in this way is something of an unanswered question, but the preponderance of the evidence suggests some scary things—long jail times, perhaps without trial, and so on.What...