Handset leader reacts to dwindling sales as analysts expect more negative news in the normally slow first quarter.
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Analysts expect the phone maker to announce a focus on Android that would make Google the centerpiece of its handset business.
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T-Mobile is set to officially debut the first phone, dubbed the G1, to sport Google's Linux-based Android operating system. The search king, expected to grab at least 4 percent of the market, will become the latest agitator to shake up the industry.
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Researcher Gartner issues report saying Apple’s Mac OS X clawed away the biggest percentage gains in smartphone sales.
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T-Mobile's reported move toward an open platform speeds the demise of pre-installed software on mobile phones.
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Computing giant takes on Google, Apple, Nokia, Microsoft, and RIM as it defines the mobile web as a place to do business.
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Redmond software beast plans to use the pending purchase to boost its Windows Mobile operating system.
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Watch out Google, Linux, and iPhone. Cell phone leader will purchase Symbian's remaining assets for $411M and offer the code for free.
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Nobody wants to just sell phones, but broader ambition has its perils.
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Startup picks up $9.5 million in a third round from investors interested in its smart phone content distribution.
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Armed with a new name and its usual unbounded optimism for the Next Big Thing (advertising?), the Mobile World Congress is the place to be if you're into cell phones.
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CEO sees room for growth in ‘underdeveloped’ U.S. market and in midrange phones.
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Latest version of operating system for smartphones looks more like Vista.
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British company’s free subscription ZuCast service brings podcasts to mobile phones.
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As devices converge, phones need bigger screens and better keyboards.
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Device maker teams with Microsoft and Vodafone on high-speed smartphone.
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An international palace revolt headed by Motorola, Samsung, and Vodafone could overthrow Symbian, Nokia, and Microsoft.
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The Symbian operating system dominates pricey smartphones, but Linux may find its place in low-end ‘feature’ phones.
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VoIP upstart gains new funding and access to Asian markets and technology.
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VoIP upstart declares its independence from specialized user software with cell phone integration deals.
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