 Manufacturers of cheap flat-panel TVs, like Vizio and Olevia, could be partially blamed over the recent closing of 128 CompUSA stores and 70 Circuit City stores. Obviously, the low prices of the off-brand LCD flat panels have put a lot of pressure on the "premium" flat-panel manufacturers like Sony and Panasonic to drop prices to compete. The price drops all around have squeezed the margins and hurt the brick-and-mortar retailers like CompUSA and Circuit City, in turn partially causing some of the recent closings. The general consensus at yesterday's U.S. Flat Panel Display Conference was that there are too many brands on the shelves and that the discounts need to stop. Maybe it's just a hunch, but I don't think that opinion will be too popular with the consumers.
Manufacturers of cheap flat-panel TVs, like Vizio and Olevia, could be partially blamed over the recent closing of 128 CompUSA stores and 70 Circuit City stores. Obviously, the low prices of the off-brand LCD flat panels have put a lot of pressure on the "premium" flat-panel manufacturers like Sony and Panasonic to drop prices to compete. The price drops all around have squeezed the margins and hurt the brick-and-mortar retailers like CompUSA and Circuit City, in turn partially causing some of the recent closings. The general consensus at yesterday's U.S. Flat Panel Display Conference was that there are too many brands on the shelves and that the discounts need to stop. Maybe it's just a hunch, but I don't think that opinion will be too popular with the consumers. 
Thursday, March 8, 2007
Cheap LCDs to Blame for CompUSA Store Closing?Cheap LCDs to Blame for CompUSA Store Closing?
Microsoft: Google Poops on Copyright
 In a speech made yesterday to the American Association of Publishers, associate general counsel for Microsoft, Tom Rubin, called out Google (and its Book Search) for not respecting copyright. Alleging that "Google's track record of protecting copyrights in other parts of its business is weak at best," he asserted Microsoft's Live Search (Books) does protect copyrights.
 In a speech made yesterday to the American Association of Publishers, associate general counsel for Microsoft, Tom Rubin, called out Google (and its Book Search) for not respecting copyright. Alleging that "Google's track record of protecting copyrights in other parts of its business is weak at best," he asserted Microsoft's Live Search (Books) does protect copyrights.
Archos 204 Debuted, But Europe Only
 Following on the heels of the pudgy Archos 704 Wi-Fi, this Archos 204 is a PMP for people who actually want the word "Portable" in that acronym to mean something.
Following on the heels of the pudgy Archos 704 Wi-Fi, this Archos 204 is a PMP for people who actually want the word "Portable" in that acronym to mean something.
Like the 704, the 204 has a hard drive (20GB) storage, and can play back MP3, WAV, WMA, and JPG photos. Unfortunately, this one plays only audio and is in Europe only for 179 Euros. Otherwise, we'd recommend either the iPod or the Zune (if it were released) over this one. – Jason Chen
Magellan Makes Maestro Line Official, First GPS with Voice Command
 Magellan confirmed those leaked Maestro GPS systems today, giving them better prices than we had initially reported. The top of the line Maestro 4050 will be the company's first GPS to support voice commands and sell for $699 when it drops in May. The 4040, which loses the 4050's voice command and real-time traffic features, but keeps Bluetooth and text-to-speech will go for $499, whereas the entry-level 4000 will debut in April (along with the 4040) for $399. Personally, I'd wait till TomTom makes their SMS-capable unit official before committing to any of these systems. – Louis Ramirez
 Magellan confirmed those leaked Maestro GPS systems today, giving them better prices than we had initially reported. The top of the line Maestro 4050 will be the company's first GPS to support voice commands and sell for $699 when it drops in May. The 4040, which loses the 4050's voice command and real-time traffic features, but keeps Bluetooth and text-to-speech will go for $499, whereas the entry-level 4000 will debut in April (along with the 4040) for $399. Personally, I'd wait till TomTom makes their SMS-capable unit official before committing to any of these systems. – Louis Ramirez
Creative iPod Speaker System
 
HTC Shipping Yahoo Go on All Smartphones. Chairs Last Seen Fleeing at Microsoft
 HTC, the undisputed leader of Windows Mobile smartphones, has just announced a partnership with Yahoo. The deal? To load Yahoo Go—a weather, news, stocks, sports, widgets, flickr, and internet app suite—onto HTC's phones. With Microsoft already embedding Live! onto Windows Mobile 6 phones, this partnership seems interesting.
HTC, the undisputed leader of Windows Mobile smartphones, has just announced a partnership with Yahoo. The deal? To load Yahoo Go—a weather, news, stocks, sports, widgets, flickr, and internet app suite—onto HTC's phones. With Microsoft already embedding Live! onto Windows Mobile 6 phones, this partnership seems interesting.   Will users with HTC phones be using both Yahoo Go and Live! Or will one be removed in favor of the other? In any case, we're sure Microsoft, including Balmer, isn't too happy with HTC loading a competitor's software onto the devices at the OEM level. – Jason Chen
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-G1: Look Mom, No Wires!

Hewlett-Packard R837: No More Pet Pics With Zombie Eyes



 
     One point, though - if you shoot your pet in a darkened room (with a camera, I mean, just in case the bunny-lovers at PETA are reading this) then he will come out with black saucers for eyes. But that's cool - you can tell everyone that Tricky-Woo's father was a hard-drinking Marmoset who loved Fluffy's mom once before moving on, and the last thing you heard he was fresh out of jail and running a brothel in Manila. – Ad Dugdale
