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Transistor kills the radio star?

"Mais de mil musicas em Mp3 num telemóvel"

"(...) The Nokia N91 is comparable in size to Apple’s 4-GB iPod Mini, but there’s a price differential. The Mini is $199, while the N91, to ship in Europe and Asia by the fourth quarter, is expected to sell for around $900 overseas, and $500 in the USA after discounts. Nokia hopes to have the phone here by year’s end, but needs a carrier.(...)
Most cell phones have limited internal memory — around 32 megabytes, though some higher-end phones come with slots for memory cards like those found in digital cameras. A 1-gigabyte card sells for around $70.
Samsung recently introduced a phone with a 1.5-gigabyte hard drive in South Korea, and says it will make a 3-gigabyte phone in the future.
No. 2 handset manufacturer Motorola announced an alliance with Apple last year for a non-hard drive phone that would play songs purchased at the iTunes Music Store. The phone has been delayed, primarily due to resistance from carriers about promoting Apple, says Alex Slawsby, an analyst with market tracker IDC.
Cell phones are the top-selling consumer tech device, with sales of 650 million last year, growing to 840 million in 2008, IDC says" (in USA Today)
(via Contrafactos)

Comentário: Mais uma vez estamos perante um caso de vantagens evidentes por parte da convergência tecnológica - os telemóveis vão tentar absorver os dispositivos de leitura digital em Mp3, beneficiando da vantagem de, com um mesmo dispositivo, ter não apenas o leitor, mas um telemóvel, um rádio, um...

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