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Animation: How the Mobile Phone Market Has Evolved Over 30 Years

http://player.vimeo.com/video/698878211
How The Mobile Phone Market Has Evolved Since 1993

The mobile phone landscape looks drastically different today than it did three decades ago.

In 1993, Motorola accounted for more than half of the mobile phone market. But by 2021, its market share had shrunk to just 2.2%. How did this happen, and how has the mobile industry changed over the last 30 years?

More on Apple & Easter

More on Apple & Easter

Reader Richard sends this information:

Subject:
Apple Calendar Settings

The newest versions of the iOS, at least for the iPhone, no longer
have an Alternate Calendar option for “Christian”. They offer Chinese,
Hebrew & Islamic. You can see this by going to Settings > Calendar >
Alternate Calendars. This is for people who want to add addional
holidays to the default calendar. They used to have a Christian
version. So this definitely falls under “deChrisitanization.”

Global Stocks Rise, Copper Soars In Thin Holiday Volumes

Global Stocks Rise, Copper Soars In Thin Holiday Volumes

European stocks are steady in post-Christmas trading if struggling for traction after a mixed session in Asia, amid trading thinned by a holiday-shortened week and ongoing worries about the tech sector; however a strong rally in commodities - including copper and oil - buoyed expectations for a strong 2018 and helped offset concerns over the technology sector triggered by reports of soft iPhone X demand. 

Frontrunning: December 26

  • Analysts Cut iPhone X Shipment Forecasts, Citing Lukewarm Demand (BBG)
  • North Korea likely to pursue talks, says South (Reuters)
  • The quiet probe into Clinton email investigation could be a landmine for Robert Mueller (USA Today)
  • Bitcoin rises 10 percent, recovers from last week's brutal selloff (Reuters)
  • U.S. Retailers Feel Christmas Cheer After a Tough Year (WSJ)
  • Kremlin Sees ‘Unbearable’ Risk to U.S. Ties in New Sanctions (BBG)
  • Murder in America: What Makes Cities More Dangerous (WSJ)

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