So there’s a scene in one of the old “Star Trek” movies in which James Kirk is trying to persuade the bad guy to beam Spock onto his ship. When the bad guy refuses, Kirk asks why. “ Because you wish ...
So there’s a scene in one of the old ”Star Trek” movies in which James Kirk is trying to persuade the bad guy to beam Spock onto his ship. When the bad guy refuses, Kirk asks why.” Because you wish it ...
With Xiaomi President Lu Weibing confirming that their phones will be more expensive next year, and that Samsung will reportedly increase the prices of its Galaxy A series, Counterpoint has revised ...
Apple and Samsung are best equipped to handle rising memory chip costs that could drive down global smartphone shipments by 2.1% in 2026, according to new data from Counterpoint Research. Image credit ...
Apple could exit 2025 as the top smartphone company by market share for the first time in more than a decade. That turn at the top could be short-lived and could come ahead of a 2026 that is predicted ...
Dec 16 (Reuters) - Global smartphone shipments are expected to decline 2.1% next year as rising chip costs are likely to impact demand, technology-focused market research firm Counterpoint said on ...
… but our independent journalism isn’t free to produce. Help us keep it this way with a tax-deductible donation today. In her recent commentary calling for Minneapolis to abandon ranked-choice voting ...
When the College Board canceled SAT testing in 2020, hundreds of colleges adopted test-optional admissions policies for that fall. The Urban Institute reported that the number of four-year colleges ...
Counterpoint Research has forecasted that Apple's (AAPL) iPhone shipments will surpass Samsung's (OTCPK:SSNLF) smartphone shipments in 2025, effectively ending a 14-year reign by the South Korean ...
Global smartphone shipments are expected to increase by 3.3% year-over-year in 2025, mainly driven by strong performances from Apple, according to new data from Counterpoint Research. The iPhone maker ...
The most extended government shutdown in U.S. history has revived a familiar argument: The Senate’s filibuster is to blame for congressional paralysis. It’s a compelling narrative with a convenient ...
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