A few months ago, I told you about a makeover contest that CDW, a technology retailer, was running along with its partners Intel, Lenovo and Linksys. The gist was that CDW would choose five small companies for a technology overhaul and then report the results. Let’s just say the wow factor on one lucky winner was just as great as on those extreme makeover shows on television.
Intel is displaying four new ultramobile PCs designed around its Menlow chips at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), including highly anticipated devices from Lenovo and Toshiba.
Lenovo Group plans to ramp up its PC production by spending $30 million on two new manufacturing and fulfillment plants in Mexico and India, the company said on Thursday.
Lenovo Group has moved worldwide marketing services such as creative development to a new hub it has established in Bangalore, India with marketing communications firm Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide.
Well, that was unexpected – most of you will have heard by now that Google just sold Motorola Mobility to Lenovo for almost $3 billion, taking Android's parent company back out of the hardware game, and, possibly, putting the whole ecosystem on solid footing for the future.
I always thought the economics of this sale made sense. Now I've come around to thinking that freeing PCD from the clutches of IBM might be good for the PC market, as well as for Lenovo.
Lenovo announced its first LTE smartphone and other handsets priced between US$219 to $549, but none will be immediately available in the U.S., one of the largest mobile device markets.
Lenovo is going beyond smartphones and tablets with Android, putting the operating system in a unique 28-inch 4K smart monitor and a new 19.5-inch all-in-one PC.
Lenovo is going beyond smartphones and tablets with Android, putting the operating system in a unique 28-inch 4K smart monitor and a new 19.5-inch all-in-one PC.
PC blade manufacturer ClearCube Technology scored a coup last week with the announcement that the third-largest PC company in the world will market and sell its blades.
By selling Motorola Mobility to Lenovo, Google is ending a combination that never really worked out while keeping assets that could prove valuable down the road.
PC makers have often struggled when it comes to selling smartphones, but China's Lenovo could be on the cusp of making a breakthrough. The company's US$2.9 billion deal to buy Motorola Mobility from Google might end up paving the way for Lenovo to become one of the rare PC makers with a prominent handset business.
Yesterday, Google shook up the mobile space with a surprising sale of its Motorola Mobility hardware division to China's Lenovo. (The purchase, of course, is pending regulatory approval.)
Lenovo reported a 30 percent jump in its net profit for the fourth quarter of last year, with its earnings driven by a record number of devices shipped.