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Will this affect the increased pace of incremental innovation in consumer packaged goods? "In the next year or so, these and a few of the other largest retailers are expected to slice the assortment of products in their stores by at least 15%, industry executives and analysts say. This is a challenge for manufacturers, who have grown accustomed to churning out incremental variations on popular products to maintain shelf space and keep their brands fresh in consumers' minds."
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IBM Aims for a Battery Breakthrough by Steve Hamm | BusinessWeek
Article points out the GE, among others, is also making a play in batteries. "Industry leaders have called for just this kind of concerted effort amid concern that the U.S. will miss out on one of the most important technology shifts in history—the switch from gasoline to electricity as the primary power source for light vehicles. The worry is that the U.S. will trade its current dependency on the Middle East for oil with a new dependency on Asia for vehicle batteries. 'We lost control of battery technology in the 1970s,' laments Andy Grove, former chairman of chip giant Intel. 'Battery technology will define the future, and if we don't act quickly it will go to China and Japan.' "
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The 99-Cent iPhone App That Kills Print Journalism by Ray Richmond | The Wrap
I have it. And it's good enough that it's hard to imagine how a publication could sell online access if it was also available via this iPhone app. Media disruption continues.
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In a move borrowed from open source programming, startup MediaBugs purports to offer an improved, centralized method for media corrections. "Improved" partly because many media sites have no well-defined path for users to point out corrections, nor prominent place to publish corrections for readers to see.
