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Demand For "anytime, anywhere" Internet Access Drives Continued Surge In Notebook PC Ownership Around The World
The Popularity Of Notebook PCs Will Help Close The Digital Divide Between Society's Technological Haves And Have-Nots, Says Ipsos Insight Study The Face of the Web
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Portable MP3 Player Ownership Reaches New High
One In Five Americans Aged 12 And Older Owns A Portable MP3 Player: Ipsos Research
Interest In Additional Multimedia Content For Portable MP3 Players Fueled By Teens And Young Adults, Reveals Quarterly Digital Music Study, TEMPO: Keeping Pace With Digital Music Behavior -
Ipsos Insight And AstraZeneca Awarded Best Of Research Excellence Series At PBIRG 2006 Annual General Meeting
The Case Study "Quantifying The Emotional Drivers of Physician Brand Choice" Selected To Receive Prestigious Award By Pharmaceutical Company And Supplier Agency Conference Delegates
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More Evolution Than Revolution: Most Consumers Ambivalent About Emerging Digital Video Choices
While New Ways Of Accessing Digital Media Are Intriguing To Some Members Of The Online Public, Most Prefer To Wait And See
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In-Home Digital Convergence: Reality TV, Or Not Ready For Prime Time?
New Ipsos Data On The `Digital Den' Highlights Barriers To Market Development And Provides An Estimate Of Next-Year Market Potential
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Testing--and Reaching--Your Product's Performance Potential
Ipsos' Product Precision(TM)Offers Expert Guidance For Developing Successful Products
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The PC To Be Challenged By Competing Digital Platforms For Supremacy In Tomorrow's "Digital Den"
As More Americans Experiment With Digital Media, Television Peripherals Such
As The Digital Video Recorder And Dedicated Game Console Are Emerging As
Legitimate Competitors To The PC As The Preferred Digital Entertainment
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Mobile Phones Could Soon Rival the PC As World's Dominant Internet Platform
Mobile Phones Poised To Overtake The PC As The Dominate Internet Platform In Some Markets, According To Ipsos Insight's Latest The Face of the Web Study
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The Insurance Industry's Reputation after Hurricane Katrina
The hurricanes of 2005 had a devastating effect on the life and livelihood of Gulf Coast residents, and could be having a negative effect on the insurance industry. Recovery from the tremendous damage wreaked by Hurricane Katrina will cost unprecedented amounts of money: the U.S. government's most recent budget estimates spending for hurricanes Katrina and Rita at more than $100 billion. Recently, the Bush administration asked Congress to approve another $18 billion in aid, still far short of what's needed, according to insurance industry analysts. Tensions among the key players--federal, state, and local governments, disaster and relief agencies, the insurance industry, and hundreds of thousands of policyholders--seem unavoidable.