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New Gillette Guard

Funny how articles I read the night after I have a class in COMM101 are related by coincidence.

Gillette’s gone backwards in tech and is now offering a one-blade version of their famous razors, but there’s a reasoning behind it: they’re targeting a developing market.

There’s a new razor in town! Called the Gillette Guard, its concept goes back to the blueprint of simple razors by having just one blade and a plastic handle-none of those 5-electric-powered-blade madness. This simple razor, début-ing in India, will cost the equivalent of 34 cents USD, making it affordable for the market while allowing P&G to expand their presence and market share on Gillette’s weakest market,caused by the formerly expensive line-up. Although selling such a cheap blade might hurt their brand image a bit, the competitive pricing should attract many buyers by brand perception and fanciness that Gillette blades that are known for in that area.

[Full Article]

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Nokia: What’s Their Problem?

If you ask my friends how they would define me, they’d probably respond with something like “cellphone nerd”, “phone person” or sometimes even “Cellphone freak”. Although I do have an interest in mobile phones, I don’t see myself as an know-it-all in that industry but as someone that reads on the latests mobile phone news or technological achievements.

Setting that aside, I encountered this article yesterday on the New York Times explaining the problems employees at Nokia face in their workforce and reasons why they are suffering in the market that they once dominated without any threat less than half a decade ago. The reply that was common amongst those that used to work for Nokia was the difficulty of getting an idea or proposal to the executive team for initiation. Each person had a different set of goals that conflicted with other executives, not to mention the employees that worked for them. As a result, they lost some very capable minds in their company that went ahead elsewhere.

Simply by communications problems inside the biggest cellphone company in the world, Nokia’s market share is slowly being chipped off by new players in the field, notably Apple and HTC. Although Nokia lost their spot in the high-end cellphone market, they must reposition themselves in the low to mid end market where the demand for their phones is still high since their cheap phones are known for their durability and reliability.

[NewYorkTimes]

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Media gone too far with the Toyota Crisis

The infamous accelerating Toyotas in the United States, was it a big problem?

In this Forbes article by Michael Fumento, he questions the validity of the claims covered by the media and analyses  the discrepancies within some widely reported cases, specifically the adventure of the Jim Sikes and his Prius that’s full of plot holes, inconsistencies, and logical fallacies.  Through this example, Fumento argues it isn’t entirely Toyota’s faulty cars that are responsible for Sikes’s success to receive national attention, rather it’s the extensive media attention given to the whole crisis that contributes to Sikes’s success. Similar articles on the web point to similar conclusions, and this post on Jalopnik reveals Toyota isn’t the first manufacturer to fall victim to the false media hype: Audi was under the same limelight in the 80’s.

So, who’s at fault here? Certainly Toyota’s responsible for their products; however these problems are common with other auto companies, yet Toyota ended up being the scapegoat for problems that are primarily related to driver error in the media. Regardless, the media continues to drive headlines by using situations that already passed half a decade ago , and even make attempts to rig a car just to grab attention on the headlines.

Has media gone too far for their self interest? In this particular case it may seem so, but in a society that allows freedom of speech it is difficult to regulate information control. The result of media’s generation of fear and anger in the society results in Toyota’s loss of reputation and brand perception

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Ryanair

Just ran across an article today on Gizmodo redefining the new ‘budget class’

^I definitely wouldn’t be smiling like that if I was sitting on one of those saddle seats, it looks painful X_x

Anyway, it’s a perfect solution for Ryanair…I can see them installing these onto their airplanes soon, no maintenance and  no moving parts. Wonder what’s it’s like to shove a 6ft+ passenger in one though haha =P

[Link Here]

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COMM 101

Infamous runaway Toyota’s: Who’s at fault?

[i didn’t know there was a word limit when I note this, short version 2 posts above]

I’m sure you’ve all heard about this controversy in the beginning of the year, with all those tree-hugging Priuses trying to end their boring, miserable lives by going high before they crash and burn along with their drivers. Although there’s already extensive coverage on unintended acceleration and other general quality issues with Toyota, I’d like to point out that this problem is actually not that big of a deal.

Yes, you can argue that the Toyotas in question did claim more than a couple of lives, but out of all those Toyota vehicles out there around the world, the handful of cars that are going astray probably does not even account for one percent of the millions of vehicles they churn out every year. What’s interesting too is that after one incident makes it on to the news, the reports of similar incidents increase almost exponentially (ok a lil sarcasm here haha).

In this Forbes article by Michael Fumento, he questions the validity of the claims covered by the media and analyses  the discrepancies within some widely reported cases, specifically the adventure of the Jim Sikes and his disobedient Prius which took him 23 minutes to slow the car down after the police went in front of him. In addition to Sike’s sketchy report on the whole incident, his less than stellar background of his life makes his story even less believable. Through this example, Fumento argues it isn’t entirely Toyota’s faulty cars that are responsible for Sikes’s success to receive national attention, it’s the extensive media attention given to the whole Toyota crisis that allowed Sikes to successfully plant his story to the public in hopes of receiving compensation from Toyota Motor Corp. Similar articles on the web point to similar conclusions, and this post on Jalopnik reveals Toyota isn’t the first manufacturer to fall victim to the false automotive media hype: Audi was under the same limelight in the late 80’s.

So, who’s at fault here? Certainly Toyota’s responsible for their faulty products and they must compensate those families who have lost someone dear to them; however I believe the astronomical damage has been done to Toyota over a problem that occurs every year, not just in Toyotas is unfair for the company, which forked out billions of dollars from lawsuits, all because of extensive media coverage and people who try get large sums of money from lawsuits.

What I find most interesting is that despite sufficient proof that most cases with unintended acceleration cares are hoaxes, trusted news outlets still attempt to generate unneeded fear, whether the actual situation already passed half a decade ago, or whether it’s relevant to the whole crisis. Heck, they even make attempts to rig a car just to grab attention on the headlines or find something to talk about in their news programs. Surprisingly, blogs and online media, sources that are often considered “unreliable” by academic institutions, are the sources that seem to analyse the whole situation and judge it accordingly with reasonable explanation.

Has media gone too far for their self interest? In this particular case it may seem so, but in a society that allows freedom of speech it is difficult to regulate information control. Guess we as readers have to use our own judgement to figure out what’s true and what’s not.

On a side note, I believe those combusting 560hp 458 Italia’s that recently received a recall are far more dangerous than those 110hp accelerating Priuses…

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