1928
1930
ACCO Brands
AIM alliance
AJAR (applications software platform)
AKM Semiconductor
ARM Holdings
Abbott Laboratories
Ace Hardware
Acer Inc.
Alcatel Mobile Phones
Allstate
Almondvale Stadium
Amateur radio
Amiga
Android (operating system)
Anixter International
Aon Corporation
Apple Computer
Apple Inc.
Apple Macintosh
Archer Daniels Midland
Arizona
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
Ascender Corporation
Asset
Asus
Atari ST
Atheros
Audience (telecom company)
Australian Football League
BT Cellnet
Baker & McKenzie
Base station
Battery eliminator
Baxter International
Bill Lear
Bill Smith (Motorola engineer)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
Bluetooth
Bob Galvin
Boeing
Bouygues Telecom
Broadband networks
Broadcom
Brookdale Senior Living
BusinessWeek
CDW
CF Industries
CME Group
CNA Financial
CSR Plc.
Cable modem
Cable television
Canada
Career Education Corporation
Caterpillar Inc.
Cathode ray tube
Cell phone
Cellular network
Cellular networks
Chase bank
Chicago
China Mobile
China Telecom
China Unicom
Cisco
Compal Electronics
Computer
Computer software
Continental AG
Corn Products International
Country Financial
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation
Dalvik virtual machine
Danica Patrick
Daniel E. Noble
David Beckham
De facto standard
Defense (military)
Dell
Denmark
Digital
Digital video recorder
Dimetra
Discover Financial
Dot Foods
DynaTAC 8000X
EBay
Earnings before interest and taxes
Eby-Brown
Electro-Motive Diesel
Employment
Energy Star
Equity (finance)
Equity Residential
Ericsson Mobile Platforms
Ethernet switch
Exelon
Explorer 1
1930
ACCO Brands
AIM alliance
AJAR (applications software platform)
AKM Semiconductor
ARM Holdings
Abbott Laboratories
Ace Hardware
Acer Inc.
Alcatel Mobile Phones
Allstate
Almondvale Stadium
Amateur radio
Amiga
Android (operating system)
Anixter International
Aon Corporation
Apple Computer
Apple Inc.
Apple Macintosh
Archer Daniels Midland
Arizona
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
Ascender Corporation
Asset
Asus
Atari ST
Atheros
Audience (telecom company)
Australian Football League
BT Cellnet
Baker & McKenzie
Base station
Battery eliminator
Baxter International
Bill Lear
Bill Smith (Motorola engineer)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
Bluetooth
Bob Galvin
Boeing
Bouygues Telecom
Broadband networks
Broadcom
Brookdale Senior Living
BusinessWeek
CDW
CF Industries
CME Group
CNA Financial
CSR Plc.
Cable modem
Cable television
Canada
Career Education Corporation
Caterpillar Inc.
Cathode ray tube
Cell phone
Cellular network
Cellular networks
Chase bank
Chicago
China Mobile
China Telecom
China Unicom
Cisco
Compal Electronics
Computer
Computer software
Continental AG
Corn Products International
Country Financial
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation
Dalvik virtual machine
Danica Patrick
Daniel E. Noble
David Beckham
De facto standard
Defense (military)
Dell
Denmark
Digital
Digital video recorder
Dimetra
Discover Financial
Dot Foods
DynaTAC 8000X
EBay
Earnings before interest and taxes
Eby-Brown
Electro-Motive Diesel
Employment
Energy Star
Equity (finance)
Equity Residential
Ericsson Mobile Platforms
Ethernet switch
Exelon
Explorer 1
For other uses, see Motorola Mobility and Motorola Solutions.
Motorola, Inc.
Type
Public
Industry
Telecommunications
Fate
Split
Successor
Motorola Mobility
Motorola Solutions
Founded
September 25, 1928
Headquarters
1303 East Algonquin Road,1 Schaumburg, Illinois, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Greg Brown (President & Co-CEO)2
Sanjay Jha (Co-CEO)3
Products
Mobile phones
Smartphones
Two-way radios
Networking systems
Cable television systems
Wireless Broadband Networks
RFID Systems
Mobile Telephone Infrastructure
Revenue
$22.044 billion (2009)4
Operating income
$-158 million (2009)4
Net income
$-51 million (2009)4
Total assets
$25.603 billion (2009)4
Total equity
$9.775 billion (2009)4
Employees
60,000 (2010)5
Website
Motorola.com
Motorola, Inc. (pronounced /moʊtɵˈroʊlə/; NYSE: MOT) was an American-based, multinational,6 telecommunications company based in Schaumburg, Illinois, which was split into two independent public companies, Motorola Mobility and Motorola Solutions on January 4, 2011.7
Before it was split, the company was a manufacturer of wireless telephone handsets, and also designed and sold wireless network infrastructure equipment such as cellular transmission base stations and signal amplifiers. Motorola's home and broadcast network products included set-top boxes, digital video recorders, and network equipment used to enable video broadcasting, computer telephony, and high-definition television. Its business and government customers consisted mainly of wireless voice and broadband systems used to build private networks and public safety communications systems like Astro and Dimetra. Motorola's handset division is focused on smartphones using Google's open-source Android mobile operating system. The first phone to use the newest version of Google's open source OS, Android 2.0, was released on November 2, 2009 as the Motorola Droid (the GSM version launched a month later, in Europe, as the Motorola Milestone).
Contents
1 History
2 Finances
3 Spin-offs
3.1 Television and radio manufacturing
3.2 Iridium
3.3 Government and defense
3.4 Semiconductor
3.5 Automotive
3.6 Biometrics
3.7 Split
4 Quality systems
5 Environmental record
6 Sponsorships
7 References
8 External links
//
History
Local branch in Glostrup, Denmark.
Motorola started in Chicago, Illinois as Galvin Manufacturing Corporation (at 847 West Harrison Street)8 in 1928, with its first product being a battery eliminator. Paul Galvin purchased the patents to the automotive radio and acquired the rights to the trade name Motorola ("motor" and "Victrola") from William Lear. The name Motorola was adopted in 1930, and the word has been used as a trademark since the 1930s.9
Many of Motorola's products have been radio-related, starting with a battery eliminator for radios, through the first walkie-talkie in the world in 1940, defense electronics, cellular infrastructure equipment, and mobile phone manufacturing. In the same year, the company built its research and development program with Dan Noble, a pioneer in FM radio and semiconductor technologies joined the company as director of research.
In 1943, Motorola went public and in 1947, the name changed to its present name. At this time, Motorola's main business was producing and selling televisions and radios. Motorola produced the hand-held AM SCR-536 radio during World War II which was vital to allied communication.
In 1952, Motorola opened its first international subsidiary in Toronto, Canada to produce radios and televisions. In 1953, Motorola established the Motorola Foundation to support leading universities in the United States.
In 1955, years after Motorola started its research and development laboratory in Phoenix, Arizona to research new solid-state technology, Motorola introduced the world's first commercial high-power germanium-based transistor. The present "batwing" logo was also introduced in 1955 (having been designed by Zeke Ziner in late 1954).
Beginning in 1958 with Explorer 1, Motorola provided radio equipment for most NASA space-flights for decades including during the 1969 moon landing. A year later, it established a subsidiary to conduct licensing and manufacturing for international markets.
In 1960, Motorola introduced the world's first "large-screen" (19-inch), transistorized, cordless portable television.
In 1963, Motorola, which had very successfully begun making televisions in 1947 introduced the world's first truly rectangular color TV picture tube which quickly became the industry standard.
In 1969, Neil Armstrong spoke the famous words "one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind" from the Moon on a Motorola Radio.10
In 1974, Motorola sold its television business to the Japan-based parent company of Panasonic.
In 1976, Motorola moved to its present headquarters in Schaumburg, Illinois.
In September 1983, the firm made history when the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the DynaTAC 8000X telephone, the world's first commercial cellular device. By 1998, cellphones accounted for two thirds of Motorola's gross revenue.11 The company was also strong in semiconductor technology, including integrated circuits used in computers. In particular, it is well known for the 6800 family and 68000 family of microprocessors used in Atari ST, Commodore Amiga, Color Computer, and Apple Macintosh personal computers. The PowerPC family was developed with IBM and in a partnership with Apple (known as the AIM alliance). Motorola also has a diverse line of communication products, including satellite systems, digital cable boxes and modems.
In 1986, Motorola invented the Six Sigma quality improvement process. This became a global standard. In 1990, General Instrument Corporation, which was later acquired by Motorola, proposed the first all-digital HDTV standard. In the same year, the company introduced the Bravo numeric pager which became the world's best-selling pager.
In 1991, Motorola demonstrated the world's first working-prototype digital cellular system and phones using GSM standard in Hanover, Germany. In 1994, Motorola introduced the world's first commercial digital radio system that combined paging, data and cellular communications and voice dispatch in a single radio network and handset. In 1995 Motorola introduced the world's first two-way pager which allowed users to receive text messages and e-mail and reply with a standard response.
In 1998, Motorola was overtaken by Nokia as the world's biggest seller of mobile phone handsets.10
On September 15, 1999, Motorola announced it would buy General Instrument in an $11 billion stock swap. General Instrument had long been the No. 1 cable TV equipment provider, supplying cable operators with end-to-end hybrid fiber coax cable solutions. This meant that GI offers all cable TV transmission network components from the head-end to the fiber optic transmission nodes to the cable set-top boxes, now at the availability of Motorola.
In June 2000, Motorola and Cisco supplied the world's first commercial GPRS cellular network to BT Cellnet in the United Kingdom. The world's first GPRS cell phone was also developed by Motorola.
In 2002, Motorola introduced the world's first wireless cable modem gateway which combined a high-speed cable modem router with an ethernet switch and wireless home gateway.
In 2003, Motorola introduced the world's first handset to combine a Linux operating system and Java technology with "full PDA functionality".
In June 2006, Motorola acquired the world-class software platform (AJAR) developed by the British company TTP Communications plc.12
In 2006, the firm announced a music subscription service named iRadio. The technology came after a break in a partnership with Apple Computer (which in 2005 had produced an iTunes compatible cell phone ROKR E1, and most recently, mid 2007, its own iPhone). iRadio has many similarities with existing satellite radio services (such as Sirius and XM Radio) by offering live streams of commercial-free music content. Unlike satellite services, however, iRadio content will be downloaded via a broadband internet connection. As of 2008, iRadio has not been commercially released and no further information is available.13
In 2007, Motorola acquired Symbol Technologies, Inc. to provide products and systems for enterprise mobility solutions, including rugged mobile computing, advanced data capture and radio frequency identification (RFID).
Motorola creates numerous products for use by the government, public safety officials, business installments, and the general public. These products include cell phones, laptops, computer processors, and radio communication devices. The Motorola RAZR line has sold over 120 million units bringing the company to the number two mobile phone slot in 2005.
Since the 1950s, used Motorola radio equipment has been popular with amateur radio ("ham") operators. Known as "Ma Batwings," Motorola has provided little to no support to hobbyists, who keep using these radios for years or even decades after they were taken out of production.
Divisional Products:14
Enterprise Mobility Solutions: Headquarters located in Schaumburg, Illinois; comprises communications offered to government and public safety sectors and enterprise mobility business. Motorola develops analog and digital two-way radio, voice and data communications products and systems, mobile computing, advanced data capture, wireless infrastructure and RFID solutions to customers worldwide.
Home & Networks Mobility: Headquarters located in Arlington Heights, Illinois; produces end-to-end systems that facilitate uninterrupted access to digital entertainment, information and communications services via wired and wireless mediums. Motorola develops digital video system solutions, interactive set-top devices, voice and data modems for digital subscriber line and cable networks, broadband access systems for cable and satellite television operators, and also wireline carriers and wireless service providers.
Mobile Devices: Headquarters located in Libertyville, Illinois; currently the least prosperous arm of the firm; designs wireless handsets, but also licenses much of its intellectual properties. This includes cellular and wireless systems and as well as integrated applications and Bluetooth accessories.
Finances
This section requires expansion.
Motorola's handset division recorded a loss of US$1.2 billion in the fourth quarter of 2007, while the company as a whole earned $100 million during that quarter.15 It lost several key executives to rivals,16 and the web site TrustedReviews called the company's products repetitive and uninnovative.17 Motorola laid off 3,500 workers in January 2008,18 followed by a further 4,000 job cuts in June19 and another 20% cut of its research division a few days later.20 In July 2008 a large number of executives left Motorola to work on Apple Inc.'s iPhone.21 The company's handset division was also put on offer for sale.22 Also that month, analyst Mark McKechnie from American Technology Research said that Motorola "would be lucky to fetch $500 million" for selling its handset business. Analyst Richard Windsor said that Motorola might have to pay someone to take the division off the company's hands, and that Motorola may even exit the handset market altogether.23 Its global market share has been on the decline; from 18.4% of the market in 2007 the company had a share of just 6.0% by Q1 2009, but at last Motorola scored a profit of $26 million in Q2 and showed an increase of 12% in stocks for the first time after losses in many quarters. During the second quarter of 2010, the company reported a profit of $162 million, which compared very favorably to the $26 million earned for the same period last year. Its Mobile Devices division reported, for the first time in years, earnings of $87 million.24
Spin-offs
Television and radio manufacturing
In 1974, Motorola divested itself of its television and radio-manufacturing division, which included the popular Quasar brand of electronics. This division was acquired by Matsushita, already well-known under its Panasonic brand in North America, where it was looking to expand.
Iridium
Main article: Iridium (satellite)
Motorola developed the first truly global communication network using a set of 66 satellites. The business ambitions behind this project and the need for raising venture capital to fund the project led to the creation of the Iridium company in the late 1990s. While the technology was proven to work, Iridium failed to attract sufficient customers and it filed for bankruptcy in 1999. Obligations to Motorola and loss of expected revenue caused Motorola to spin off the ON Semiconductor (ONNN) business August 4, 1999, raising for Motorola about $1.1 billion.
Motorola manufactured two satellite phone handsets for this network - the 9500 and 9505 as well as transceiver units. Some of these are still in production by an OEM but sold under the Iridium brand.
Government and defense
Further declines in business during 2000 and 2001 caused Motorola to spin off its government and defense business to General Dynamics. The business deal closed September 2001. Thus GD Decision Systems was formed (and later merged with General Dynamics C4 Systems) from Motorola's Integrated Information Systems Group.
Semiconductor
On August 4, 1999 Motorola, Inc.'s Semiconductor Components Group, manufacturing Motorola's discrete, standard analog and standard logic devices was spun-off, recapitalized and established as an independent company named ON Semiconductor.
On October 16, 2003, Motorola announced that it would spin off its Semiconductor Products Sector into a separate company called Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.. The new company began trading on the New York Stock Exchange on July 16 of the following year.
Automotive
In July, 2006 Motorola completed the sale of its automotive business to Continental AG. Motorola’s automotive unit had annual sales of $1.6 billion (€1.33 billion) and employed 4,500. The divisions products included telematics systems used for vehicle navigation and safety services, engine and transmission control electronics, vehicle control, electronics and sensors used in steering, braking, and power doors and power windows.
Biometrics
In October, 2008, Motorola agreed to sell its Biometrics business to Safran, a French defense firm. Motorola's biometric business unit was headquartered in Anaheim, Calif. The deal is expected to close in Q1, 2009.
Split
On March 26, 2008, Motorola's board of directors approved a split into two different publicly traded companies. This came after talk of selling the handset division to another corporation. These new companies would comprise the business units of the current Motorola Mobile Devices and Motorola Broadband & Mobility Solutions. Originally it was expected that this action would be approved by regulatory bodies and complete by mid-2009, but the split was indefinitely delayed due to company restructuring problems and the 2008-2009 extreme economic downturn.25
On February 11, 2010, Motorola announced its separation into two independent, publicly traded companies,26 effective Q1 2011. The official spilt occurred at around 12:00 pm EST on January 4, 2011. The two new companies are called Motorola Mobility (NYSE: MMI; cell phone company) and Motorola Solutions (NYSE: MSI; Government and Enterprise Business).
Quality systems
The Six Sigma quality system was developed at Motorola even though it became best known through its use by General Electric. It was created by engineer Bill Smith, under the direction of Bob Galvin (son of founder Paul Galvin) when he was running the company. Motorola University is one of many places that provide Six Sigma training.
Environmental record
Motorola, Inc., along with the Arizona Water Co. has been identified as the sources of trichloroethylene (TCE) contamination that took place in Scottsdale, Arizona. The malfunction led to a ban on the use of water that lasted three days and affected almost 5000 people in the area. Motorola was found to be the main source of the TCE, an industrial solvent that is thought to cause cancer. The TCE contamination was caused by a faulty blower on an air stripping tower that was used to take TCE from the water, and Motorola has attributed the situation to operator error.27
Motorola ranks 6th out of 18 leading electronics manufacturers in Greenpeace’s Guide to Greener Electronics of October 2010 (the company shares 6th place with its competitors Panasonic and Nokia). 28
Motorola scores relatively well on the chemicals criteria and has a goal to eliminate PVC vinyl plastic and brominated flame retardants (BFRs), though only in mobile devices and not in all its products introduced after 2010, despite the fact that Sony Ericsson and Nokia are already there. All of its mobile phones are now PVC-free and it has two PVC and BFR-free mobile phones, the A45 ECO and the GRASP; all chargers are also free from PVC and BFRs. 29
The company is also increasing the proportion of recycled materials that is used in its products. For example the housing for the MOTO™ W233 Renew and MOTOCUBO A45 Eco mobile phones contains plastic from post-consumer recycled water cooler bottles. 30 According to the company’s information all of Motorola’s newly designed chargers meet the current Energy Star requirements and exceed the requirements for standby/ no-load modes by at least 67%. 31
Sponsorships
Motorola sponsored Scottish Premier League club Motherwell F.C. for 11 years. This long term deal ended after the company started to reduce its manufacturing operations in Scotland. The club also sponsored Livingston F.C. between 1998-2002. The company also had a plant on the edge of the town. However, this closed down at the same time as their sponsorship with the club ended. The South Stand at Livingston's Almondvale Stadium, was named after the company, during their time of sponsorship. The company also sponsored a cycling team that counted Lance Armstrong amongst its members. Motorola is also a large sponsor of Danica Patrick, David Beckham, and Fergie. It also Sponsored The Richmond Football Club in the Australian Football League from 2004-2007.
Robby Gordon was sponsored by Motorola in 2007 and 2008. Motorola is on Robby's car in NASCAR 07 and NASCAR 08
References
Notes
^ Motorola Office Locations, Retrieved 2010-07-26.
^ Greg Brown, President and Co-CEO
^ Silver, Sara; Lublin, Joann S. (2008-08-05). "Motorola Lures Jha to Head Cellphone Unit". The Wall Street Journal: pp. B1.
^ a b c d e http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/ABEA-2FO3VV/616932042x0x275710/30b0d3a9-7524-49d4-85ae-6443c6d89fbb/2008_Form_10-K.pdf
^ http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/ABEA-2FO3VV/917020769x0x359291/AD7222B4-C7FE-490B-882F-FFACDA370B7B/MOT_2009_Annual_Report_on_Form_10-K_Wrap.pdf
^ "Fortune 500 2008: Motorola". CNN. http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2008/snapshots/288.html. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
^ "Motorola Is Split Into Two". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704111504576059863418814674.html. Retrieved January 4, 2011.
^ Mahon, Morgan E. A Flick of the Switch 1930–1950 (Antiques Electronics Supply, 1990), p.111.
^ Music in Motion: The First Motorola Brand Car Radio. Motorola Inc. http://www.motorola.com/content.jsp?globalObjectId=8432-10811. Retrieved 2007-12-15 (see "Birth of the Motorola Brand")
^ a b "Motorola gets in the game". CNN. September 28, 2009. http://money.cnn.com/2009/09/28/technology/Motorola_google_android.fortune/index.htm. Retrieved May 13, 2010. dead link
^ John F. Mitchell, Time Magazine Milestones section, July 6, 2009, p.17
^ Motorola acquires TTPCom AJAR Software Platform
^ "iRadio". Motorola.com. http://broadband.motorola.com/iRadio/. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
^ http://www.motorola.com/content.jsp?globalObjectId=8892
^ Motorola profit slides on mobile woes; shares hit 5-year low - MarketWatch
^ Motorola CTO Richard Nottenburg takes off - Engadget
^ Motorola Phones Sales Crash 38 Per Cent - TrustedReviews
^ Motorola to lay off 3,500 - Engadget Mobile
^ Motorola cuts another 4,000 jobs - Engadget Mobile
^ slashing 20% of its research division
^ Motorola sues former employee turned Apple exec for ganking trade secrets - Engadget
^ Motorola insider tells all about the fall of a technology icon - Engadget
^ Olga Kharif and Roger O. Crockett (2008-07-10). "Motorola's Market Share Mess". BusinessWeek. http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jul2008/tc20080710_148095.htm?chan=search. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
^ http://www.gsmarena.com/motorola_ends_fiscal_q2_with_healthy_profit-news-1846.php
^ Reardon, M.: "As losses return, Motorola delays its split", "CNET News", 2008-10-30, retrieved on 2009-04-26
^ http://mediacenter.motorola.com/content/detail.aspx?ReleaseID=12429&NewsAreaID=2
^ http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2008/05/09/20080509sr-pvwater0510-ON.html The Arizona Republic Retrieved May 15, 2008
^ "Greenpeace – Guide to Greener Electronics". Greenpeace International. http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/campaigns/toxics/electronics/Guide-to-Greener-Electronics/. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
^ "Greenpeace – Guide to Greener Electronics". Greenpeace International. http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/campaigns/toxics/electronics/Guide-to-Greener-Electronics/. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
^ "Motorola – Material content". Motorola. http://responsibility.motorola.com/index.php/environment/products/materials/#performance. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
^ "Motorola – Energy efficiency". Motorola. http://responsibility.motorola.com/index.php/environment/products/energy/#performance. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
Further reading
Gart, Jason H (2006.). Electronics and Aerospace Industry in Cold War Arizona, 1945-1968: Motorola, Hughes Aircraft, Goodyear Aircraft. Arizona State University. Phd diss.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Motorola
Motorola Official Website
Motorola Droid Accessories
v · d · eOpen Handset Alliance
Mobile Operators
Bouygues Telecom · China Mobile · China Telecom · China Unicom · KDDI · NTT DoCoMo · SoftBank Mobile · Sprint Nextel · T-Mobile · Telecom Italia · Telefónica · TELUS · Vodafone
Software Companies
ACCESS CO., LTD. · Ascender Corporation · Cooliris, Inc. · eBay · Google · LivingImage · Myriad · MOTOYA Co., Ltd. · Nuance Communications · NXP Software · OMRON SOFTWARE Co, Ltd. · PacketVideo · SkyPop · SONiVOX · SVOX · VisualOn Inc.
Semiconductor companies
AKM Semiconductor · ARM · Audience · Atheros · Broadcom · CSR Plc. (joined as SiRF) · Cypress Semiconductor Corporation · Freescale Semiconductor · Gemalto · Intel · Marvell Technology Group · MediaTek, Inc. · MIPS Technologies · Nvidia · Qualcomm · Renesas Electronics Corporation · ST-Ericsson (joined as Ericsson Mobile Platforms) · Synaptics · Texas Instruments · Via Telecom
Handset Manufacturers
Acer Inc. · Alcatel Mobile Phones · Asus · CCI · Dell · Foxconn · Garmin · Haier Telecom (Qingdao) Co., Ltd. · HTC · Huawei · Kyocera · Lenovo Mobile Communication Technology Ltd. · LG · Motorola · NEC Corporation · Samsung Electronics · Sharp Corporation · Sony Ericsson · Toshiba · ZTE Corporation
Commercialization companies
Aplix · Borqs · L&T Infotech · Noser Engineering · Sasken Communication Technologies · SQLStar International Inc. · Teleca · The Astonishing Tribe · Wind River Systems
· Wipro Technologies
See also
Android · Dalvik virtual machine · T-Mobile G1
v · d · eIllinois-based Corporations
Fortune 500
Corporations
(by size - 2010)
Archer Daniels Midland · Boeing · Walgreen Company · State Farm Insurance Cos. · Sears Holdings Corporation · Kraft Foods · Caterpillar Inc. · Allstate · Abbott Laboratories · Deere & Company · McDonald's · Motorola · Exelon · United Continental Holdings · Illinois Tool Works · Sara Lee Corporation · Baxter International · Navistar International · RR Donnelley · Discover Financial · Aon Corporation · Integrys Energy Group · OfficeMax · W. W. Grainger · Fortune Brands · Smurfit-Stone Container · Telephone and Data Systems · Anixter International · United Stationers · Tenneco · Northern Trust
Fortune 1000
Corporations
(by size - 2010)
Companies listed above, plus: Hospira · Old Republic International · Nalco Holding Company · Corn Products International · Pactiv · Hyatt Hotels Corp. · Country Financial · General Growth Properties · Hewitt Associates · Unitrin Inc · Nicor · CME Group · CF Industries Holdings · Molex · Jones Lang LaSalle · Packaging Corp. of America · Brookdale Senior Living · Equity Residential · Career Education Corporation · AptarGroup · True Value · Gardner Denver · Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
Other major private and
public companies
(alphabetically)
Ace Hardware · ACCO Brands · Amsted Industries · Baker & McKenzie · Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association · CDW · CHASE (Bank) · CNA Financial · Dot Foods · Eby-Brown · Electro-Motive Diesel · Flex-N-Gate · Follett Corporation · Grant Thornton LLP · Health Care Service Corporation · Heico Cos. · Hendrickson International · Jenner & Block · Kirkland & Ellis · Marmon Group · Mayer Brown · Medline Industries · OSI Group · Reyes Holdings · Sauer-Danfoss · Schiff Hardin LLP · Sidley Austin · Skidmore, Owings and Merrill · Solo Cup Company · Tellabs · Tribune Company · U.S. Foodservice · Walsh Group · Wirtz Corp.
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sorunsuz balant salyor Motorola W510 ile telefon grmeleri mesajlama ve e posta gnderimi ile dosya paylam son derece hzl bir ekilde gerekletirilebiliyor Motorola nternet Hizmeti Motorola W510 cep telefonunun hzl EDGE teknolojisi sayesinde internete balanmak ve dosya indirmek gibi ilemler son derece kolay ve hzl bir ekilde
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The Motorola Droid (WCDMA/GSM version: Motorola Milestone, stylized ... At this time, Motorola Milestone is only available from Telus.[25] The Milestone ...
Motorola Atrix HD Multimedia Dock Retails For $59?
The Motorola Atrix 4G is quite a different breed of Android phone. This device has the ability to transform itself into a desktop, a set-top box or a laptop through the use of different docks. These docks vary in price with the laptop dock expected to sell for about $150. (...)Read the rest of Motorola [...]
Motorola Goes After Apple in Super Bowl Teaser for Xoom ...
Aiming to turn the tables on Apple, Motorola is trying to pitch its upcoming Xoom tablet as an alternative to the dominant computing culture--the same tactic Apple ...
Motorola Solutions Announces Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year 2010 Financial Results
SCHAUMBURG, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Motorola Solutions, Inc. (NYSE: MSI), formerly Motorola, Inc., today announced its fourth-quarter and full-year 2010 financial results. The following are pro forma* financial highlights for Motorola Solutions, which primarily represented the continuing operations of the former Enterprise Mobility Solutions segment of Motorola, Inc. These results have been ...
Motorola Pokes Apple Again, Says, "2011 Looks A Lot Like 1984"
Motorola is provoking Apple once again with a teaser ad for its Xoom tablet. ... It's bold of Motorola to attack Apple, but it better back it up with more than words. ...
Motorola sends Ochocinco again to the Super Bowl
Like last year, Motorola signed NFL player Chad Ochocinco to report from the Super Bowl XLV. Chad Ochocinco plays for the Cincinnati Bengals and has been promoting Motorola already at the Super Bowl...
Here is a colorful treatment I created for a Motorola poster via Wired Magazine showcasing their newest social media gadget the Cliq Had a great time creating this one utilizing some of my curvature assets mentioned in earlier posts 2009 James White and Motorola All rights reserved <a href http www signalnoise com rel nofollow >www signalnoise com< a> <a href http signalnoise bigcartel com rel nofollow >Signalnoise Store< a>
http://www.flickr.com/photos/signalnoiseart/4087257411/
Motorola Solutions rides Asia's urbanization wave
Network equipment vendor rolls on multiyear modernization plans for public safety and metro systems, among others, for continued growth in burgeoning Asian markets such as China and India, says company exec.
Motorola V170 (TracFone) Black
Only $0.99










