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  • HTC posts record sales (again), getting itself something nice (Dashwire) to celebrate

    by 
    Terrence O'Brien
    Terrence O'Brien
    08.05.2011

    While the top three smartphone makers (Apple, Samsung, and Nokia) garner most of the press, HTC is quietly becoming a juggernaut. IDC's number five just posted yet another month of record sales, hitting $1.56 billion -- almost twice what the company moved in July of last year. To celebrate its continued meteoric rise, the Taiwanese manufacturer has announced it plans to acquire Dashwire, the cloud services company behind the awesome brilliant Awesome Drop, for $18.5 million. The only question is, how long HTC can keep this growth up? After all, common sense says what goes up, must come down -- just ask Nokia.

  • Nintendo says 3DS sets day-one handheld sales record, doesn't quantify it

    by 
    Sean Hollister
    Sean Hollister
    03.29.2011

    How many Nintendo 3DS handhelds got sold stateside after Triforce Johnson got one? Enough for Nintendo to boast: "U.S. day-one sales numbers for Nintendo 3DS were the highest of any Nintendo hand-held system in our history," the company claimed today, adding that the volume of tech support calls it received was also "well below the rate experienced during past hardware launches," and that there are no widespread issues with the handheld. That may sound a bit premature, considering Nintendo won't provide actual sales figures until April 14th, but we're willing to consider the possibility that the Virtual Boy's legacy is done: perhaps this time, the only major headaches Nintendo's handheld will create are for the likes of Sony and Microsoft.

  • Samsung hits 10 million Galaxy S sales

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    01.04.2011

    Sammy wanted to sell 10 million copies of its now-ubiquitous Galaxy S line before 2010 closed out -- and it may have actually pulled off that feat, despite being at "just" 9.3 million in the middle of December. Though impressive, that wouldn't make the Galaxy S Samsung's fastest-selling phone to the magical 10 million mark -- that honor is reserved for the Star, which hit it in just six months compared to the Galaxy S' seven. Considering that there's some form of Galaxy S sold on a staggering percentage of the world's major carriers, the success should come as no surprise; question is, can they keep it up in 2011 (hopefully thanks in part to a dual-core model or two)?

  • HTC EVO 4G overtakes Palm Pre for best-selling launch day on Sprint

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    06.07.2010

    Considering the lackluster career that Palm's inaugural webOS duo ultimately endured on Sprint, it's wild to think back to those heady days when the Pre was the carrier's best launch day performer in history -- but alas, no longer. As you might've expected, the mighty EVO 4G has shown the Pre the door to take its own place in the record books, a mark we're not surprised to see considering the activation issues many customers saw on Friday as Sprint's systems buckled under the load. Sprint isn't quoting figures, but it proudly boasts of "temporary shortages of the device at some of the 22,000 sales locations across the United States" that are in the process of being replenished with daily deliveries. Now, the next hurdle is to see whether Sprint's shared WiMAX infrastructure can stand up to the load of its first wildly-successful 4G consumer product, eh? Follow the break for the carrier's press release.

  • Avatar smashes Blu-ray sales records, has some owners ready to smash incompatible players

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    04.26.2010

    Well, well. Our friend Jimmy C.'s (who cancelled on our planned interview last week, but it's cool) little indie project has taken the all-time Blu-ray sales crown for North America in just four days. That's how long it took for Avatar to move 2.7 million Blu-ray discs, ahead of The Dark Knight's 2.5 million number, showering viewers with that incredibly high bitrate audio and video (other than some pleading for more low end thump, we haven't heard any complaints.) The downside for a few, including one Crunchgear editor, is that the movie shipped with a new version of BD+ encryption and has had trouble playing on certain Blu-ray players, including the BD-UP5000, BD-C5500, as well as several Pioneer units (fixed after a firmware update.) Some owners have found a way around the issues for the BD-C5500, but there's no word when an update to take care of things completely may be incoming. If you're wondering how much time the extra DRM bought Fox & co. before the BDRips started floating around, DVDFab claimed to break it the same day the movie launched, while Slysoft's AnyDVD HD has offered compatibility with some, if not all, region releases the day after. So much for that ten year prediction.