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Hitachi Ltd.

Japan-based Hitachi is known by global customers for making TVs. But on Wednesday, the company said it is considering ending its television production operations in Japan.

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How one eco-town will energizeupdated: Tue Jul 05 2011 01:48:00

A planned subdivision will run free of coal and nuclear energy. CNN's Kyung Lah reports.

Biometric ATM gives cash via 'finger vein' scanupdated: Wed Jul 07 2010 05:29:00

Poland's cooperative BPS bank says it's the first in Europe to install a biometric ATM -- allowing customers to withdraw cash simply with the touch of a fingertip.

New technology helps impaired in Polandupdated: Wed Jul 07 2010 05:29:00

Students from Poland develop software for children with motor-neuron disease, allowing control of a computer with mouth alone.

CNNMoney: Hitachi pleads guilty to price-fixingupdated: Tue Mar 10 2009 15:02:00

Hitachi became the latest electronics manufacturer to agree to plead guilty to price-fixing in the sale of LCD panels used in desktop monitors and notebook computers, the Justice Department announced Tuesday.

Review: Ultrathin TV boasts stunning designupdated: Wed Nov 26 2008 13:20:00

When Hitachi first announced the U.S. availability of its superslim monitors at CES last January, they were the slimmest flat-panel LCDs yet at 1.5 inches thick.

Radio tags could make jewelry more secureupdated: Wed Jun 13 2007 13:27:00

The diamond ring of the future will radiate its unique beauty -- quite literally -- thanks to a minuscule radio-frequency identification (RFID) chip embedded in it.

Fortune: Your dumbest moment at workupdated: Mon Jan 22 2007 18:09:00

Okay, so you probably haven't charged outrageous amounts of phony business expenses to your employer, like former Wal-Mart vice chairman Thomas Coughlin, No. 35 on Business 2.0's 101 Dumbest Moments in Business list. Or hit the "send" button on a mass mailing of racist e-mails, like (No. 59). But everybody makes mistakes, and sometimes they're bad enough - or just embarrassing enough - that slinking away to a different company where nobody knows you can seem like the only real option.

CeBIT: Tech companies focus on securityupdated: Mon Mar 13 2006 03:46:00

Security is never far off the mind of most people, and the companies that make money from fear are here in abundance at the CeBIT technology trade fair.

'Mind talk' device helps paralyzed updated: Wed Sep 28 2005 10:31:00

Japanese scientists have created a device that could enable severely paralyzed people to communicate simply by measuring changes in their cerebral blood flow.

CNNMoney: Roll camerasupdated: Thu Jul 14 2005 17:11:00

Each May new camcorders appear on the shelves of electronics stores everywhere.

CNNMoney: Asia stocks take low roadupdated: Mon Apr 11 2005 06:47:00

Dow Jones Newswires

Search for better phone powerupdated: Tue Sep 21 2004 06:46:00

A mobile phone is no longer just a phone -- it is also a music player, video camera and personal organizer.

CNNMoney: Tech rally boosts Nasdaqupdated: Fri Jun 25 2004 14:04:00

The Nasdaq closed higher on the day and the week Friday thanks to an afternoon tech rally during a quiet session on Wall Street.

CNNMoney: Big screen: Rear projectionupdated: Thu Apr 15 2004 10:44:00

This is the TV that family rooms are built for. The new rear-projection TVs are nothing like their forebears, those old tavern staples that relied on three cathode-ray guns beaming blue, green and red to form images on the screen -- often so skewed that they produced rainbow effects.

Business 2.0: Micro Hard Drives Very big files now fit inside very small packages.updated: Sat Nov 01 2003 00:01:00

More data, at lower cost, in ever smaller devices: Micro hard drives--which cram gigabyte-level storage capacity and rapid data-transfer rates into tiny, matchbook-size casings--are the way to go....

Business 2.0: Fuel-Cell Supercharge!updated: Wed Oct 01 2003 00:01:00

By this time next year, you may be able to buy laptops equipped with methanol cartridges that offer longer-lasting power than traditional batteries. The caveat? When you travel, good luck getting y...

Fortune: Can EMC Restore Its Glory? The hardware juggernaut's answer to its problems: software.updated: Mon Jul 22 2002 00:01:00

In August 2001, two dozen coders, product managers, and marketers at storage kingpin EMC were sitting in a conference room on the company's sprawling campus outside Boston. The gathering was routin...

Fortune: Peter Lewis On Technologyupdated: Mon Jul 08 2002 00:01:00

PLASMA: IT'S A GAS Prices for these wide-screen, superthin TV sets are still inflated, but they're falling rapidly. Should you watch or wait? Here's the skinny on Hitachi's new 42-inch dazzler.

Money Magazine: Bull Or No Bull, Today's Market Offers Plenty Of Bargainsupdated: Sat Aug 01 1998 00:01:00

What kind of bull market is this? Hundreds of great stocks are dirt cheap, even though the Dow and the S&P 500-stock index are within 3% of all-time highs. On June 15, a day when the Dow took one o...

Money Magazine: THE DAY THE DOW HIT 8000 JULY 16, 1997: THE MARKET MADE HISTORY, COPS CHASED VERSACE'S KILLER, AND MILLIONS OF updated: Wed Oct 01 1997 00:01:00

Hours before Grand Central Terminal starts humming, the economic engine that drives the stock market--and ultimately, the entire country--is already cranking up. The fuel is the energy and hope of ...

Fortune: YOUR NEXT PC MAY BE JAPANESE TOUGHENED BY A PRICE WAR BACK HOME, FIVE JAPANESE ELECTRONICS GIANTS ARE COMING AFTER AMERICAN USERupdated: Mon Oct 28 1996 00:01:00

Get ready for fireworks. Five huge Japanese electronics companies--Fujitsu, Hitachi, NEC, Sony, and Toshiba--have decided to make the $47-billion-a-year U.S. personal computer business the target o...

Fortune: HITACHI GLIDING NOWHERE? THE JAPANESE BEHEMOTH IS LOOKING TO PCS TO BOOST ITS MEAGER PROFITS. GOOD LUCK, SAY updated: Mon Aug 05 1996 00:01:00

Hitachi is a name that floats just out of focus, at the far edge of your awareness. The company sells its wares nearly everywhere, and its product range is breathtaking, from frivolous kitchen item...

Fortune: MUTUAL FUNDS/WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW THE BIG THREAT TO INTERNATIONAL STOCK FUNDSupdated: Mon May 27 1996 00:01:00

One thing stands between foreign market returns and your foreign stock fund's growth: the strengthening dollar. In the past six months the dollar has risen 10% against the deutsche mark and 25% aga...

Fortune: THE FORTUNE GLOBAL 500 RANKED WITHIN INDUSTRIES updated: Mon Aug 07 1995 00:01:00

The world may be getting smaller as we all travel more, but there's little evidence that the folks flying us are richer for it. The nine airlines on the 500 lost an aggregate $1 billion; the Air Fr...

Fortune: JAPAN LOGS ON TO THE INTERNETupdated: Mon Sep 05 1994 00:01:00

The Japanese are putting aside their traditional resistance to computer networking and climbing onboard the Internet. In the past year, usage has doubled; two million Japanese E-mail addresses and ...

Fortune: THE 500 RANKED WITHIN INDUSTRIES updated: Mon Jul 25 1994 00:01:00

U.S. companies led their global rivals in 13 out of 25 industries -- one fewer than last year. Who stumbled? General Electric, traditionally lord of electronics and electrical equipment, fell to th...

Fortune: PORTFOLIO TALK HITTING BULL'S-EYES IN JAPANupdated: Mon Aug 09 1993 00:01:00

Helped by a $90 billion government stimulus package, the performance of Japan's stock market has been spectacular in the past 12 months, nailing down a 40% return for investors. But does the politi...

Fortune: FORTUNE'S GLOBAL 500 THE WORLD'S LARGEST INDUSTRIAL CORPORATIONS ANOTHER YEAR OF PAINupdated: Mon Jul 26 1993 00:01:00

If you thought last year was bad for global business -- and it was -- brace yourself for these numbers from FORTUNE's unique list of the world's 500 largest industrial corporations. In all, one-qua...

Fortune: JAPAN'S TURN TO CRY 'COPYCAT' . . .updated: Mon May 17 1993 00:01:00

Once renowned as the masters of imitation, Japanese manufacturers of consumer electronics are learning how it feels to fight a war against copycats. A 1992 survey by the Ministry of International T...

Fortune: JAPAN HARD TIMES FOR HIGH TECH The whole Japanese electronics industry ran into trouble last year. But it's not just cyclical. Mupdated: Mon Mar 22 1993 00:01:00

IN JAPAN, 1992 was the Year of the Monkey, and it turned out to be the year Japanese electronics makers found the monkey on their backs. Their production, which grew by almost 10% a year compounded...

Money Magazine: SMART MOVES updated: Sat Aug 01 1992 00:01:00

-- Many foreign stocks seem like better buys than U.S. issues these days. If you can wait three to five years for the battered Japanese market to recover, consider Hitachi (New York Stock Exchange,...

Money Magazine: NOW'S THE TIME TO INVEST 15% OF YOUR MONEY OVERSEASupdated: Sat Aug 01 1992 00:01:00

Voodoo economics is alive and well at the Federal Reserve. The problem is, the potion ain't potent. The magic the Fed is using to bring the economy back to life consists of interest-rate cuts. Coun...

Fortune: CUSTOMERS DRIVE COMPANY TIE-UPSupdated: Mon Jan 27 1992 00:01:00

IBM's announcement that Hitachi will sell Big Blue's notebook computers in Japan adds yet another twist to the dizzying array of alliances, agreements, and partnerships entwining the computer indus...

Fortune: JAPAN'S INFLUENCE ON AMERICAN LIFE There's more to it than team building and sushi. The Japanese are changing Americans' self-imupdated: Mon Jun 17 1991 00:01:00

REMEMBER when America was the greatest country in the whole wide world? After World War II a euphoric sense of supremacy -- No. 1, by God, and proud of it! -- seemed the birthright of U.S. citizens...

Fortune: EAST RATES WESTupdated: Mon Jan 28 1991 00:01:00

When pollsters quizzed 600 Soviets, Czechs, Poles, Yugoslavs, East Germans, and Hungarians to test their familiarity with Western products, only four -- three Poles and a Russian -- professed unfam...

Fortune: SEE WHO'S HELPING OUR SCHOOLSupdated: Mon Jan 14 1991 00:01:00

AT&T and many other U.S. companies won't be handing out any more to educational projects, charities, and the like in 1991 than in 1990, when corporate giving reached some $5.9 billion. Times are to...

Fortune: U.S. IDEA, JAPANESE PRODUCT (CONT'D)updated: Mon May 21 1990 00:01:00

Once again, Japanese companies are taking a technology invented in the U.S. and using it to create groundbreaking consumer products. The new technology is called fuzzy logic because it enables mach...

Fortune: TODAY'S LEADERS LOOK TO TOMORROW SCIENCE GEORGE HEILMEIER I HAVE TO LEARN TO EAT RAW FISHupdated: Mon Mar 26 1990 00:01:00

Just as we're developing global markets, we're going to have to develop a global R&D presence in the 1990s. Not only do you want to tap local scientific communities in the Far East and in Europe, y...

Fortune: TODAY'S LEADERS LOOK TO TOMORROW ECONOMICS ALFRED D. CHANDLER JR. THE ENTREPRENEUR HAS TO GET BIGupdated: Mon Mar 26 1990 00:01:00

In the industries that have changed the world, from fertilizers to machinery to computers, the firms that make the big capital investment early are the ones that survive. The cost advantages are tr...

Fortune: FORTUNE Magazine contents page SEPTEMBER 25, 1989 VOL. 120, NO. 7 updated: Mon Sep 25 1989 00:01:00

COMPETITION/Cover Story 42 WHERE JAPAN WILL STRIKE NEXT Loaded with cash and eager to head off fire-breathing challenges from Korea and other growing Asian dragons, the folks who brought you the Wa...

Fortune: IS U.S. BUSINESS GIVING AWAY ITS TECHNOLOGY -- AGAIN?updated: Mon Sep 11 1989 00:01:00

First it was the VCR, then the fax machine, and next the dynamic memory chip. In each case foreign companies capitalized on a technology created in the U.S. and ran off with a huge market. Will it ...

Fortune: COMPUTER NEWS AND BLUESupdated: Mon Aug 28 1989 00:01:00

IBM could jeopardize millions in revenue because of a hardware snag. The company recently canceled a new disk drive for its mainframe computers because of last-minute problems. That will widen the ...

Fortune: THE WORLD'S BIGGEST INDUSTRIAL CORPORATIONS THE NEW SHAPE OF GLOBAL BUSINESSupdated: Mon Jul 31 1989 00:01:00

A list of the world's 100 biggest industrial companies is a picture of the global economy -- and as this year's compilation shows, the picture is changing. The titans of 20th-century industry, moto...

Fortune: JAPAN DISCOVERS WOMAN POWER Faced with a labor shortage, Japanese companies are looking to make managers of young college graduaupdated: Mon Jun 19 1989 00:01:00

REMEMBER that young woman who slipped into the room, deposited cups of green tea in front of everyone, then quietly backed out? Remember her, because on your next trip to Japan she may be sitting o...

Fortune: SHAKEOUT IN SUPERCOMPUTERSupdated: Mon May 22 1989 00:01:00

Having a big rival drop out of your business sounds like nothing but good news. But Cray Research may have lost its worldwide competitive edge now that Control Data, the only other U.S. supercomput...

Fortune: YOUR RIVALS CAN BE YOUR ALLIES U.S. companies are fast learning how to team up with foreign competitors to crack markets and acqupdated: Mon Mar 27 1989 00:01:00

AMERICAN COMPANIES once rode into alien country as fearlessly as the Lone Ranger without Tonto. Nowadays they enlist a partner who knows his way around the local gullies. In their quest for new mar...

Fortune: HOW JAPAN WILL SPEND ITS CASH Talk about a shopping spree: Together the Japanese industrial giants have accumulated $60 billion updated: Mon Nov 21 1988 00:01:00

PENCIL LOVERS, don't take a job at Toyota Motor Corp. The world's richest company -- with $13.7 billion in spare cash -- limits employees to one at a time. A sign over the towel dispenser in the re...

Fortune: ELECTRONICS SURGE IN JAPANupdated: Mon Jul 04 1988 00:01:00

In Japan, an electronics epicenter, offices are surprisingly unautomated. Most executives do not type, and handwritten spreadsheets are common. Says David Norman, an analyst for Dataquest, a market...

Fortune: TOKYO'S STOCK MARKET: STRONGER THAN YOU THINK Those harrowing P/Es look safer when you adjust for accounting and cultural differupdated: Mon Apr 11 1988 00:01:00

WESTERN INVESTORS have been worrying about the Tokyo stock market, which many consider, to adapt a phrase, a riddle wrapped in an enigma, with a dash of inscrutability thrown in. Share prices that ...

Money Magazine: A Couch Potato's Guide to Gear What you need to turn your TV room into a mini-moviehouseupdated: Fri Apr 01 1988 00:01:00

Close your eyes and remember your last picture show: the screen stretches mesmerizingly wide, the sound effects are shiveringly real, and you sit back and sink your toes . . . right into the gummy ...

Money Magazine: Digital Dilemmas In which MONEY offers some opinionated guidance on the purchase of stereo TVs, VCRs and other things that go beupdated: Tue Dec 01 1987 00:01:00

If flakes of silicon are swirling about your head like snow during the final frenzy of holiday shopping, welcome to the blundering herd. Digital dilemmas! Electronic enigmas! Big-ticket blues! The ...

Fortune: A half-baked idea?updated: Mon Oct 26 1987 00:01:00

Who would have dreamed that in Japan, where rice has been the staple for 2,000 years, the hottest new kitchen product would be an electronic machine to make bread? Even Matsushita Electric Industri...

Fortune: BIOLOGY'S AWESOME CHALLENGE: BREAKING THE CODE OF LIFE updated: Mon Oct 26 1987 00:01:00

Jerome Lejeune, a French geneticist, discovered in 1959 that people born with Down's syndrome have one more chromosome than the usual human complement of 46. He liked to compare the collection of h...

Fortune: THE BIGGEST BOSSES 19. KATSUSHIGE MITA HITACHI THE MOUNTAIN PRIESTupdated: Mon Aug 03 1987 00:01:00

Taciturn and ascetic, Katsushige Mita has always seen the big picture. But the idealistic engineering graduate from the University of Tokyo came down with a thump when he took his first job and fou...

Fortune: COVER THE YEAR'S 50 MOST FASCINATING BUSINESS PEOPLE JACK WELCH THE MAN WHO BROUGHT GE TO LIFEupdated: Mon Jan 05 1987 00:01:00

LAST FALL an influential New York security analyst received three unexpected visitors from Hitachi, the $21-billion-a-year maker of consumer electronics products and computers. Like most Japanese g...

Fortune: JAPAN'S COMEBACK PLAN With the yen up 36% in a year against the dollar, Japanese companies are slashing costs, squeezing supplieupdated: Mon Sep 29 1986 00:01:00

AFTER YEARS of generating prosperity through a single-minded emphasis on exports, Japanese companies are discovering that the old strategy isn't working the way it used to. The yen is worth 36% mor...

Fortune: A RESPITE IN THE CHIP PRICE WAR U.S. manufacturers of computer memories feel relieved since the government concluded that the Jaupdated: Mon May 12 1986 00:01:00

AFTER YEARS of complaining about unfair trade practices, U.S. chipmakers finally seem to have their Japanese rivals on the run. The Commerce Department, pursuing three antidumping actions, has prop...

Fortune: THE YEAR'S 50 MOST FASCINATING BUSINESS PEOPLE JACK WELCH THE MAN WHO BROUGHT GE TO LIFEupdated: Sun Jan 05 1986 00:01:00

LAST FALL an influential New York security analyst received three unexpected visitors from Hitachi, the $21-billion-a-year maker of consumer electronics products and computers. Like most Japanese g...

Fortune: BRITISH UNIONS GO JAPANESE Onetime militants are tripping over each other to sign labor contracts with Japanese companies, surreupdated: Mon Dec 09 1985 00:01:00

BRITAIN'S CLASS WAR may not be over, but the Japanese are winning some battles. From the played-out mining valleys of South Wales to the rusting shipyards of Tyneside, onetime militants are scrambl...

Fortune: THE STRUGGLE OVER SPERRY'S FUTURE Once IBM's biggest competitor, Sperry Corp. has sunk to No. 7 in the U.S. computer business. Aupdated: Mon Dec 09 1985 00:01:00

WHOEVER RENTS Sperry Corp.'s midtown Manhattan headquarters when the company moves out next year will inherit a battlefield. Sperry spent three years there at war with itself, as dissenting executi...

Fortune: STOCKS FROM ACROSS THE PACIFIC Investors have been discovering that solid values abound in some of the world's hottest economiesupdated: Mon Aug 19 1985 00:01:00

As millions of American tourists take Europe by storm, a growing number of ! American investors are starting to turn away from European stock markets. Until recently these countries' stocks were ch...

Fortune: NOW, THE JAPANESE CHALLENGE IN MICROPROCESSORS Japan's largest chipmaker is moving fast to break the U.S. hammerlock on computerupdated: Mon Jul 08 1985 00:01:00

WITH UNINTENDED irony, Japan's Science and Technology Agency conferred a prestigious award in May on Tomihiro Matsumura. Matsumura, 55, senior vice president for microprocessors at Nippon Electric ...

Fortune: Bubbles takes a bowupdated: Mon Jul 08 1985 00:01:00

Despite all the doom and gloom in the computer business, one segment seems to be basking in the sun: supercomputer sales are growing at a healthy clip. So naturally companies are trying to horn in ...

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