Sentences with phrase «release competing products»

Still, with big data companies like Hortonworks, MapR, and Cloudera that also specialize in Hadoop now steadily rolling out new features to lure customers, it seems likely that these bigger companies will one day release competing products.
In the world of smart speakers, it's impossible for either of the big players, Amazon or Google, to do literally anything without the other releasing a competing product.

Not exact matches

CAR - T treatments, including competing products from Novartis rivals Kite Pharma and Juno Therapeutics, come with the risk of potentially deadly side effects such as cytokine - release syndrome (CRS), in which a glut of T - cell - assisting cytokines can cause high fever, low blood pressure, and problems with lung oxygenation.
Likely this is the reason a small self - funded startup can release a technology that not only competes with a product that had a multi-billion dollar budget but can exceed it in so many interesting ways.
Reynolds also hopes to expand in the direction of alternatives like e-vapor products, where its Vuse offerings have competed well against the products its rivals have released.
They are the waste products they release, and the small molecules they use to compete with other microbes and interact with their environments.
The supplement market has seen a tremendous increase in fat burner supplement demand and an increasing number of companies have started competing and releasing new products.
THE DVD by Bill Chambers Genius Products presents The Weinstein Company's first theatrical (and now home video) release Derailed on DVD in competing R - rated fullscreen and unrated widescreen and fullscreen editions.
MAT Holdings Inc. has released a new Bendix Brakes brand Stop by Bendix brochure, detailing recent enhancements to the product line and its advantages over competing products.
It is not at all unreasonable to expect it to work as advertised, especially when competing companies like Amazon and Apple consistently release very solid products.
Piracy is also a factor, and to compete, most manga publishers have introduced digital products and are trying to catch up with Japanese releases.
An iPad with a smaller screen size has been rumored for months, and the company almost certainly wants to announce the product before the holiday buying season to compete with cheaper tablets like the Kindle Fire and Nexus 7 — and of course put the hurt on Microsoft's big Surface release.
While previously dismissed by analysts as a relatively stolid niche market, the popularity of e-readers during the 2009 holiday season - combined with the high - profile release of the Apple iPad, which features a baked - in e-reader-has led to something of an arms race between competing products: as soon as one device undergoes a software or hardware update, it seems, the others feel duty - bound to introduce a new feature of their own.
Amazon has also, of course, released a tablet called the Kindle Fire, which has an LCD screen (not e-ink) and competes with products like the Apple iPad.
Yet the product sold over one million units worldwide and more impact is expected once Samsung launches the 10 - inch form factor, with the new Android Honeycomb release and video capabilities next month, to compete more closely with the Apple iPad.
Ever since Apple's fabled iPad launched and revealed the world - shaking truth that it has no Flash support (which doesn't seem to have hampered pre-orders in any way), support for Flash playback has been the main element in the marketing strategies of companies that released, or will release, competing products.
Making it difficult to game with your friends due to controllers not being released separately just yet, or making you spend more money for a simple feature than competing consoles have standard is just frustrating, and may make people look away from your product on the shelf in search of something more user - friendly.
To make matters worse, the team was pressured to release a product by Christmas of «96 to compete with the other two huge upcoming console mascot platformers: Crash Bandicoot and Super Mario 64.
Factors that could cause Blizzard Entertainment's actual future results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward - looking statements set forth in this release include, but are not limited to, sales of Blizzard Entertainment's titles, shifts in consumer spending trends, the seasonal and cyclical nature of the interactive game market, Blizzard Entertainment's ability to predict consumer preferences among competing hardware platforms (including next - generation hardware), declines in software pricing, product returns and price protection, product delays, retail acceptance of Blizzard Entertainment's products, adoption rate and availability of new hardware and related software, industry competition, rapid changes in technology and industry standards, protection of proprietary rights, litigation against Blizzard Entertainment, maintenance of relationships with key personnel, customers, vendors and third - party developers, domestic and international economic, financial and political conditions and policies, foreign exchange rates, integration of recent acquisitions and the identification of suitable future acquisition opportunities, Activision Blizzard's success in integrating the operations of Activision Publishing and Vivendi Games in a timely manner, or at all, and the combined company's ability to realize the anticipated benefits and synergies of the transaction to the extent, or in the timeframe, anticipated.
Then, in the flash of an eye, a slew of endless press releases from Thomson Legal & Regulatory and LexisNexis praising themselves for the fact they are themselves; combined with their endless desire to control and purchase every and any new company (mainly tech based these days) that may actually have products that could compete with them sometime in the future or at the very least provide some modicum of balance in the market just quashes any hopes I had for the year.
Startup firm «designed by m» has released a series of iOS device screen protectors called mPact Glass, an anti-scratch tempered glass shield that supposedly boasts higher light transmission than competing products.
Given the original Google Home's speakers are one of the device's most heavily criticized features, it makes sense for Google to release a higher - end version of its smart home assistant in an effort to compete with Amazon's new line of Echo products.
Unfortunately, the company missed their initial December 2017 release target and delayed the launch until sometime in 2018, a move that may have allowed the competing Amazon Echo and Google Home product lines to get a leg up on the competition.
After it took nearly three years to reveal a speaker to compete against Amazon's Echo and Google Home, it said last week it will delay the release of its new product, called the HomePod, to next year.
The OnePlus 2 is advertised as the 2016 flagship killer so is intended to compete with products releasing later this year and into 2016.
Timing for the speaker's release is up in the air — see the earlier issues with getting Bixby voice controls to work in the U.S. — but that the product, code - named Vega, would compete against rival smart speakers that let you control other smart devices in the home.
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