Teens and college-aged kids are the biggest purchasers of mobile content, yet they lack a way to protect their investments.

Not all phones have high resolution images or video capability so [Magnolia's] chipset isn't going to be used on the lower-end phones that don't have the ability to generate a lot of data.

No one likes to carry a brick around, and this is the smallest, thinnest, lightest device that has all those combined features.

When you look at IBM over the last few years, a high-end ThinkPad used to be at $7,500. Now, the entire high-end side of the market has fallen to about $5,000. But users still want full functionality, not a brain-dead system.

Mobile computing is moving from the fringe to the mainstream. Portable computers are becoming the primary PC.

A significant portion of the more than 25 million mobile professionals have a need for universal access.

With 10MB of flash, users will have the ability to store and update locally referenced information, and that will make the cell phone useful right out of the box.