Smartphones Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Smartphones stocks.

Smartphones Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 GME Walmart CFO, Fmr Home Depot CEO, & more: C-Suite Insights
May 17 GME GameStop's insane week ends with ~27% stock gain: A timeline of notable events
May 17 GME Goldman Sees Fear of Underperforming as Retail Crowd Returns
May 17 GME Stocks Mixed As Dow Closes Above 40,0000; GameStop Dives As Nvidia Faces Earnings Test
May 17 GME Meme stock frenzy begins to fizzle
May 17 GME Do meme stocks like GameStop ruin the investing experience for newbies?
May 17 GME Meme stocks return: Yahoo Finance Reports
May 17 GME Hedge funds squeezed from short bets amid surging meme stocks, Goldman Sachs says
May 17 GME Decoding The FFIE Surge: Inside Faraday Future's Nasdaq Rally
May 17 GME Market drivers, GameStop, China's property push: Catalysts
May 17 GME Elon Musk to expand Tesla gigafactory rocked by Left-wing protests
May 17 GME These stocks ripped even higher than GameStop in the meme rally
May 17 GME Heard on the Street: GameStop’s Game Woes Grow
May 17 GME Microsoft's Game Pass is bad news for GameStop investors
May 17 GME GameStop stock is crashing after the company reported weak sales and cashed in on the meme stock revival by selling 45 million shares
May 17 GME Dow Jones Holds Strong Near 40,000; GameStop Slammed On Share Offering, But Reddit Jumps On OpenAI Pact
May 17 GME Top Midday Stories: GameStop Shares Plunge on Q1 Sales Drop, Stock-Sale Plan; Big Hess Shareholder to Abstain From Chevron Takeover Vote; Robinhood Gets Double Upgrade from BofA Securities
May 17 GME GameStop Watchers Urge Ryan Cohen to Capitalize on Meme Moment
May 17 GME Spot Silver Tops $30 an Ounce to Hit Highest Since 2013
May 17 GME GameStop Stock Drops on Plan to Sell More Shares, Downbeat Sales Forecast
Smartphones

Smartphones (contraction of smart and telephone) are a class of mobile phones and of multi-purpose mobile computing devices. They are distinguished from feature phones by their stronger hardware capabilities and extensive mobile operating systems, which facilitate wider software, internet (including web browsing over mobile broadband), and multimedia functionality (including music, video, cameras, and gaming), alongside core phone functions such as voice calls and text messaging. Smartphones typically include various sensors that can be leveraged by their software, such as a magnetometer, proximity sensors, barometer, gyroscope and accelerometer, and support wireless communications protocols such as Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and satellite navigation.
Early smartphones were marketed primarily towards the enterprise market, attempting to bridge the functionality of standalone personal digital assistant (PDA) devices with support for cellular telephony, but were limited by their battery life, bulky form factors, and the immaturity of wireless data services. In the 2000s, BlackBerry, Nokia's Symbian platform, and Windows Phone began to gain market traction, with models often featuring QWERTY keyboards or resistive touchscreen input, and emphasizing access to push email and wireless internet. Since the unveiling of the iPhone in 2007, the majority of smartphones have featured thin, slate-like form factors, with large, capacitive screens with support for multi-touch gestures rather than physical keyboards, and offer the ability for users to download or purchase additional applications from a centralized store, and use cloud storage and synchronization, virtual assistants, as well as mobile payment services.
Improved hardware and faster wireless communication (due to standards such as LTE) have bolstered the growth of the smartphone industry. In the third quarter of 2012, one billion smartphones were in use worldwide. Global smartphone sales surpassed the sales figures for feature phones in early 2013.

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