LEAD STORY
Forecast 2003 TIME Europe Editor ERIC POOLEY begins the assessment

Geo Politics War, Terror, China and the World

Business & Finance Can we learn to love CEOs again?

Technology The machine can be our friend

Culture & Society Modern life is rubbish: let's escape

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The complete list of stories from the Dec. 16 issue of TIME magazine

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HOT HIPTOP: Danger's multifunctional mobile device is now on sale in the U.S.

Mobiles Take Charge
Alternatives to the traditional battery and more cool designs keep mobile phones a hot item

Posted Sunday, Dec. 8, 2002; 2.02 p.m. GMT
It's one of the great ironies of the wireless era: in order to get free of wires, you need to juice up with wires. (Where is my power adapter?) An innovation from one of this year's Tech Pioneers should make it easier to provide uninterrupted power to cell phones and personal digital assistants.

Robert K. Lifton, the 74-year-old American Chairman and ceo of New York-based Medis Technologies, is using military technology and a team of Russian-Israeli scientists to develop a mobile power unit that uses micro fuel cells, powered by ethyl alcohol, to recharge conventional mobile batteries. Medis' Power Pack allows a user to operate her phone while simultaneously recharging a depleted battery. Each fuel cartridge has enough juice to charge a battery twice or handle six to nine hours of talk time. After that, the user discards the spent cartridge and powers up with a new one. Lifton says he expects the Power Pack to cost no more than $15 to $20, with each refill costing $1.

Plans are to get the Power Packs in stores no later than 2004. When the Power Pack arrives, there'll be more cool mobiles around. One is designed by Danger, a Palo Alto company co-founded by Tech Pioneer Andy Rubin, 39. Danger's oval-shaped mobile device, called the hiptop, combines a camera, a gsm phone and a Web browser. Already on sale for $199 in the U.S., as the T-Mobile Sidekick, it should launch in Europe in the first quarter of 2003. Also coming is the use of mobile phones as digital wallets. If Tech Pioneer Raomal Perera, the 40-year-old ceo of Ireland-based Network365, has his way, we'll soon be using his secure technology to buy everything from tickets to chocolates via our cell phones.

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S O C I E T Y
Islam In Europe An inside look at how Europe's Muslims adapt to secular society — and vice-versa

T H E A T E R
Boney's Part A stage extravaganza, a TV mini-series and a clutch of films put Napoleon in the spotlight again
E U R O P E
Outta Here A faltering economy and Schröder's policies have companies fleeing Germany

P O L I T I C S
Wages Of Spin Cherie Blair didn't know she was doing business with a con man, but it's Tony and New Labour who may pay the price


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FROM THE DEC. 16, 2002 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, DEC. 8, 2002

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