(Reuters) - Customers look at the iPod and iPad 2 at the Apple retail store in San Francisco, California November 17, 2011. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith (UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY)... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Two potential customers walk past a Chevrolet Volt electric vehicle and a gas-powered Chevrolet Cruze on display at the Suburban Chevrolet dealership in Ann Arbor, Michigan, October 22, 2011. At the Chevrolet dealership here, customers wa... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - A vendor waits for customers at his wine stall at a market in Shanghai November 9, 2011. China's annual inflation rate fell sharply in October to 5.5 percent in a further pullback from July's three-year peak, giving Beijing more r... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - A sheep vendor waits for customers at a market, ahead of the Eid-al-Adha feast, in Khartoum November 3, 2011. Sheep sales have come to a halt as high prices deter many Sudanese to buy sheep on the occasion of the Muslim pilgrimage haj. Tr... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Customers look at Olympus Corp's digital cameras at an electronics store in Tokyo October 28, 2011. Japan's Olympus said on Friday that it is unaware of any probe by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation into payments it made t... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Customers choose pieces of pork at a Wal-Mart Supercenter in Chongqing municipality October 25, 2011. Wal-Mart stores in Chongqing reopened to surging crowds on Tuesday, two weeks after being shut down by local authorities for violating f... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Customers walk past a display of the biography of Steve Jobs, sold at a bookstore in Quezon City, Metro Manila October 24, 2011. REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Customers shop for groceries in a supermarket in London October 18, 2011. Inflation in Britain hit a three-year high in September driven by soaring gas and electricity bills, further eroding living standards and piling more pressure on th... [Full Article]
The maker of the struggling BlackBerry tried to soothe tens of millions of frustrated customers Monday, offering more than $100 worth of free software to each one and giving some a month of technical support as compensation for last week's mass... [Full Article]
(Reuters) - Canada's Research In Motion Ltd said it will offer free premium apps worth more than $100, in a bid to appease its customers following BlackBerry service disruption last week. (Source: Reuters)... [Full Article]