<![CDATA[Gizmodo: 150]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: 150]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/150 http://gizmodo.com/tag/150 <![CDATA[Justify Your Product: Panasonic 150-inch Plasma]]> Panasonic's 150-inch plasma is crazy huge, but it's also crazy expensive, with price estimates around $1,000 per inch. So can Panasonic justify building the thing?

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<![CDATA[Pharos' Entry Level GPS Units Are Cheap Enough To Be Disposable]]> Pharos, whose GPS units we've actually tested in smartphone form, has just released two entry level models for the price of $199 and $299. The Pharos Drive GPS 250, which is $299, has a SiRFStarIII GPS receiver, touchscreen display, and automatic night view switching when it detects that the sun's gone. The cheaper Drive GPS 150 has the same SiRFStarII GPS receiver, but measures 3.94-inches as opposed to the 4.3-inches of its larger brother. Both run off NAVTEQ maps and both have a 5-7 hour operation time. [Pharos]

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<![CDATA[1GB nano for $150]]> Finally, Apple rolls out the 1GB iPod nano at a gorgeous $150 price point. With the same form factor and interface as the larger-capacity models, it can hold about 240 songs or about 15,000 images.

Apple is also giving us a late Christmas with the announcement that it will reduce pricing of its 512MB and 1GB iPod shuffle to $69 and $99, respectively.

Look for the 1GB nano in white and black, available immediately. And for that price, you'll still get the included earbud headphones, a USB 2.0 cable, case and a CD with iTunes for Mac and Windows computers.

Apple unveils new 1GB iPod nano at $149 [Appleinsider]

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