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<text id=93TT2587>
<title>
Jan. 04, 1993: The Best of 1992:Products
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Jan. 04, 1993 Man of the Year:Bill Clinton
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PRODUCTS, Page 63
THE BEST OF 1992
</hdr>
<body>
<p>1. Motorola's MicroTAC
</p>
<p> For telephone junkies, the best came in small packages:
Motorola introduced the world's lightest cellular phone. The
MicroTAC Ultra Lite (price: $945), the first portable to weigh
in under half a pound, has been ringing up record sales since
it was unveiled in September. As tiny as it is, the MicroTAC is
expected to extend Motorola's big lead over such rivals as
Fujitsu (which just introduced a similar phone with a new
return-call feature). Pocket phones are the fastest-selling
segment of consumer electronics. Total sales of pocket phones
topped 1 million units last year, compared with 87,000 four
years ago.
</p>
<p>2. Apple PowerBook Duo Dock
</p>
<p> Executives at the computer company's Cupertino,
California, headquarters call their new portable BOB W, for the
"best of both worlds" because it doubles as a desktop PC as well
as a laptop, thereby eliminating the need to buy separate
computers for the office and for the road. After the stunning
success of the first PowerBook laptop, introduced in 1991,
analysts wondered how Apple could possibly top that. It has.
</p>
<p>3. Chrysler LH Series
</p>
<p> Critics first joked that the initials stood for Chrysler's
"Last Hope." But the No. 3 automaker may have the last laugh
with these widely praised cars. The series, which includes the
Concorde, Eagle Vision and Dodge Intrepid, features
a racier design, 10% more interior space based on "cab forward"
engineering, and a sticker price that starts at $16,000. The LH
line has already landed Automotive Magazine's Car of the Year
Award.
</p>
<p>4. Diversified Cosmetics
</p>
<p> Mainstream beauty-product companies finally faced up to
minority consumers. Revlon joined Maybelline and Estee Lauder's
Prescriptives with cosmetic lines aimed exclusively at women of
color. Now if they can just work on those flesh-toned Band-Aids!
</p>
<p>5. Clear Products
</p>
<p> 1992 may go down in marketing history as the Year of
Clear. Hoping that consumers equate clear with clean,
Colgate-Palmolive and Procter & Gamble introduced transparent
dishwashing liquid soap. And linking clarity and light, both
Pepsi and Coca-Cola unveiled see-through sodas. The marketing
motive behind Amoco's new colorless gasoline isn't quite so
clear.
</p>
<p>6. Habitrol Nicotine Patch
</p>
<p> It's not exactly a badge of honor. But for smokers who are
unable to kick the habit by sheer willpower, the circular
nicotine patch is a sign of commitment. Worn like a bandage on
the skin, the patch releases nicotine to the bloodstream in
decreasing doses over a three-month period. Prescribed by
doctors, the patch has a success rate of up to 28%. Treatment
costs an average of $3.50 a day. Ciba-Geigy's Habitrol is the
leader with nearly 50% of the $800 million market, followed by
Nicoderm with 31%.
</p>
<p>7. Juiceman II
</p>
<p> In their quest for eternal youth, aging baby boomers have
embraced everything from Retin-A to tofu. This year it's the
Juiceman II, a fruit and vegetable juicemaker that is
pulverizing the competition in sales and hype. Juiceman II
infomercials run regularly on late-night TV and feature
juiced-up pitchman Jay Kordich, whose far-fetched claims include
cures for cancer, high blood pressure and impotency. While it
may not be the fountain of youth, the juicer makes a nutritious
drink.
</p>
<p>8. Step Aerobics
</p>
<p> Climbing stairs in the course of a day is a chore. But
doing it in leotards on a specially made bench step to music
under the banner of "step aerobics" is invigorating,
life-extending exercise. The latest low-impact fad has already
won over 11 million converts, and companies are stepping up to
the opportunity. Bench steps sell for upwards of $49.95; step
videos run about $30; and the price tag on Reebok's special
step-aerobics shoes starts at $65.
</p>
<p>9. The X Factor
</p>
<p> Just plain X, as in Malcolm X, the slain civil rights
leader whose initial has become ubiquitous as both a political
statement and a fashion statement. X's are everywhere: on T-
shirts, baseball caps, coffee mugs, jackets, jeans, lapel
buttons, wristwatches, trading cards and even bags of potato
chips. For vendors, the X is also a dollar sign. Sales of
Malcolm X-related merchandise topped the $100 million mark last
year.
</p>
<p>...AND THE WORST
</p>
<p>Crazy Horse Malt Liquor
</p>
<p> Just when movies like Dances with Wolves have begun to
erase years of negative stereotypes about Native Americans,
along comes Crazy Horse. Congress forced Hornell Brewing to drop
the label once the existing stock is depleted.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>