Archive for the ‘Electronics’ Category

What You Should Know Before You Budget

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

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Credit: apium

Sticking to a budget is more or less like sticking to a diet: It sucks, and you’re almost guaranteed to fail.

BUT! There’s another way. With a few simple tricks, you can take control of your spending and avoid feeling guilty all the time. Here’s what Tara Siegel Bernard from the New York Times has to say:

  • Let the robots take control. Set up automatic transfers to your savings and investment accounts. It only takes a few minutes. If your savings is being automatically transferred out of your spending account every month, you don’t have to worry about spending it!
  • Start at the finish line. What are you saving for? Saving is easier when you have a goal in mind (a vacation, a new car, an obscenely expensive pair of shoes). Figure out how much money you need and you’ll know how much money to have automatically transferred each month.
  • Separate the fun money from the serious money. If you have a phone bill or rent to pay, keep that money separate from the money you plan to squander irresponsibly at the mall. Obviously.
  • Brace yourself for big surprises. One of the easiest ways to muck up your budget is to suddenly spend a lot of money you hadn’t planned for. This one’s easy, though. Put a little extra away somewhere each month. You can use that to cover your surprise expenses without feeling like a total budgeting loser.

Best Quote:
“Ultimately, what we want our money to be is an energy source. It should help us get somewhere or do something.”  – Amanda Clayman, Financial Therapist (only in New York!)

Your New Apple Gadget Might Be Selling You Out

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

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credit: Unhindered by Talent

On the night before the night before Christmas, a disgruntled fellow named Jonathan Lalo decided to drag Apple Inc. to court. Why? He says that the UDI (Unique Device Identifier) built in to iPhones and iPads allows apps to collect data on their users without their permission. (He called out some of these apps right in his complaint: Pandora, Paper Toss, the Weather Channel, Dictionary.com.)

Why is that a big deal? Well, appmakers can do pretty much anything they want with the information they collect about you. They can make their products better, customize offerings, or, you know. Sell your most intimate details to the highest bidder.

The suit says: “Some apps are also selling additional information to ad networks, including users’ location, age, gender, income, ethnicity, sexual orientation and political views.”

JLa wants to make his legal challenge into a class action suit – which means that he wants to sue Apple on behalf of everyone who has downloaded an app from the Apple Store in the past two years. If he wins, or if Apple agrees to some kind of settlement, everyone in that “class” (or category of people) would share in the settlement benefit.

Other Countries Outpacing U.S. in Internet Tomfoolery

Monday, December 27th, 2010

Check this out. It’s a crazy interactive site showing you how different countries/ regions around the world compare when it comes to digital adventures.

Which country do you think does the most online shopping?

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Fun facts!

  • Hong Kong is totally beating everyone at Angry Birds
  • South Korea and Vietnam are shopping online when the boss isn’t looking
  • Residents of China and Singapore all have a part-time job, and that job is surfing the Internet
  • Everyone in Brazil and Malaysia has more Facebook friends than you

Surprise! Barnes & Noble Colors Its Nook

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Amazon.com’s Kindle has been dominating the e-book market since the get-go, but the Kindle just got sucker-punched by Barnes & Noble’s all-new Nook Color. (Who’s naming these things?)

Full-color photo spread (including gratuitous moustache shot) in the original article:
Bloomberg, 12/2/10: Color Nook One-Ups Kindle in E-Reader Battle: Rich Jaroslovsky

Throw Angry Birds For Stress Relief

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Congratulations, English! There’s now a thing called “entertainment snacking.”

  • Super-popular Angry Birds is just one of the “casual games” now dominating the digital marketplace. These games are accessible to nearly everyone because they’re rooted in basic physics concepts and extremely easy to understand.
  • A study showed that casual gaming actually reduced stress and improved mood in players, most of whom report that they play while waiting for appointments. One of the characteristics of Angry Birds is that it doesn’t punish players for failing – its feedback mechanism is reward-only.
  • Simple games aren’t new, but they’ve always been popular – just look at Tetris or Bejeweled. Alas, eventually all games run out of levels, so developers will have to keep innovating to feed the time-killing needs of their audience.

Facts & Figures

  • Angry Birds has sold more than 12 million copies since last year
  • The average session of casual gaming lasts less than 15 minutes
  • Famous Angry Birds addicts: David Cameron (the UK Prime Minister), Salman Rushdie, Conan O’Brien

Best Quote

“[I'm] something of a master at Angry Birds.” – Salman Rushdie, Booker Prize-Winning Novelist

Black Friday’s Supertroopers

Friday, November 26th, 2010

It’s Black Friday, the biggest and most aggressive shopping day of the year. Stores slash prices and determined shoppers wait up all night, push each other, bribe each other, and occasionally trample one another to get their hands on the goods.

This year has seen an increase in the number of shoppers from the broke years after 2008, and the L.A. Times was kind enough to interview some of the consumer warriors swarming the local malls.

Best Quotes

  • “It’s cold, cold, cold, frustrating and stressful standing for five hours but you just do it. My mother-in-law put me in this spot.” – Monica Ferreira, 27, hoping for a $600 washer-dryer from Sears
  • “We are in it to win it. Go hard or go home.” – Ilene Agan, 27, veteran Black Friday Shopper at Toys R Us
  • “This is professional shopping for a lot of these customers, and they know exactly what they want. They plan these things, they have their routes and they make a beeline.” – Mike Boylson, Chief Marketing Officer, JCPenney
  • “Maybe I’m sacrificing too much for this TV.” – Vanessa Barrera, 20, Sears

The Hobbit Lives In New Zealand!

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

New Zealand wants the new Hobbit films to be shot within its borders so badly that it’s changing labor laws to make it happen.

  • Just when it seemed the J.R.R. Tolkien film adaptation industry was moving to New Zealand for good, Warner Bros. almost pulled its latest project – a two-part adaptation of The Hobbit – out of the country.
  • After an actors’ union boycott threatened production, Warner Bros. management flew to New Zealand to discuss whether the movie could be made there or not. Thousands of Hobbit fans took to the streets to protest.
  • New Zealand’s government responded swiftly, promising Warner Bros. additional tax breaks on future movies, setting up a joint marketing deal, and changing the country’s labor laws to “clarify the differences between a contract worker and a movie production employee.”

Facts & Figures

  • The Hobbit film project is worth about $500 million to New Zealand.
  • Losing the film could have meant up to a $1.5 billion loss.
  • “The Hobbit,” by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published in 1937.

Best Quote

“Making the two Hobbit movies here will not only safeguard work for thousands of New Zealanders, but it will also follow the success of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy in once again promoting New Zealand on the world stage.” – John Key, Prime Minister of New Zealand

Hotel Owners Not Sure About Online Review Sites

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Well, that’s not entirely true. Hoteliers with happy customers are reaping the benefits of increasingly visible recommendations. But not every hotel has happy customers…

  • The popular hotel review resource TripAdvisor.com is facing lawsuits from hotels claiming the site is bad for their businesses.
  • Anyone can post an anonymous review of a hotel on the site. TripAdvisor argues that this makes for the most honest reviews, but opponents say it creates a protected space for libel and defamation. Sites like TripAdvisor are usually exempt from these accusations because they just publish reviews – they don’t write or edit them.
  • TripAdvisor typically doesn’t remove old or inflammatory reviews, but it does allow hotel owners to post responses to negative reviews. In response to the popularity and influence of these review sites, consulting firms have sprung up promising to monitor and control online customer feedback.

Facts & Figures

  • There are 35 million hotel reviews on TripAdvisor.com.
  • TripAdvisor was sued in 2009 over a review that claimed the owner of a hotel restaurant was seen buying drinks for a prostitute.
  • Revinate, a San Francisco image protection firm, charges hotels hundreds of dollars a month to track online reviews.

Best Quote

“We have pretty happy customers, so something like TripAdvisor works in our favor.” – Niki Leondakis, President and CEO of Klimpton Hotels

Starbucks Fishes For Customers With Free Stuff

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Would you like a free e-book with that grande caramel macchiato?

  • In an effort to boost profits, Starbucks is trying a new promotion with partner Yahoo! to bring free e-books, movies, online news subscriptions, and mp3s to customers using its free wifi.
  • The online freebies will only be accessible through Starbucks wifi networks, meaning customers will have to return to a shop to pick up where they left off with their books and movies. Alternately, they can purchase the product from the provider, which gives Starbucks a portion of the profit.
  • To make the program happen, the company has partnered with The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, USA Today, Apple, Patch, Zagat, HarperCollins, Penguin Group, and SnagFilms.

Facts & Figures

  • Starbucks made its wifi free to everybody this July.
  • Users logged in to Starbucks wifi over 30 million times in September.

Best Quote

“Users across the Internet are moving more into this ‘snackable behavior’ to begin with.” – Burke Culligan, Vice President of Product Management at Yahoo!

Microsoft Fights For Space On The Smartphone Stage

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Microsoft basically threw its old smartphone operating system out and tried again. Worth it? We’ll see…

  • Microsoft has just unveiled seven new smartphones it will be launching in partnership with several cell phone companies (AT&T, T-Mobile, Deutsche Telekom AG) over the next few months. So far, the new technology isn’t compatible with Verizon or Sprint Nextel networks.
  • The handsets are produced by different manufacturers, but they all run on the new Windows Phone 7 mobile operating system. The system has been totally redesigned in an attempt to compete with the more popular iPhone and Android.
  • Windows Phone 7′s interface is inspired in part by the company’s Zune mp3 player, and will feature an optional paid service (U-Verse) that allows users to watch cable shows on the device.

Facts & Figures

  • The seven new devices go on sale beginning November 8th
  • Three of the AT&T-branded phones are priced at about $200 with a 2-year contract
  • In the 2nd quarter of 2010, Microsoft’s piece of the smartphone OS market pie dropped to 5.5%

Best Quote

“The phones are always delightful, and wonderfully mine. This is a different kind of phone.” – Steve Balmer, Microsoft Chief Executive