Archive for the ‘Gear’ 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!)

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

In Exhibition Soccer Matches, Everyone Wins

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

Practice in new climates isn’t the only reason teams are playing in distant locales.

  • More and more, national soccer teams are playing exhibition games (called “friendlies”) in unusual places, often far from home.
  • The practice is basically a money-maker for everyone: the agents that manage a team’s exhibition games try to maximize profit for the teams, the game broadcasters, and sponsors. They manage to make a pretty neat profit for themselves, too.
  • Teams are sent to play friendly matches wherever they’ll get the biggest audience – live or on television. Brazil recently played a friendly in Derby, England that was viewed live by only 13,088 fans but broadcast to 120 different countries.

Facts & Figures

  • In October, Argentina traveled to a friendly match in Japan, Chile traveled to Oman, and Brazil played Iran in Abu Dhabi.
  • Since June 2007, only one of Brazil’s 18 exhibition games has been played in Brazil.
  • As a result of their deal with sports rights agency Kentaro, the Brazilian soccer federation receives approximately $3 million.

Best Quote

“This is the new landscape of international football. Friendly games used to be a chance to try out new players or different formations. Nowadays they’re about making money, which means going wherever you’ll get the biggest audience.” – Tony Cottee, Football Analyst and Former Player for the England National Team

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

DailyCandy Editor Lauren Lumsden On Discovering New And Cool

Monday, October 4th, 2010

It’s not every day you get to interview an editor from your favorite daily mailing list, but we somehow convinced Lauren to chat in front of our camera last week. Check out her interview to learn about the dude-ranch-to-web-editor career track and, of course, Bacon Salt.

>>TILE brings you exclusive interviews from people doing great things in SPEND, GROW, and GIVE. To view more, click on TILEcasts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or someone you’d like to see interviewed? Let us know – just Ask TILE!

The Secret Behind Ikea

Friday, June 4th, 2010

You know you’ve spent hours wandering its hallowed halls, browsing cheaply-made furniture and believing that its functional European designs will somehow make you a better person. But have you ever wondered how a giant warehouse next to the highway can do that to you?

  • Ikea brought on Kerri Molinaro in 1992, and with her arrival came a brand-new approach to customer appeal. Molinaro brought fashion sense and an eye for merchandising to the efficient furniture store, and changed its image completely.
  • Ikea’s unique business model involves scrimping on production costs and sales staff, and splurging on things like consumer research, product design, and advertising.
  • The store’s layout is not a coincidence, either. Products are displayed alongside one another in beautifully decorated mock-rooms; items cleverly displayed on a wall are easy to find in nearby bins, and, of course, the store is a literal maze, trapping customers who cannot navigate beyond the store’s arrow guidance system.

Facts & Figures

  • More than 50% of Ikea visitors buy something before leaving; in women’s clothing stores this number is closer to 8%
  • Each Ikea store employs approximately 400 people. Of these, 30% are in sales and 70% work in the warehouse or in merchandising.
  • During an average visit, Ikea shoppers spend two hours in the store.

Best Quote

“Often people will never come into contact with staff until the cashier. These products are really selling themselves.” – Kerri Molinaro, President, Ikea Canada

Strange Bike And Monorail Fusion May Revolutionize City Travel

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Safe, weatherproof, environmentally friendly, and a good workout, too!

  • Geoffrey Barnett’s ingenious new invention combines a recumbent (lying down) bicycle with monorail technology, creating the “Schweeb.”
  • The invention may provide an alternative means of city travel, and it’s cheap and ecologically-friendly, to boot.
  • Apparently, recumbent cycling is faster than upright cycling, and a monorail would be the safest way to get around crowded cities quickly.

Facts & Figures

  • “Schweeb” is derived from the German word “schweben,” which means “to float” or “suspend.”
  • Barnett worked on the design for six years while he lived in Tokyo, and opened a 200 meter (650 foot) track in Rotorua, New Zealand in 2007.
  • The Schweeb can reach speeds of up to 35 mph.

Best Quote

“To me, as a cyclist, it’s just obvious, you should be able to ride over the top of traffic, so I came up with the idea of a weather-proof capsule that is completely safe.” – Geoffrey Barnett, Inventor

Guns And Coffee Go Together Like Peas And Carrots

Friday, March 12th, 2010

A fast-spreading movement in the pro-gun community has taken the Starbucks coffee contingent by storm.

  • As firearms fanatics and gun-control advocates battle over an issue known as the “open carry” movement (a demonstration by gun owners of carrying their guns in unconcealed holsters in public areas and private businesses where allowed), Starbucks, in full compliance with state open-carry weapons laws, has been caught up in the middle of the raging debate.
  • Starbucks, along with some other establishments, has refused to ban guns, causing uproar in the gun-control community.
  • Some retailers have banned guns from their stores for fear of losing out on potential customers with hoplophobia (fear of firearms).

Facts & Figures

  • The “open carry” movement started gaining momentum in 2004 after pro-gun advocates began researching state laws only to find that many states do not have laws that prohibit carrying unconcealed firearms.
  • In the 43 states where open carry is legal, Starbucks has around 4,970 company-operated stores.
  • Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Home Depot Inc., Best Buy Co. and Barnes and Nobles Inc. also allow unconcealed weapons in the respective states that allow such an activity, and have all become “open carry” friendly sites and milieus for informal “open carry” demonstrations.
  • Companies such as Peet’s Coffee & Tea have disallowed carrying unconcealed weapons in their stores, despite the legality of such an action.

Best Quote

“I think the policy shows complete disregard for the safety and sentiments of their workers. The only thing worse than a yuppie upset with how their frappuccino turned out is a yuppie with a gun who’s unhappy with how their frappuccino turned out.” – Erik Forman, a Starbucks barista, union member, and ostensible hoplophobe and sensationalist from Minneapolis

Computers Are Too Complex, Make Them More Like iPhones!

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Sometimes it seems as though computers are more trouble than they’re worth, but they may become much simpler in the not-too-distant future.

  • Although personal computers have become easier to use since their inception way back when, most people still encounter problems while using their computers and their current operating systems (like Snow Leopard for Mac or Windows Vista).
  • iPhones are the picture of simplicity, and could serve as a model for how computer companies construct operating systems in the future.
  • While it may seem a simple solution to the complexity problem, integrating an operating system similar to the iPhone’s would be difficult for a multitude of reasons, and especially troublesome for the implementation of the multitouch interface (that thing that allows you to move stuff on your iPhone with your finger).

Facts & Figures

  • Back in the day, if you wanted to open up a Microsoft Word document, you would’ve had to type in a cryptic command, like this:

DIR*.EXE
MSWORD.EXE A:\REPORT.DOC

  • Microsoft tries to make all their new versions of their primary operating system (Windows) familiar to customers of earlier versions, which accounts for the continuing complexity of the system.
  • Apple uses the iPhone’s operating system in its new iPad computer.
  • It would be easier for Apple to design a completely new operating system instead of implementing the multitouch interface onto a desktop computer.

Best Quote

“With the iPad and the horde of tablets that will follow it, we can expect computing to become much easier than what we’re accustomed to today.” – Brian Chen, Wired magazine