Wednesday, April 30, 2014

जनता का आदमी


Grocery shoppers of Chicago should start getting used to the notion of bringing their own, reusable bags to the supermarket and other stores; the city’s aldermen passed a resolution earlier today that will ban plastic shopping bags in many stores by Aug. 2015, and almost all stores one year after that.

As in other cities where plastic shopping bags have been banned or heavily regulated, supporters of the Chicago action point to stray bags that fill the city’s gutters and trees, raising both concerns about environmental and aesthetic impact.


“We’re not Neanderthals, we can do better and we should,” explained one alderman to the Chicago Tribune.


The ban would be rolled out in two parts. First, starting in Aug. 2015, retailers with stores larger than 10,000 square feet or chain businesses with at least three outlets operated by the same owner will not be allowed to offer plastic shopping bags to customers. Smaller businesses will have an additional year to ditch the controversial bags.


Since some Chicago neighborhoods are desperately lacking in proper grocery stores, some aldermen raised concerns that a shopping bag ban will harm the city’s efforts to attract supermarkets to these food desserts.


Additionally, stores situated on the city’s edge are worried about losing shoppers to businesses across the city line that will still offer the bags. Some alderman believe that stores could move out of the city rather than face the hassle of only offering paper bags, which are not without their own problems.


A local merchants association had proposed instituting a small per-bag fee as a way of encouraging shoppers to use their own bags, but ultimately the city council went with the ban plan, which has the support of Mayor Rahm Emanuel.


PREVIOUSLY IN PLASTIC BAG BAN-WAGON NEWS:

Is Seattle Plastic Bag Ban Actually Leading To More Shoplifting?

L.A. Bans Plastic Supermarket Shopping Bags

Portland (The One In Oregon) Jumps On The Plastic Bag Ban-Wagon

California Decides Not To Ban Plastic Bags

Walmart Testing Plastic Bag-Less Stores In California

Should Plastic Shopping Bags Be Banned?




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Because no one likes to be told they’ll be arriving somewhere at one time only to find you’re stranded at an airport late at night, staring at the closed Cinnabon and wondering if you’ll ever get home. Late planes are a problem, one that Southwest Airlines says it’s trying hard to fix after lagging behind other carriers in the race to be on-time.

CEO Gary Kelly says the airline is going to add a few minutes between certain flights to try to prevent tardy planes, and will keep an eye on the amount of tight connections it sells, reports the Associated Press.


Despite a No. 1 spot for all-time timeliness since airlines started reporting that information to the government in 1987, Southwest was in 12th place last year behind all its big rivals.


“We’ve got significant schedule changes that are planned for the summer,” Kelly said. “That’s when I want to be monitoring the on-time performance and making sure that we see the improvement that we need. We need to get back to where we were for 2012.”


Part of the problem could be that Southwest jammed more flights into peak hours to get more customers flying, but that’s not working out so well.


“We tried to get a little more aggressive in 2013, and it probably is the cause of our dip in on-time performance,” Kelly said.


But because people want to fly during busy hours due to the plethora of itineraries available, Southwest has to walk a fine line between providing what they want and getting people there on time.


“As long as we’re operating a full airplane,” Kelly said, “I don’t mind spending an extra minute or two turning it.”


Southwest CEO Vows to Fix on-Time Problem [Associated Press]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Now that marijuana is legal in Colorado for recreational use, that doesn’t mean necessarily that everyone is sitting around toking on pipes and joints, despite what your imagination has led you to believe. And because a whole lot of people, including pot tourists, like to eat their reefer, state officials are taking on the task of regulating those edible offerings.

As funny as it might be to imagine someone giggling over a batch of brownies, consumers ingesting too much marijuana is a serious problem for health officials and regulators. And of course, those who could come to harm by doing so.


To tackle the issue of how to curb such a problem, a task force is meeting today to start refining Colorado’s rules on edibles, meaning, edible marijuana products, reports the Associated Press.


“Basically, we are trying to figure out how to come up with a reasonable THC concentration or amount in edibles in proportion to product safety size,” said one pediatrician who has treated kids who have eaten marijuana and gotten sick.


Eating too much pot can have serious consequences, and not just in children — one Denver man reportedly jumped to his death from a hotel balcony after eating six times the recommended dosage of a marijuana-infused cookie.


It’s especially important because many people eschew smoking marijuana for the edible forms, including tourists to the state who can’t smoke in public or at a hotel. And because it’s a new industry, many consumers just don’t know how much to eat.


The state already limits how much THC can be in edibles to 10mg per serving, with a max of 10 servings in a package. But it’s hard to nail down that potency because of the wide varieties of marijuana available.


State lawmakers are also working on legislation that would require edibles themselves to be marked as containing pot, and not just the containers and wrappers they come in. Another bill would reduce limits on how much concentrated marijuana you can have, like the oils used to make cakes and cookies.


“All of us want to make sure people are safe,” said Meg Collins, executive director of the Denver-based Cannabis Business Alliance and a member of the task force. “The industry is stepping up and is looking at the best ways to educate and communicate to its customers safe ways to recreate with marijuana.”


Colorado works on new rules for edible marijuana [Associated Press]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Did you have a high school or college e-mail account administered by your school? Whatever, Grandma: lately, many schools have migrated to using Google Apps for Education, which provides mail and a suite of other Google services to educators and students for free. Free, really? Surely there must be a catch. Say, that Google was indexing students’ messages in order to serve up more relevant ads to them elsewhere on the Internet.

See, one of the selling points of Google Apps for Education is that unlike regular old Gmail, it doesn’t scan the text of your messages and serve up related ads in order to pay for the whole endeavor. For standard Gmail users who don’t use ad-blocking software, these appear right alongside the messages. In theory, Apps for Education users weren’t supposed to see ads like these. Yes, Google would process the content of customers’ e-mails, but only for features like tagging certain messages as “important” or sorting them into the new “social media” and “Promotions” tabs. So they claimed.


The plaintiffs in a current lawsuit against Google claim that the company is using data gleaned from reading Apps for Education users’ mail in order to serve up more relevant ads elsewhere on the Internet, where many sites use Google’s Adsense service for their advertising.


A company spokesman told media outlets this morning that Google will also stop similar ad-scanning practices for businesses and governments that use Gmail for employee e-mail accounts.


Google Stops Scanning Student Gmail Accounts for Ads [Wall Street Journal]

Google Under Fire for Data-Mining Student Email Messages [Education Week]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

Mobile users will finally be able to watch free Hulu shows -- and all the glorious ads they can stomach -- on their phones and tablets.

Mobile users will finally be able to watch free Hulu shows — and all the glorious ads they can stomach — on their phones and tablets.



For years, consumers have been able to watch free TV content on Hulu on their computer screens, but if they wanted to check out most of this freely available content on their phones or tablets, they generally had to ante up for a paid Hulu Plus subscription. Today, in addition to some other new features for Hulu, the service announced it will begin making free content readily available to mobile users.

This is a big step forward for Hulu, which had previously limited non-paying mobile users to clips of shows rather than the library of free content that is available to desktop users.


Hulu is different from competitors like Netflix or Amazon Prime, in that almost all of its content — even much of what’s on Hulu Plus — is broken up by advertising breaks. This allows the company to make a number of shows available for streaming to anyone, but it also means Hulu was missing out on ad revenue from non-paying users who can’t access these shows on their mobile devices.


Android users will be the first to get access to free content when it rolls out this summer, followed by iOS users.


OTHER HULU ANNOUNCEMENTS:

The company said today that it will soon be offering advertisers what it calls an “In-Stream Purchase Unit,” that allows Hulu users to make purchases and place orders directly from within Hulu. The first partner to try this will be Pizza Hut, meaning users can order up a pie while catching up on Hannibal, without having to leave Hulu to do so.


Hulu is also continuing to talk to cable operators about getting the service integrated into set-top boxes. It’s already a fixture on most web-connected streaming devices like Roku, Chromecast and Amazon’s new Fire TV.


[via TheVerge]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


So you think you love your little fluffy wuffy snorgly borgly honeypie Fido, do you? You tuck him in with his special blanket every night, feed him his fancy food and generally fawn over your pet — but how does your city stack up when it comes to spending cash on pets?

Because apparently may is National Pet Month, Amazon.com celebrated by releasing its list of the 20 most pampered pet cities in the United States. Keep in mind that Amazon is in the business of selling pet goods, so this list is far from the definitive word on spoiled pets.


The list is on 2013 sales of pet-related items — from Mr. Whiskers’ favorite toy to Rover’s beloved brush. Does your fish have a ginormous fish palace? That’s included too.


According to Amazon’s list, the most pampered cities for pets on a per capita basis, and in cities with more than 400,000 residents:


1. Miami

2. Seattle

3. Atlanta

4. San Francisco

5. Portland, Ore.

6. Washington, D.C.

7. Las Vegas

8. Austin, Texas

9. Tucson, Ariz.

10. San Diego

11. Sacramento, Calif.

12. Raleigh, N.C.

13. Dnever

14. Colorado Springs, Colo.

15. Baltimore

16. San Jose, Calif.

17. Albuquerque, N.M.

18. Chicago

10. Omaha, Neb.

20. Virginia Beach, Va.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


It’s been a rough few weeks for United Airlines; once again coming in dead last in an annual customer satisfaction survey of major U.S. carriers, and then posting a quarterly loss of nearly half a billion dollars while Delta and American earned huge profits. Now the leadership of the largest chapter of the United pilots union is making no attempt to hide their disapproval of CEO Jeff Smisek.

The Street reports that in an April 25 letter to the 2,300 members of the Air Line Pilots Association chapter representing United’s pilots based in Newark and New York, chapter officers write that “It’s time to find a new CEO who understands how to run an airline, not just make excuses for his failures.”


The three officers explain that they “have absolutely zero confidence in the ability of present management to lead a turnaround.”


The letter takes issue with what are apparently still-lingering growing pains resulting from United’s merger with Continental. That deal was approved in 2010 and the two carriers have been operating as a single entity since 2012.


“[A] merger that should have been completed in three years or less remains incomplete after nearly four years (and) interdepartmental communication and cooperation are nearly nonexistent,” reads the letter, which also cites “terrible employee morale and excessive outsourcing… combined with chronic operational and IT issues” as a reason that United’s highest tier of frequent fliers have left the airline “in droves,” according to union leadership.


“No one else has a greater financial stake in United Airlines than the collective stake of our pilots,” explains the letter. “Our careers should not be jeopardized by the worst senior management in the airline industry.”


This is just the opinion of the leadership of one chapter of the union. The other chapters will have their say when they all meet in Chicago next week.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


The Energizer bunny will soon be part of a broken home. Okay, not really but the little guy’s parent company plans to split in two; separating the bunny from tampons, shaving gel and other personal products a bunny obviously has no need for.


Energizer Holdings announced plans to break its hefty product portfolio into two separate companies by the end of 2015. One company will continue to sell batteries, while the other will focus on personal care products.


Officials with the company say the split is the latest development in a plan to provide a clearer focus for the company in terms of competition and growth.


“Since becoming an independent company in 2000, Energizer has built two successful divisions and each is now well-suited to realize its full potential on a standalone basis,” Ward M. Klein, CEO of the company, says in a news release.


The new Personal Care company won’t be selling some new brand of household products, either.


In fact, the company behind the iconic bunny is the same company behind some of the most well-known personal care products on the market, such as Platex, Schick and Edge shaving gel, Hawaiian Tropic and Banana Boat sun care products and more.


The Household Products company will continue to sell batteries, portable lighting products from the Energizer and Eveready brands.


Before the company can officially split the plan must be approved by regulators.


Energizer Announces Intent To Separate Into Two Publicly Traded Companies [Energizer Holding Company]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

(frankieleon)

(frankieleon)



While some of our nation’s brightest food minds were gathered at a Food Safety Summit in Maryland earlier this month, the very thing they came together to discuss seems to have wreaked havoc on more than 100 people attending. In what can only be a prank from the food gods, it appears food poisoning is one of the suspected culprits, officials say.

The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene said that most of those who fell ill have complained of diarrhea, reports the Associated Press, after hearing back from about 400 of the 1,300 attendees. No one has been hospitalized.


It’s still unclear what happened or how the attendees were exposed to the illness over the course of two days earlier this month, when the Baltimore Convention Center hosted representatives the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and food companies like McDonald’s Corp, Tyson Foods Inc and ConAgra Foods Inc.


The illness might’ve spread from person to person, or could’ve been transmitted through the food served during the conference. The food service company was recently inspected in February with no glaring citations, other than a violation notice for condensation dripping from an ice machine.


“We are working on evaluating possible exposures and doing testing at the Maryland state public health laboratory to attempt to identify an agent,” the health department said in the statement.


Food poisoning fells more than 100 at Maryland food safety summit [Associated Press]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Our price-tracking colleagues down the hall at Consumer Reports keep track of when the best discounts appear on a variety of items. As we get ready to flip over the calendar page to celebrate May, what will you be able to find the best deals on in the coming month?

Athletic clothing and shoes

If you’re in the market for new sneakers, this might be the month to buy them.


Camping and outdoor gear

This makes sense: in much of the country, the weather is finally tolerable to spend time outside, so companies are competing for our tent money.


Carpeting

…there must be a good reason for this price drop, but we’re not sure what it could be.


Cordless phones

If you’re switching to a cordless phone system for your landline, look for one that has a battery backup so the line remains usable when the power is out.


Lawn mowers and tractors


Mattresses

Try mattresses out in person before buying, which means you have to go to a retail store. Keep in mind that the most expensive models are at the front, waiting to draw your attention.


Small electronics

Pocket-sized gadgets and devices that you plug into your TV will most likely be on sale in the coming month.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

walmart Here’s our idea of what a typically Walmart shopping list looks like: bread, butter, milk, eggs, toothpaste, shampoo, and auto insurance. That is not a typo, Walmart has officially entered every facet of our lives with the launch of their new auto insurance comparison service.


The super-store teamed up with AutoInsurance.com to begin a comparison service that aims to help drivers buy and save on their auto insurance policies, the company announced Wednesday.


Because, you know, you’re already making money transfers and trading in video games for cash at Walmart, why not buy auto insurance there, too?


“Providing our customers with access to a broad assortment – from groceries to tires – at low prices and in one location is what we’re known for. We’re bringing the same one-stop shopping mentality to the insurance industry with AutoInsurance.com,” Daniel Eckert, senior vice president of services for Walmart, says in a news release.


The service provides customers with multiple quotes from insurance carriers such as Progressive, Esurance, Safeco, The General and others. So far, the service is available in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Texas, but the company plans to offer it nationwide in the coming months.


The idea for the auto insurance comparison service was born out of the realization by Walmart officials that customers “too often have to settle for auto insurance policies that aren’t the best fit and cost more than they want to spend.”


Walmart first experimented with the service last year in Pennsylvania. Customers who used the service reported their annual insurance savings to be an average of about $1,168.


As the exclusive retailer and marketing partner of AutoInsurance.com, Walmart customers will be able to access the service directly from its website.


The company detailed just how the service works in its announcement:



  • When customers log on to the website, all they have to do is provide their name, address, date of birth and contact information.

  • They can then opt-in to have the site retrieve their current auto insurance policy. This allows AutoInsurance.com to automatically fill in most of the necessary coverage information and provide a direct apples-to-apples comparison.

  • In just minutes, the customer is provided multiple quotes from leading carriers. They can customize their coverage, including deductibles, and see those choices immediately reflected in the quotes.

  • They can choose to either purchase the policy online immediately, speak with a licensed agent at 800-700-7500, or save their information and make the purchase later. There is absolutely no cost or commitment to use the service.

  • Customers will only be contacted in the future by AutoInsurance.com or the carrier of the policy they purchase.



Walmart Works with AutoInsurance.com to bring Customers First-of-its-Kind Comparison Service [Walmart]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

Big mistake? Vivian would've probably liked these meanies according to this study.

Big mistake? Vivian would’ve probably liked these meanies according to this study.



Walking into the rarefied air of a fancy boutique might take your breath away if you’re not used to staring at price tags with more zeroes tacked on than you’ve ever held in your hands, but add in a hoity toity salesperson and and you’ve got shopping magic, says a new study looking at snobby sales staff.

Instead of a ginger avenging angel in the guise of Julia Roberts, triumphing over her former tormentors by waving her high-end purchases in their snobby faces a la Pretty Woman, the study says that when sales people act above the shopper, people can be swayed into buying those tony goods, says a study from the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business.


Published in the upcoming Journal of Consumer Research, the study says such treatment might make shoppers feel like they’re getting the real, fancy deal.


“It appears that snobbiness might actually be a qualification worth considering for luxury brands like Louis Vuitton or Gucci,” says Sauder Marketing Prof. Darren Dahl. “Our research indicates they can end up having a similar effect to an ‘in-group’ in high school that others aspire to join.”


Ah yes, leave it to the cool kids to be mean to someone, just to find that such treatment only further chains the poor outcast to the idea of buying her way into acceptance! Sorry, there’s a 12-year-old in me who is feeling skeptical of this whole thing.


Anyway, participants in the study had imagined or real interactions with sales representatives, some who were rude, some who were perfectly pleasant. They then rated their feelings about the brands they were shown and how much they wanted to own them.


Lo and behold, participants said they wanted to be associated with high-end brands and felt that way more after they’d been treated like the stuff on the bottom of Tiffany’s perfectly white Keds. Shh, quiet, 12-year-old me.


However, the sales person had to really come off as an authentic representative of the brand, or face turning off the customer (which might’ve been the case in Pretty Woman) And sales staff acting snobby didn’t help impressions of mass-market brands.


“Our study shows you’ve got to be the right kind of snob in the right kind of store for the effect to work,” says Dahl.


He suggested that if you’re being treated rudely and don’t like it, you should leave and come back later. Or shop online, where you can only count on strangers to leave rude reviews.


Snobby staff can boost luxury retail sales [University of British Columbia]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


With every word he writes, recently installed FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler shows he has little interest or belief in net neutrality as most consumers understand it. In another flimsy attempt at defending his position on “fast lanes” — i.e., allowing Internet service providers to charge more to content companies seeking priority access to end-users — Wheeler contends that consumers should do what Verizon and other telecoms want because well, it could take a while to do it correctly.

LET’S JUST GET IT OVER WITH

“The idea of net neutrality (or the Open Internet) has been discussed for a decade with no lasting results,” writes Wheeler in a lengthy blog post. “Today Internet Openness is being decided on an ad hoc basis by big companies. Further delay will only exacerbate this problem.”


Once again, Wheeler completely glosses over the fact that the only reason a federal appeals court gutted the previous neutrality rules was because a shortsighted FCC never thought to categorize Internet service providers as vital communications infrastructure. As numerous supporters of a true net neutrality have repeatedly pointed out, reclassifying ISPs would likely mean the FCC could reinstate the old rules (and possibly more stringent ones) and survive a legal challenge.


But Wheeler doesn’t want to take that chance because he’d rather allow clever lawyers for the telecom industry to dictate the direction of net neutrality than use the clever (but less well-paid) lawyers at the FCC to figure out a solution that doesn’t undercut the entire notion of an open Internet.


He once again points to this so-called “blueprint” that the appeals court laid out in its opinion as a way to “create Open Internet rules that would stick,” without regard to whether or not those rules result in an Internet that is open.


IF YOU CAN’T BEAT ‘EM…

Lawyers for the telecom industry do not look at a court’s ruling and say, “Well, there you go… That’s the final word, I guess. Thank garsh I have this fancy laws degree!” Had Verizon been defeated at the appeals court level, it most certainly would have submitted one heck of a petition to the U.S. Supreme Court — an option that Wheeler did not pursue.


You’d think that, given his previous experience CEO of the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association and president of the National Cable Television Association, Wheeler would have some insight at how to beat the telecoms at their own game. But instead he’s fine with letting Verizon win, so long as it results him checking “Do net neutrality thingy” off his to-do list.


“I am concerned that acting in a manner that ignores the Verizon court’s guidance, or opening an entirely new approach, invites delay that could tack on multiple more years before there are Open Internet rules in place,” explains Wheeler, who says his proposal is “an enforceable rule,” which he believes is more important than “continuing the debate over our legal authority that has so far produced nothing of permanence for the Internet.”


Does he not realize that this isn’t giving your kid a dang Ritz cracker to shut him up until you eat dinner at Grandma’s house? These are binding regulations that will be used to set important precedents during a crucial stage in the development of the Internet.


DON’T MAKE ME RECLASSIFY YOU…

Wheeler’s defense does begin to show some cracks, which is a positive sign — and an indicator that concerned consumers should continue to write the FCC to let them know their feelings.


He writes that if his proposal “turns out to be insufficient or if we observe anyone taking advantage of the rule,” he “won’t hesitate” to reclassify ISPs as infrastructure… which only raises the question of why he hesitates to do that now, before the feces hits the fan.


Again, he explains, it’s a matter of being expedient. The FCC can’t use that delight roadmap from the court.


YOU JUST DON’T UNDERSTAND

On the specific issues of fast lanes, Wheeler once more accuses consumers of overreacting and not trusting that a governmental agency run by a former frontman for both the cable and wireless industries has their back.


To show just how awesome his FCC will be at keeping fast lanes from turning standard Internet connections into mud roads in order to squeeze the most money from online content companies, Wheeler outlines the various ways in which the agency will police fast lanes.


Let’s take these on a point-by-point basis…

“Something that harms consumers is not commercially reasonable. For instance, degrading service in order to create a new ‘fast lane’ would be shut down.”


That’s good to hear, but this statement doesn’t differentiate between degrading service and passive-aggressively not improving service. We don’t expect the Verizons and Comcasts of the world to slow down the current level of service; we just expect they will largely maintain the status quo while charging a premium for even mildly improved access.


“Something that harms competition is not commercially reasonable. For instance, degrading overall service so as to force consumers and content companies to a higher priced tier would be shut down.”


Again, this statement fails because it doesn’t take into account that a failure to improve service is a de facto degradation.


“Providing exclusive, prioritized service to an affiliate is not commercially reasonable. For instance, a broadband provider that also owns a sports network should not be able to give a commercial advantage to that network over another competitive sports network wishing to reach viewers over the Internet.”


That sounds nice, Mr. Wheeler, but this doesn’t seem to require the ISP to provide the same level of service or access; merely that it not make that better service exclusive. So if Cable Company X (which is also an ISP) owns an online sports channel that it gives priority access to, Company X need only offer priority access to competing networks; it doesn’t say Company X can’t charge a premium fee for that access.


“Something that curbs the free exercise of speech and civic engagement is not commercially reasonable. For instance, if the creators of new Internet content or services had to seek permission from ISPs or pay special fees to be seen online such action should be shut down.”


This is really just a restatement of one of the few remaining principles of net neutrality — that ISPs can’t block legal content. What it doesn’t deal with is the increased cost for entry into a market because of fast lane fees.


Say there are three streaming video companies competing — two established services with millions of paying subscribers, and one startup that is showing promise but is still leaning heavily on venture capital funding while gaining its audience. If ISPs start charging fast lane fees, the two established businesses can pay while the startup can not. The quality of its service begins to look poor in comparison to the others and it can’t gain subscribers. Additionally the other two companies increase their rates to offset the cost of the fees; they also no longer have to worry about being undercut by a low-cost competitor.


This isn’t blocking legal content or curbing the free exercise of speech, but it is an example of how fast lanes can limit consumer options and result in decreased competition and higher prices.


On this last issue, Wheeler makes more promises that are reactive instead of proactive.


“If we get to a situation where arrival of the ‘next Google’ or the ‘next Amazon’ is being delayed or deterred, we will act as necessary using the full panoply of our authority,” he writes, again ignoring the fact that he can preempt that concern by not allowing fast lanes in the first place and simply reclassifying ISPs.


A TRUE BELIEVER OR A SPINELESS APPEASER?

Perhaps Wheeler is indeed an idealist and truly believes that ISPs will continue to innovate and improve their networks for everyone at their current rate, and that they will only use fast lane access in the most extreme cases — and never in a discriminatory, anti-competitive, anti-consumer manner.


But the fact that he repeatedly makes statements about not hesitating to reclassify ISPs if necessary seems to indicate that he doesn’t really believe these things; it’s just faster and easier for now to pretend he does.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


You might associate GameStop with video game consoles and software for your computer, but the chain is looking ahead. They’re looking toward a future where everyone plays games on the mobile phones in their pockets…and, more importantly, needs somewhere to buy those phones. That means closing around 125 GameStop stores, and adding new shops in other brands that the company owns: Spring Mobile, Simply Mac, and authorized sellers of Cricket Wireless.

What are these chains? Spring Mobile is a mobile products store that sells AT&T phones and plans. GameStop bought the chain in late 2013, and they have a few hundred stores scattered across the country.


Cricket is a mobile carrier that recently tied its fortunes together with AT&T’s no-contract Aio Wireless brand. GameStop doesn’t own this company, but operates stores that sell Cricket phones and service.


Simply Mac, as you might guess from the name, is an authorized reseller of Apple products that runs small stores in markets that lack Apple stores.


Maybe this will be a more promising plan for GameStop: the main problem that we can see from here is that the stores have tied their future very closely to that of AT&T Wireless.


GameStop to close 120-130 stores; open 300-400 tech stores under new banners [Chain Store Age]

GameStop 3.0 pushing company beyond games [Games Industry]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Did you sneer at the mysterious AOL breach that has compromised some customers’ information because you don’t use AOL e-mail anymore? Yeah, about that. Some former AOL users have reported that messages went out under their former IDs. Are spammers forging messages from defunct addresses, or have these AOL accounts gone zombie?

Normally, when we talk about zombie accounts, we mean financial or utility accounts that have been explicitly closed and are reactivated again, creating unexpected disasters for the account’s owner. In this case, though, the zombie accounts aren’t really dead…the users had just abandoned them for so long that they probably assume that the accounts had been cleared out of the system.


CNN spoke to one ex-AOL user who heard from co-workers and former students that her long-dormant account was sending out messages. She found that the messages had been forged, and weren’t being sent from her account, but they were going out to people she had e-mailed in the past, and did bear her return address.


If you still have access to your account, AOL asks that you change the password. Whether you’re a customer or not, report any suspicious messages that claim to originate from AOL to AOL_phish@abuse.aol.com.


Reports on this are spotty, so we’re calling on our readers: if you notice any messages from someone who you know hasn’t used AOL in years, or if your contacts complain of receiving e-mail from your long-abandoned account, please let us know.


If this incident has taught us anything, it’s that it’s a really, really good idea to shut down accounts that you don’t intend to use again, if possible.


AOL hack causes zombie spam [CNN Money]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


First of all, if you’re reading this in Internet Explorer, copy the link, quit the browser and paste it into another one. Because it’s been three days since Microsoft first announced a major security flaw in versions 6 through 10 of the browser and there’s still no patch to fix the problem.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the company has stayed mum since Saturday’s announcement, when it said it would be issuing a patch for PC users running Internet Explorer — unless you’re still using Windows XP, in which case, there will be no saving you — after discovering “limited, targeted attacks” exploiting the flaw.


While Microsoft hasn’t said when the fix will come, it’s to be hoped that it will arrive soon [cue ticking clock]. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security advised Americans to simply switch to a different browser to be safe until the problem is fixed.


“We are currently unaware of a practical solution to this problem,” the Department of Homeland Security’s United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team said in a post yesterday, recommending that users and administrators “consider employing an alternative Web browser until an official update is available.”


Users can also turn off Adobe Flash to avoid the hack, which uses a corrupted Flash file to get into a victim’s computer.


“The attack will not work without Adobe Flash,” security firm FireEye said. “Disabling the Flash plugin within IE will prevent the exploit from functioning.”




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

amazon Wearables are all the rage. But are you too indecisive to actually choose which product best suits your needs, or lack the time to research the hundreds of different options available? Fear no more, technology-hungry consumer, because your knight in shining armor has arrived: Amazon.


Amazon launched a new one-stop store aimed at making the latest, greatest wearable technology easily available for consumers, the company announced Tuesday.


The online Wearable Technology store offers devices from established brands such as Samsung, Jawbone and GoPro, as well as, offerings from emerging manufacturers like Basis and Misfit. Customers can shop by category, compare products and discover soon to be released devices.


Officials with the company say the new store was born out of the popularity of the wearables market and an increase in the number of consumers searching Amazon for the products.


“Wearable technology is an exciting category with rapid innovation,” John Nemeth, director of wireless and mobile electronics at Amazon, said in a statement. “We’re thrilled to bring our customers a store with the largest selection and great prices that helps eliminate the guesswork when deciding which wearable devices best fit their needs — whether that is tracking activity, staying connected through smartwatches or capturing their next adventure with wearable cameras.”


To keep consumers up-to-date on the latest innovations in the wearables department, Amazon’s new site includes a Learning Center complete with product videos and detailed buying guides. Additionally, the Editor’s Corner of the store will feature information about wearable technology industry news, device reviews and other documents.


Amazon.com Puts Wearable Technology at Your Fingertips with Launch of New Store [Amazon.com]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

LAclipperslog Yesterday, a number of high-profile sponsors cut ties with the NBA’s L.A. Clippers pending a decision from the league on how to handle the pretty awful things team owner Donald Sterling is accused of saying. Now that it’s issued a lifetime ban against Sterling’s involvement in the league, the NBA is asking those advertisers to return to the fold.


“Those marketing partners of the Clippers and partners of the entire NBA should judge us on our response to this incident,” said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver following his announcement of Sterling’s ban and the $2.5 million fine for the racist comments recorded by his girlfriend and leaked last Friday to TMZ. “I would hope that they would return to their business relationship with the Clippers.”


More than 15 sponsors — including State Farm, Red Bull, Virgin America, CarMax, Kia, and Samsung — pulled their support from the team in the wake of the Sterling scandal.


Some sponsors have already announced their return to sponsoring the team, which is in the middle of a playoff battle against cross-state rivals the Golden State Warriors.


Kia tells the Chicago Tribune that “We look forward to a positive resolution and continuing our relationships within the NBA community, including our league and team sponsorships and our personal ties to Blake Griffin.”


And State Farm told the Trib it is “continuing the pause of our sponsorship of the Clippers organization as we evaluate this ongoing situation.”


Sterling is still technically the owner of the Clippers, but the plan appears to be that the league’s Board of Governors will compel him to sell his stake in the team, which require the consent of 75% of the other NBA team owners.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


The virtue and environmental impact of buying locally-grown produce is a controversial question, but produce trucked from a nearby farm usually tastes better, at least. It’s also nice when a grocery store points out which items of produce come from farms in your community. The key question is, how do you define “local”?

This question came up yesterday when we posted pictures of cilantro grown in California labeled as “local” at a Kroger store in Ohio. We assumed that this was an error, and an anonymous Kroger employee confirmed that for us. We had to wonder, though: what does Kroger consider “local” enough to put that sign on?


We wrote to Kroger to ask about the signage. “Local product is within 400 miles of the area, although we do get a lot of items much closer,” a Kroger spokesperson answered us. That seems like a pretty distant limit, but it’s comforting to know that California isn’t considered local to Ohio.






PREVIOUSLY:

Cilantro Is Not Local To Ohio When Grown In California




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

For Dodgers fans in L.A. without Time Warner Cable, going to see a game live may the only way to catch a game. (photo: Atwater Village Newbie)

For Dodgers fans in L.A. without Time Warner Cable, going to see a game live may the only way to catch a game. (photo: Atwater Village Newbie)



When Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal questioned Comcast and Time Warner Cable execs about how the merger of these companies would impact regional sports programming, the two cable operators shrugged it off as a silly question. But it’s not, and here’s why.

In their testimony before the Senators, Comcast and TWC said there should be no concern about the merger affecting regional sports channels because Comcast and TWC don’t currently have any overlap with these channels.


But this isn’t about overlap. It’s about using the combined assets of Comcast and TWC to force customers off of the only real remaining competition in the pay-TV market: Satellite service from DirecTV and Dish.


The two biggest players in regional sports coverage are Comcast, through its various Comcast SportsNet offerings, and FOX, which operates a large number of local sports channels. In markets with multiple sports teams, these regional channels often carry the majority of games for everything except the NFL, which is usually available through a local broadcast TV station.


But where FOX’s sports offerings and those of Comcast differ is availability to people across multiple pay-TV platforms. See, FOX, being a content company that wants its shows seen by as many people possible, tries to make deals with as many cable and satellite providers as possible. And across the entire list of local FOX Sports stations, only a handful are not available to both DirecTV and Dish subscribers in their area. In all of its markets, FOX has at least made deals with DirecTV, in addition to the terrestrial cable operators.


That’s not true for Comcast, which balks at offering satellite providers access to some of its most coveted sports offerings out of concern that it will lose its stranglehold on the local pay-TV business.


THE PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT

We’ve written before about the mess here in Philadelphia, where Comcast successfully held a death grip on its local sports network through the “terrestrial loophole,” an antiquated aspect of FCC regulations that said a cable operator didn’t need to share its privately owned stations with others in the area if those stations only went out via terrestrial cables. The FCC closed that loophole several years ago, but CSN Philadelphia is still not available to companies that compete with Comcast in the area.


Sources at some of those competitors tell Consumerist it’s because Comcast is demanding an “extortionate” rate — something along the lines of what a cable company would pay to broadcast a major network nationwide — just to air Phillies, Flyers, and Sixers games to customers in the Philadelphia market.


Making matters even worse for those with satellite service, Comcast recently made a deal with the Phillies that ensures that all but around 10 of the team’s 162 games will be broadcast on Comcast-owned stations that are not available to DirecTV or Dish customers.


If you need more concrete evidence that Comcast would rather tick off satellite companies than score higher ratings, you need look no further than the current NHL playoffs.


NBC is touting that all playoff hockey games will be available on some NBC channel this season, and one of last week’s games between the Flyers and the NY Rangers was slated to appear on CNBC, a station that all DirecTV and Dish subscribers have. But here in Philadelphia, the game was also aired on CSN Philadelphia, which triggered NHL blackout rules, meaning that satellite customers in the area were left staring at a blank screen.


There is absolutely no other reason for Comcast to simulcast this game on the smaller regional sports station other than to make sure it remains blacked out for Dish and DirecTV subscribers in the area.


So rather than make sure that as many people could see the game as possible, generating more revenue and earning much-needed goodwill, Comcast chose to raise a middle finger to Philadelphia-area residents who dared to not subscribe to Comcast.


The same will likely hold true for tonight’s game, which is available nationally on NBC Sports network, but which will presumably be blacked out for DirecTV and Dish users in the area because it’s also being shown on CSN Philly.


HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM

There is a similar issue going on in Houston, where CSN Houston carries the majority of Rockets and Astros games, but which only about 2-in-5 Houstonians have access to.


In spite of sinking ratings because of lack of availability, Comcast has yet to reach a deal with either DirecTV or Dish (or U-Verse and other terrestrial providers in the area), leading Houston Mayor Annise Parker to try to bring all the interested parties together to hopefully come to a resolution.


TIME WARNER CABLE: THE UN-ARTFUL DODGER

Comcast’s merger partner is trying to mimic its bigger pal’s tough-guy monopolistic stance with SportsNet L.A., jointly owned by the Dodgers and TWC.


Because TWC is unwilling to budge on the price tag for access to the Dodgers — who currently have the leverage of doing well so far this season — some 70% of people in L.A. have no way of watching most Dodgers game.


And much like in Houston, it’s come to the point of mayoral intervention, with Mayor Eric Garcetti (not to be confused with fictional Baltimore politician Tommy Carcetti) recently pleading with TWC to stop being jerks and make a dang deal already.


IT ONLY GETS WORSE

A merger between Comcast and Time Warner Cable only gives the combined company more leverage in negotiating with local sports teams — this is especially true with the proposed deal with Charter that would give a merged Comcast/TWC more contiguous coverage in L.A. and much of the East Coast.


In NYC, the Mets games are shown on SNY, which is jointly owned by the team, TWC and Comcast. Combined, the cable companies would own one-third of the station. The station is already unavailable to Dish customers in the city. What’s to stop Comcast — especially when it becomes the dominant cable and broadband provider in NYC — to use that ownership stake to raise the price charged to DirecTV, forcing the satellite company to pass the cost on or drop the station?


In L.A., Comcast’s adding of the few areas of the city currently held by Charter would bring Dodgers games to more people, but would also mean that the company has less reason to share with DirecTV or Dish, since not as many Angelinos would be up in arms about being unable to watch the games.


Comcast has never done anything to show that it has any interest in making sports content available to a wider market. Even its online Olympics coverage was only available to pay-TV subscribers willing to pay for service tiers that included every NBC news and sports channel.


A bigger Comcast with more money behind it will only continue to leverage exclusive regional sports deals in order to keep subscribers from cutting the cord and to convince sports fans to stay away from satellite.




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

You get the idea.

You get the idea.



There are people who like Celine Dion’s music, and then there’s a British man who took his love of “My Heart Will Go On” to such a loud, repetitive extreme that city officials were forced to confiscate his audio equipment to make him stop.

Across the pond on the fabled island of Albion — or England, you get it — neighbors of a 47-year-old man apparently obsessed with the French Canadian singer complained that he was constantly playing that one song, over and over and over again, reports United Press International.


Those grumblings led to the city council finding he’d violated a noise abatement notice times before, and it moved to take away his TV, laptop, speakers and PlayStation 3 — basically depriving him of the ability to blast Dion, or anything else (he also likes “Love Machine” by James Brown and the theme to Toy Story).


He can still play those tunes in his iPhone and MacBook, but he says he feels like the victim of a “witch hunt.” He can apply to have his belongings returned in 28 days.


But he messed with the wrong city council, it seems.


“It only takes one complaint, as in this case, and we will act,” a rep for the city council told the BBC. “People have the right to lead a peaceful existence without it being ruined by loud music. We won’t tolerate this sort of behavior and anyone who blasts out music or creates other noise nuisance should let this be a warning to them.”


My only question is… where does his heart beat noooowwwwwwww?


British authorities ban man from playing Celine Dion’s ‘My Heart Will Go On’ after complaints [UPI]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

tsaprecheckmb Relief is in sight, ye weary travelers setting off to farflung parts of this sphere we call Earth: Screening lines at airports are about to get a lot speedier for travelers flying on international airlines now that the Transportation Security Administration has expanded its PreCheck program.


The first foreign airline to join the PreCheck pack is Air Canada, which joined today, reports the Associated Press. More airlines will be signing on soon, according to the TSA.


Before that can happen, those airlines have to update their computer systems to add the extra information needed for printing boarding pass barcodes and the PreCheck logo. Those carriers have to take on the cost of doing such an update, which might be one reason it’s taken this long to get off the ground. Pun totally intended.


The PreCheck system has been a boon to those included in it, who get to leave on their shoes, belts and jackets and not remove bags of toiletries from their stuff. TSA agents can process twice as many passengers in PreCheck lanes than the normal ones, with the program currently operating at 118 of the 450 commercial airports in the United States.


Quick screening extended to international airlines [Associated Press]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

जनता का आदमी

Bitcoin If virtual currency supporters were playing a game of poker, proponents of Bitcoin would have just raised the stakes on the champions of Dogecoin. What could possibly beat Dogecoin’s beautifully painted, Shiba Inu dog-pictured NASCAR, you ask? How about providing an entire undergrad population with a wallet full of bitcoin?


That’s right, next fall the entire 4,500 person undergrad population at MIT will start the school year with $100 worth of bitcoin in their virtual wallets, The Verge reports.


The MIT Bitcoin Club announced they have raised a half million dollars from alumni and the bitcoin community to fund the social experiment of sorts. The group will work with researchers on campus to study how students use the new currency. Additionally, they plan to provide students with financial information programs about bitcoin.


“Giving students access to cryptocurrencies is analogous to providing them with internet access at the dawn of the internet era,” one of the two students behind the project tells The Verge.


While the group doesn’t know how students will use their new-found fortune, it plans to persuade merchants around campus to begin accepting the virtual currency.


In case you’re not a student at MIT and simply don’t have a clue what bitcoin is, Consumerist created a handy guide to answer just about all of your burning bitcoin-related questions.


Now for the real question: if things go well with this little experiment will MIT start accepting tuition by bitcoin?


MIT club giving every undergrad $100 in bitcoin [The Verge]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी

bagshoppingThere’s a limited number of women who are interested in spending between $200 and $400 for a purse, and that market is becoming more crowded. What’s a company like Coach to do in the face of falling sales and falling profits? Sell more expensive bags targeted at more affluent customers, of course.


According to a recent report in Bloomberg Businessweek, the company faces lots of competition in the shallow end of the designer handbag pool, with companies like Kate Spade and Michael Kors beginning to zip up more of that market. One bright spot for the company has been the higher end of its offerings, totes that cost $1,000 or more.


Wait, though–isn’t that the price territory of the big, famous luxury names like Louis Vuitton? Not anymore. According to one analysis by Barclays, companies that once sold bags in the $600 to $1,200 range are aiming even higher. That leaves an opening for Coach.


The company is saying “meh” to most of the middle class in other ways, too: it will offer fewer items in discount sale channels, including flash sale websites the company’s own brief, glorious sales.


Coach Responds to Falling Sales By Raising Prices [Bloomberg Businessweek]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist

जनता का आदमी


Currently in my phone I have at least six photos of meals I’ve prepared and/or consumed. And yes, three of those have been posted to social media because I, like many other humans who eat food, sometimes find myself so full of admiration for the stuff, I feel the need to share it. But the idea of a veritable photo booth at a restaurant existing solely for food photos (phodos? phoodos?), well, that’s a bit intense.

It’s called #Dinnercam — because everything needs a hashtag whether you want it to have one or not, as without it, the task of navigating our new social reality is rendered impossible — and is the brainchild of a South Africa Internet provider called MWEB, reports Reviewed.com.


The thing itself is about the size of a microwave and is billed as “the world’s first portable photo studio for restaurant meals.” And one can’t help but consider that the “world’s first” might be one too many.


It looks like a mini photo studio, or a tanning bed that doesn’t close. I don’t know about you, but having to cart my food off to another location for a photo shoot seems like a bit too much work. Melted cheese cools fast, y’all.


Oh and of course it’s better than using your phone, which doesn’t involve carrying your meal anywhere, because it optimizes light conditions and better positions your food for maximum droolworthiness or something.


The #dinnercam is only available at one Mexican Restaurant in Cape Town, South Africa so far, and for that I think we can all be a little relieved. For now.



#Dinnercam: A Totally Frivolous Photobooth for Foodies [Reviewed.com]




by prakash chandra via Consumerist