Category: News

  • A Guy who didn’t flush the toilet ended up with do do in his car.

    This was this morning.

    I was waiting to use the loo at work because someone was in there. He was obviously a well-to-do type, a real bastard and had no trouble telling me it wasn’t his problem when he couldnt be arsed flushing the toilet and i confronted him about flushing it. There is a button on top of the toilet to flush he easily could have pushed.

    Needless to say, when he was back at work at the other end of the complex i scooped up the shit with a large maccas cup and flung it in the backseat of his car which had the windows down, being a hot day. It smelt reeeaally bad. Im pretty sure he will have learnt to wind his windows up from now on (rather than to flush the damn toilet). I guess i could have told him the consequence of not picking it up, but i was feeling a little bit of a bitch myself at the time.

    >>>>Actually i shouldve named this "the sweet revenge thread" 😛 so anyone else got some stories?

  • Something you never know

    Do you know Coca-Cola was originally green? And which country consumes the most Coca-Cola per capita? Which city has the most Rolls Royce’s per capita? Have a look
  • My girl

    Wearing my bright yellow golf shirt, I’ll go to meet my girl. Have a look
  • Aleratec HDD Copy Cruiser Mini is a standalone disk cloner and an external docking station

    The Aleratec HDD Copy Cruiser Mini is a portable standalone hard disk drive copier for 2.5...

    Aleratec has released its new portable hard disk drive duplicator, the HDD Copy Cruiser Mini. Designed for the budget-conscious consumer, the Copy Cruiser Mini offers 1-to-1 copying of 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch SATA I and II hard disk drives. Aleratec says the device is aimed at consumers who want copy their HDDs for backup or when they move to a new computer, but who don’t need the bulk and high price of an industrial model. The Copy Cruiser Mini can also be used for external storage or data backup by connecting it to a computer using its USB port…

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  • RE: “New grads face health care worries,” Jan. 11, 2010

    Dear Editor:

    In response to Monday’s article, “New Grads Face Health Care Worries,” the Stanford Alumni Association hopes that recent graduates understand that we offer short-term major medical coverage, administered by an outside insurance provider, to recent graduates and alumni. Though it is a temporary health insurance plan that does not cover preexisting conditions, it still has benefits for recent graduates and alumni. Participants have the ability to choose any doctor or hospital rather than confine themselves to a specific network in order to receive covered care. The plan provides up to 180 days of coverage, and participants can re-apply for coverage after 180 days. Recent graduates and alumni who have purchased SAA’s short-term medical coverage have given positive feedback regarding the plan’s customer service and Stanford’s dedicated customer service representative. More information about SAA’s short-term medical coverage offering for recent graduates and alumni can be found at: www.gradmed.com/Stanford or by calling the plan administrator at 1-800-922-1245.

    Eric Cox ‘90
    Director of Membership and Partnerships
    Stanford Alumni Association

  • Will Microsoft’s Bing Become The iPhone’s New Default Search Engine?


    Apple takes on Google: Nexus One Vs. iPhone

    Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) and Google’s rivalry may be hitting a new high as reports roll in that the iPhone-maker may be talking to Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) about replacing Google (NSDQ: GOOG) with Bing as the default search engine on the popular smartphone.

    BusinessWeek reports that the talks have been under way for weeks, according to two unnamed sources. The tensions may signal that Apple and Google’s once strong relationship may be deteriorating. Not long ago, Google’s CEO Eric Schmidt held a seat on Apple’s board, but since then, Google has become more competitive in the mobile-phone space by coming out with the Nexus One, its own phone. Likewise, Apple has rejected multiple Google applications for the iPhone, including Google Voice and Latitude. For Microsoft, the switch would be huge since it’s commonly considered behind in the mobile-search space.

    Today, most of the mobile-search traffic in the U.S. is determined by the carriers, which have forged direct relationships with search engine providers. AT&T (NYSE: T) and T-Mobile USA have partnered exclusively with Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), Sprint (NYSE: S) uses Google, and Verizon Wireless has recently started to use Microsoft’s Bing. Google frequently commented on the amount of traffic coming from the iPhone alone. Last month, Microsoft launched its Bing iPhone, app, which received a lot of praise for being good-looking and intuitive.

    One of the unnamed sources told BusinessWeek: “Apple and Google know the other is their primary enemy. Microsoft is now a pawn in that battle.” Beyond rejecting Google’s applications, Apple is also working on ways to manage ad placement on its mobile devices, which is a direct threat to Google. Both companies have recently made multi-million dollar purchases in the mobile advertising space. Google has agreed to buy mobile ad network AdMob, and Apple has agreed to purchase Quattro Wireless. Microsoft and Apple are not without their conflicts, however. While Microsoft may not be considered a threat yet, it too has developments underway in the areas of mobile phones and mobile search and advertising.

    Both Microsoft and Apple declined to comment on the possible discussions, and the deal is still pending.

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  • Ultra-slim Waterproof Sony Point And Shoot Camera DSC-TX5 Coming Soon?


    If you’re anything like me and have been following Sony products its easy to tell that the model numbers associated with a device tell a story. Things seemed a little odd to me when Sony released the ultra-slim 1080 HD movie recording capable point and shoot camera DSC-TX7 at CES 2010, as it was a giant leap in model numbers from the original DSC-TX1 that they released last August. Well, I spoke to one of my major sources recently and there was some big hints towards a waterproof, underwater capable point and shoot camera coming called the DSC-TX5. When I heard this I was pretty amazed because such a feature like waterproof (presumably at realistic distances) is one thing, but to see it applied to a very slim, stylish camera such as the T-Series would be pretty wild. I decided to stay quiet about it but unfortunately the chatter has gotten too obvious now.

    Sonyalpharumors, a site I have been noticing has been mostly correct lately about Sony’s camera strategy (and has been offering consistent leaks for a while) even wrote about the DSC-TX5 a few days ago. They stated,

    The source says the TX5, Sony’s underwater point and shoot should be announced soon. “We can glean two things from the title. T means touch screen and since all of Sony’s touch screens are resistive they can actually work underwater and the X indicates the Exmor CMOS system, most likely the BSI R sensor. Don’t know pricing, or specs, though, based on other X series cameras it’ll be 10mp and likely the 4x Zeiss formula in the lens, though if it’s of the 25mm variety like the TX7 or the 35mm variety like the TX1, that remains to be seen. I am personally hoping for the former.”

    I’m not going to say much more than I already have, and I find their words very interesting. I chose not to report on that because it wasn’t really enough to go with, but things got even worse when I noticed the DSC-TX5 on some Japanese tech blogs. Apparently the Apple Brothers blog uncovered it from a cached Colortec blog (C-TEC 3) link, where they basically state the images were available via Sony Europe’s press center for a limited amount of time. The images are no longer at the C-TEC 3 blog, but still exist at the Apple Brothers blog, and are the images you see in this post. We are very confident you will see this product soon, and will be available in Europe in the colors shown above – maroon, silver, black, pink and what appears to be a white color, but we’re unsure of what colors will hit the USA.

    If we had to guess, price would probably be around $300.

  • State Tower| Bangkok | 247 m | 68 fl

    State tower
    Bangkok, Thailand

    Height: 247m/ 811ft
    floor: 68 floors
    completed: 2001
    Architect: Rangsan Architecture Co., Ltd



  • feature: Google talks Chrome OS, HTML5, and the future of software




    On the last day of November, 2009, after the initial rush of excitement around Google’s Chrome OS launch had quieted a bit, Ryan Paul and I sat down with Matthew Papakipos, the engineering director for the Chrome OS project, and Eitan Bencuya, from Google PR. I had done my best to sort out the why’s and wherefore’s of Google’s first consumer OS effort in my initial launch coverage but I still had many questions about the past, present, and future of the project.

    What followed that afternoon was an interview that was so candid, in-depth, and informative about not just Chrome OS, but about the present and future of the Web as a distributed application platform, that we chose to sit on the results until the holiday and CES madness had passed. So, in this brief pause between CES and the coming iSlate hysteria, we present our Chrome OS interview.

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  • China’s Credit Tightening Pipedream Bursts As Yuan Loans Are Set To Jump 18% In 2010

    China Bull

    China is trying to temper rampant loan growth this year, in order to stave off potentially dangerous asset market bubbles and inflation.

    Yet despite the government’s expected efforts to get tough and tighten monetary policy, even the country’s own regulators still expect total yuan loans outstanding to grow at a torrid pace in 2010.

    Market Watch: Chinese regulators expect the nation’s banks to issue about 7.5 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) in new loans this year, reflecting efforts to rein in bank lending after nearly doubling lending levels last year.

    China Banking Regulatory Commission Chairman Liu Mingkang cited the figure during an investment forum Wednesday in Hong Kong, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

    The new lending target means that outstanding yuan loans will rise about 16% to 18% this year, Liu said.

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  • GURU FOCUS: Whitney Tilson: Long Berkshire Hathaway and Short Home Builders and Region Banks

    Jan. 19, 2010 | Filed Under: BRK-A , BRK-B , BNI , ITB

    Author: guruek

    Is now the time to buy Berkshire Hathaway Class B shares on a split?

    T2 Partners managing partner Whitney Tilson certainly thinks so.

    In the latest CNBC interview, Tilson stated that he thinks BRK-A has an intrinsic value of around $14,000 per share and currently it is traded at a biggest discount to intrinsic value ever.

    He thinks Berkshire Hathaway will be substitute Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNI) in the S&P 500 after the merger and the Class B share split. That will be a catalyst for the stock to move up.

    Elsewhere, he thinks housing trouble is not over and there will be more foreclosures coming into the market. The country does not need that many new houses in the next couple of years, hence, it makes sense to short the home builders. ITB is the iShares for home builders.

    Tilson also thinks certain small regional banks may continue to struggle and that makes them ideal shorting candidates:

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  • Let Women Decide to Eat, Drink During Labor

    While some hospitals continue to restrict what women in labor are allowed to eat or drink, new research shows that there’s no benefit in restriction or risk involved with eating or drinking during labor for women who aren’t expected to have complications.

    pregnant-drink

    The Cochrane Systematic Review analyzed five previous studies involving restricting food and drink in women considered unlikely to need anesthesia. In all, 3,130 women were part of the review. No risk was found for women who ate or drank during labor in any of the studies, including those that compared eating and drinking at will with complete restriction, or in studies that compared specific foods, fluids, or carbohydrate drinks with water.

    Lead researcher Mandisa Singata said that mothers in labor should be allowed to make their own decisions about whether to eat or drink. However, the research team didn’t find studies assessing the risks of eating and drinking for women with a higher risk of needing anesthesia. The Cochrane researchers said that further research is needed before recommendations can be made for women at risk of needing surgery.

    One reason food and drink has been restricted for women in labor is the risk of possibly fatal damage to the lungs known as Mendelson’s syndrome. It can occur when particles of regurgitated food are inhaled under general anesthetic for Caesarean sections. However, Singata noted that while preventing Mendelson’s syndrome is important, it’s also a very rare problem that may not affect the majority of patients. She said, “It might be better to look at ways of preventing regurgitation during anesthesia for those patients who do require it.”

    How do you feel about restricted food or water during labor?

    (Image via flickr.gabi_menashe)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Let Women Decide to Eat, Drink During Labor

  • OMAHA WORLD HERALD: Not your usual Berkshire event

    By Steve Jordon
    WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

    There’s only one mystery surrounding today’s special meeting of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shareholders.

    How many people will attend?

    The meeting agenda has prompted no visible opposition, so shareholders likely will approve the only item of business: splitting Berkshire’s Class B shares 50-1, effective Thursday morning, in preparation for next month’s expected acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

    The shareholders’ vote also will be an unofficial referendum on Chairman Warren Buffett’s plan to acquire the railroad company, which he says stands to prosper as the U.S. economy moves forward in coming decades.

    It’s a long-term bet on the country’s economic future, he has said, and Berkshire shareholders likely will back him up.

    For this meeting, shareholders did not receive attendance credentials in advance, as they do for the annual shareholders meeting that draws tens of thousands of shareholders to Omaha each May.

    When the doors open at 8 a.m. to the Holland Performing Arts Center downtown, shareholders will gain admission by showing their IDs and, if their shares are held by a stockbroker or a bank, a statement proving stock ownership. They will meet in the 2,000-seat concert hall.

    Berkshire officials said they don’t know how many people will attend, but the meeting will have few of the entertaining elements that draw the big crowd to the annual gathering: five hours of questions and answers with Buffett and Vice Chairman Charlie Munger; a convention hall full of Berkshire subsidiaries’ bargains; and the chance to rub shoulders with thousands of like-minded investors.

    This meeting has no exhibits, probably a short Q&A session with Buffett and, most disappointing, no Munger.

    Not to mention the 40-degree difference in temperature in Omaha between January and May, the aesthetic contrast between mounds of snow and springtime blossoms, budding leaves and green grass, and the contrast between warm weather and freezing rain.

    Berkshire’s last special meeting was in 1998, at the Orpheum Theater, when about 500 shareholders approved Buffett’s plan to acquire General Reinsurance.

    This time, he wants shareholders to split the shares so that when Berkshire issues $10.5 billion worth of stock as part of the $26 billion purchase price for the railroad, even the smallest Burlington Northern shareholders could become Berkshire shareholders. They also would receive $15.8 billion in cash.

    Receiving stock for part of the purchase price would let those shareholders defer some income taxes.

    The new, smaller-value shares would begin trading Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange, opening at one-fiftieth of Wednesday’s closing price. At Tuesday’s closing price of $3,337.95, that would be about $66 a share.

    The split would not affect the price of Berkshire’s Class A shares, $100,090 at Tuesday’s close. After the Class B split, each Class A share could be converted into 1,500 Class B shares, instead of the 1-30 conversion ratio before the split.

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  • Apple, Microsoft in Cahoots: Bing to Replace Google as Default iPhone Search Engine? [Rumor]

    According to BusinessWeek, Apple and Microsoft may be in talks to defenestrate Google as the iPhone’s default search engine, in favor of Bing. This Apple-Google battle for the mobile throne is getting heated.

    This is all coming from “two people familiar with the matter,” so, you know, eat a bowl of salt or whatever, but it sort of makes sense in a Machiavellian kind of way. Windows Mobile 7 notwithstanding, Apple’s competition in the mobile arena isn’t Microsoft, but Google, and so it’s not really that outlandish, especially considering that Bing isn’t necessarily a worse search engine than Google. Apple avoids throwing unnecessary support to Google (although the iPhone will still feature Google Maps, YouTube, and Gmail) while Microsoft gains a huge market for Bing. Everybody wins, except Google, who only mostly wins.

    What do you guys think? If Bing was the default search engine on your phone, would you go through the necessary steps to change it to Google? I have a feeling a lot of people might just not care. [BusinessWeek]






  • Anti-Allergen, Organic Cotton Eco-Friendly Bedding by Allergy Luxe

    allergyluxe.jpg
    We spend a lot of time resting in our beds, so it only makes sense that we choose bedding products that are eco-friendly and better for our health. Exclusively made for Bed Bath & Beyond, Allergy Luxe Organic Pillowcases not only give you pesticide-free peace of mind, they also protect you from allergens like dust mites and pet dander.

    This luxurious sheet set is made from certified pure organic cotton and promotes an eco-friendly lifestyle. The soft sheets are free of harmful chemicals and organic dyes, and has an anti-allergen barrier weave that protects the sheets against dust mite dander, pollen, pet dander and other allergens. 100% organic cotton with a 300 thread count.

    This bedding is very soft, and at least part of the packaging is made from burlap rather than entirely plastic.

    Disclosure: I was sent a free sample of this product to review. No prior assurances were given as to whether the review be positive or negative.


  • Two More Reasons to Sell Treasury Bonds

    Two more reasons to sell US Treasury bonds: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

    These two giant mortgage lenders are poster children for the dangers of wrapping government guarantees around the credit markets. With help from the state-sponsored banking system, these two government-sponsored entities (GSEs) perverted the process of credit intermediation and artificially suppressed the cost of mortgage loans over many decades.

    This perversion of mortgage finance explains why house prices grew faster than household incomes for roughly a decade ending in 2006. With the broad recognition that the GSEs were insolvent in late 2008, the artificial suppression of mortgage rates was about to come to an end. That is, until the Treasury and Federal Reserve doubled down on their commitments to throw good money after bad. Now, permanent manipulation of mortgage interest rates has become official government policy. The cost of this policy will be even higher federal deficits in the future.

    Government guarantees temporarily hide risks, which results in foolish capital allocation throughout the economy. This game can last until the activity collapses under its own weight (like housing in 2007), or until the government itself runs out of financing options at affordable interest rates.

    Just like Medicare policies influence the practices of health insurance companies, Fannie and Freddie mortgage-backed security (MBS) guaranty policies influenced the underwriting behavior at mortgage brokers. Therefore, no one should be surprised that mortgage brokers fudged numbers to shoehorn borrowers into “conforming” mortgages. These brokers generated huge profits by unloading massive amounts of underpriced credit risk into the Fannie and Freddie MBS pipeline.

    Mortgage expert Mark Hanson described the triumph of automated mortgage underwriting over prudence in a December 2009 issue of the Mortgage Pages:

    During the bubble years, the GSEs looked at [debt-to-income ratios] secondarily to credit score, [loan-to-value ratios], and cash reserves as measured by liquid cash and 70% of retirement [assets]… During the bubble years, if the LTV was low enough and/or score and cash reserves high enough, the system would approve virtually anything.

    Many lenders, especially the big banks, had…underwriting “trainers” that would go around to the various mortgage branches and teach underwriters how to “trip” the systems in order to achieve automated loan approvals when a declination was certain, or simply get fewer approval conditions on a loan that was borderline. Getting a loan approval out of…a borrower with a 100% [debt-to-income ratio] – with limited documentation required on the automated findings – was not uncommon.

    The poorer-than-expected quality of the mortgages inside of the MBS that Fannie and Freddie guarantee will lead to hundreds of billions in credit losses. The frequency and severity of these credit losses over the next few years will take Wall Street by surprise.

    These credit losses will blow huge holes into the GSEs’ balance sheets, overwhelming their thin slices of capital several times over. When this capital vanishes, the US Treasury Department will float more government debt and use the proceeds to refill the capital shortfalls.

    On Christmas Eve, the Treasury delivered a lump of coal to US taxpayers: It eliminated caps on future equity injections into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Let’s not kid ourselves. These capital injections are not “investments.” No rational investor would be injecting equity into the GSEs right now. Rather than demand a reasonable risk-adjusted return, these injections will just keep the GSEs’ loss-plagued balance sheets solvent.

    Consider the situation by visualizing Fannie’s and Freddie’s balance sheets. Since the beginning of the financial crisis, the Treasury and Federal Reserve have teamed up to reinflate the assets and equity of these institutions. The Treasury pumped new equity (in the form of preferred stock) into them as needed, while the Fed used newly printed money to buy up the GSEs’ debt and the mortgage-backed securities that the GSEs guarantee. Thanks to these shenanigans, the market prices of the assets on the GSE balance sheets appear to be holding up. But make no mistake; despite the Fed’s actions, the real underlying value of these is being eaten away by credit losses.

    On Jan. 12, Amherst Securities published a study on the estimated losses Fannie and Freddie will absorb as foreclosures flow through the credit loss pipeline in the coming years. Using a database of 29 million active prime mortgages from First American CoreLogic, Amherst estimates that the GSEs will ultimately suffer $448 billion in cumulative credit losses. Amherst explains the likely distribution of these losses:

    These gross losses will be distributed across four categories – write- downs already taken by Fannie and Freddie and reflected in their loan loss provisions, future credit losses to be taken by Fannie and Freddie, losses absorbed by mortgage insurers, and losses absorbed by originators through put backs. Fannie’s loan loss reserves total $66 billion: $57 billion for MBS guaranty losses, $9 billion for loan losses. Freddie’s loan loss reserves total $30 billion: $29 billion for MBS guaranty losses, $1 billion for loan losses. The remaining $352 billion of losses will show up across the other three categories (Fannie and Freddie future losses, mortgage insurers, and originator put backs) over time.

    If Amherst is accurate in its projections – which I expect, given the quality and independence of its research – then Fannie and Freddie have built allowances to cover a mere 21% ($96 billion divided by $448 billion) of the losses they’ll ultimately have to absorb from the housing bubble.

    It’s no wonder the Treasury Department lifted the bailout caps on Christmas Eve; it’ll be the only entity willing to plug the GSEs’ deepening capital holes.

    What does this mean for the markets? It translates into very bad news for complacent stock market bulls and junk bond junkies.

    The lifting of the GSE bailout limits strengthens the case for rising Treasury yields in 2010. Rising Treasury yields are bearish for the stock market because higher yields offer better competition for investors’ dollars. Rising Treasury rates also increase the cost of capital for all companies.

    The elimination of limits on Treasury’s capital infusion into Fannie and Freddie is a de facto nationalization. We’ll see a gradual transformation of these hollow zombies into new branches of government. They’ll implement the official agenda for housing, with little regard for prudent lending standards. This could severely degrade the creditworthiness of US Treasury securities.

    The government will probably stick to its dishonest, Enron-style accounting; it won’t officially consolidate Fannie and Freddie assets and liabilities onto the federal balance sheet, but many foreign creditors will. These creditors will demand higher rates to compensate for the rising risks of investing in US Treasuries…and that means bond prices will fall…eventually.

    Dan Amoss
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • LG’s X300 ad strikes an amazingly familar tone

    LG’s X300 laptop may have largely avoided comparisons to a certain other thin-and-light when it was announced at CES earlier this month, but it looks like LG is intent on driving that point home regardless. As you can see for yourself in the promo video after the break, not only has LG carried on the oftimitated manila envelope motif, but it tops things off with a just slightly off “la la la” refrain for good measure. All of which might have earned LG a few points for boldness if this were a parody ad released a few years ago but, sadly, this is 2010, and this ad is all too real.

    [Thanks, Muller]

    Continue reading LG’s X300 ad strikes an amazingly familar tone

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    LG’s X300 ad strikes an amazingly familar tone originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jan 2010 00:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Hb1AC Devices

    Dear All,

    I write to you on behalf the Israeli affiliate of the JDRF.
    We represent the JDRF in Israel and are working (hard) to promote the issues of people with Diabetes type 1 here in Israel.
    Lately, we’ve been involved in a project involving Point-of-Care HbA1C devices.
    One of the outcomes was a necessity to list the medical-devices companies in the world, which can present a proven track-record of clinic operating of those devices.

    Our question is, therefore, do you happen to know who manufactures POC HbA1c meters?
    And maybe, who may know?

    We would appreciate very much your advice,

    Best regards,
    Iuval Grisariu
    JDRF Israel

    [email protected]

  • Facebook Beacon Done Right? Retailers Start Embracing Blippy.

    Screen shot 2010-01-19 at 9.56.13 PMReaders seem pretty split about what to think of Blippy, the service which allows you to share your credit card purchases online. About half think it’s the next logical step in sharing data online. The other half think it’s just about the worst idea ever. Retailers, it seems, are starting to lean towards the former.

    Blipply has reached agreements with three partners to promote and use Blippy on their sites: Woot, Groupon, and Overstock.com. The latter is particularly interesting because as you may remember, Overstock.com was an initial Facebook Beacon partner — something which caused some controversy, and caused the company to pull away from Beacon. Now, they appear ready to revisit the idea.

    Not that Beacon and Blippy are exactly the same. Beacon’s main problem was that it was opt-out rather than opt-in, which Blippy, as a service, is. But both at their core involve the sharing of purchasing data. And clearly from the get-go this has been an idea that intrigues retailers. After all, people sharing what they’re actually buying should pique the interests of others that may do the same. That was why many of them bought into the idea of Beacon.

    But Facebook users felt they were being tricked into sharing this data, and worse, giving it over to Facebook to use for advertising purposes. Blippy, which makes it very clear that the sharing of this data is whole idea of the service, gives these retailers an outlet to perhaps do it right this time.

    The amount each service will use Blippy varies. Some simply have a link telling users they can share their data on the service. Others are using OAuth to actually send purchasing data over to Blippy. How exactly Overstock.com will use Blippy is still being discussed, and should be in place by the end of the week, we’re told. But Woot and Groupon integration has already been finalized and should be live shortly.

    Depsite its controversial idea, Blippy has seem some great initial traction among users. And they’ve been able to attract a choice group of investors. This interaction between users and retailers on Blippy may be the key to the future of the service. And if it goes over well, it may leave Facebook kicking itself for what might have been.

    [photo: flickr/ken dyck]


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