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  • China Going Green For Security Reasons

    The argument on when the world’s oil supply will start dwindling is a running battle that has been going on for the better part of forty years. Pretty much everyone at this point though has figured out that at the rate we are sucking up oil (85 million barrels per day) that it won’t last for much longer. That means we need alternatives, and fast.

    While one of the main arguments in favor of alternative fuels and electric vehicles is environmental concerns, I think the U.S. needs to take a look at China’s playbook. They make no bones about it; their green initiatives are about energy security and ensuring they don’t get stuck with unfavorable allies who supply the dino juice.

    (more…)

  • Greenpeace reports Target now best for sustainable seafood

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Greenpeace released its fourth seafood “sustainability scorecard” today, which showed that the supermarket chain Target has moved up from fourth place to receive the number one ranking.

    Tilapia, look for U.S. farmed (Image: Monterey Bay Aquarium)

    Tilapia, look for U.S. farmed (Image: Monterey Bay Aquarium)

    Wegmans, last year’s winner for best seafood sustainability practices, inched down to second place. Whole Foods Markets remained at third place.

    Safeway and Ahold USA (Stop and Shop and Giant stores) and Harris Teeter rounded out the top six stores in the rankings, which rate the retailers based on how well they are monitoring the seafood they sell to keep threatened and over-fished species off the market.

    The top six supermarket chains of 20 reviewed all received strong marks for having a sustainability plan and acting on it. The next four stores were given credit for having a plan, and for taking some actions to preserve ocean ecosystems. The bottom ten stores were given failing grades.

    The rankings are part of a report called Carting Away the Oceans. In the report, Greenpeace notes that three companies that had previously received a failing grade, achieved passing marks this year. Those are: A&P; Delhaize and Trader Joe’s, which Greenpeace had singled out last year for its failure to stop buying imperiled fish and its lack of a seafood policy to guide buying. The chain announced in March that it was developing a sustainable seafood plan.

    This year’s losers in the Greenpeace rankings — those stores that continue to sell seafood that conservationists have identified as in jeopardy and have no “visible” plan to address seafood sustainability  — include: H.E.B. (H.E.B. and Central Market), Meijer, Costco, SUPERVALU, Publix and Winn Dixie.

    “A significant divide is developing among the major retailers,” said Greenpeace’s Senior Markets Campaigner, Casson Trenor. “It’s now clear that Wegmans, Target and Whole Foods are making substantive progress reflecting their commitment while others such as H.E.B. and Costco remain committed to selling endangered species and destroying marine ecosystems.”

    Greenpeace believes all seafood sellers should adopt sustainable practices to help ensure the survival of fisheries and marine ecosystems worldwide. The environmental advocacy group advocates the creation of a global network of marine preserves that operate to help save ocean eco-systems and maintain long-term viability of fish populations. To help with this, food sellers should refuse to sell from fisheries that exploit marine populations, alter the eco-system (such as when large trawlers destroy coral), use practices that harm non-targeted fish (like dolphin) or illegal and unlicensed means of obtaining fish.

    The list of chains that Greenpeace investigated, ranked from best to worst:

    1.   Target

    2.   Wegmans

    3.   Whole Foods

    4.   Safeway (Dominicks, Genuardi’s, Pavilions, Randall’s, Von’s)

    5.   Ahold USA (Stop & Shop, Giant)

    6.   Harris Teeter

    7.  A&P (Food Emporium, Pathmark, Super Fresh, Waldbaum’s)

    8.  Delhaize (Bloom, Food Lion, Hannaford Bros., Sweetbay)

    9.  Walmart

    10.  Trader Joe’s

    11.  Price Chopper

    12.  Aldi

    13.  Kroger (Baker’s, City Market, Dillon’s, Fred Meyer, Fry’s, King Soopers, Ralph’s, Smith’s, Quality Food Center – QFC)

    14.  Costco

    15.  Supervalu (Acme, Albertson’s, Bristol Farms, Jewel-Osco, Save-A-Lot, Shaw’s)

    16.  Giant Eagle

    17.   Publix

    18.   Winn Dixie

    19.   Meijer

    20.   H.E.B. (H.E.B., Central Market)

  • Poseidon 37: A Floating Power Plant For the Roughest Seas [Energy]

    This is Poseidon 37, a floating power plant with the durability of an oil rig and the efficiency to generate up to 50 gigawatts of hydro and wind power a year. I’m assuming the trident is underwater in this shot. More »







  • DST to Take ICQ Off AOL’s Hands for $187.5M

    AOL is finally offloading ICQ, to a newly familiar name in the tech investing space, Digital Sky Technologies. It’s actually a good regional fit as ICQ is the leading instant messaging service in Russia, where DST is based. DST has agreed to pay $187.5 million, which in the grand scheme of things is not too shabby — back in another era, AOL bought ICQ for $407 million in 1998. However, in December it had been reported that DST would buy ICQ for $200-$250 million.

    ICQ has been on the block for a while. Though using ICQ may be a long-lost memory U.S. Internet users, the IM service has 32 million uniques per month, with significant presence in Eastern Europe. That dates back to ICQ’s roots in Israel, where it was created in 1996 by Mirabilis.

    AOL, which is still looking to offload its social networking acquisition Bebo, reported a 58 percent decline in first-quarter profits today.

  • Sanitary Protection must be inconspicuous (Aug, 1930)

    Sanitary Protection must be inconspicuous

    That’s why most women prefer Kotex

    Kotex now has rounded, tapered corners which eliminate awkward bulges and assure a snug, firm fit.

    THERE are times when you hesitate to enjoy sports to the fullest… unless you know about Kotex.

    Kotex is the sanitary pad that is designed for inconspicuous protection. The corners are rounded and tapered. Sides, too, are rounded. It gives you complete security and ease of mind.

    Wear Kotex without a worry, then, under any frock you possess. Wear it for sports or with filmiest evening things—and retain the cool poise so essential to charm.

    Light, cool, comfortable There’s another way in which this careful shaping brings wonderful relief. There’s no unneeded bulk to pack and chafe. No awkward bulges to grow terribly uncomfortable.

    Kotex is always light, always cool, always comfortable. This is largely due to its remarkable filler — Cellucotton (not cotton) absorbent wadding. Cellucotton is five times more absorbent than cotton. This means your Kotex pad can be five times lighter than any cotton pad, with the same absorbency and protection.

    America’s leading hospitals—85% of them—choose this same absorbent for important surgical work.

    Kotex deodorizes . . . keeps you dainty and immaculate at times when that is particularly essential. It is so easily disposed of.

    You owe it to your comfort and good health to use this modern, safe, sanitary protection. Kotex is available everywhere. Kotex Company, Chicago, 111.

    IN HOSPITALS

    1. 85% of our leading hospitals use the very same absorbent of which Kotex is made.
    2. Kotex is soft… not a deceptive softness that soon packs into chafing hardness. But a delicate, fleecy softness that lasts for hours.
    3. Safe, secure… keeps your mind at ease.
    4. Deodorizes . .. safely, thoroughly, by a special process.
    5. Disposable, instantly, completely.

    Regular Kotex—45c for 12
    Kotex Super-Size—65c for 12

    Also regular size singly in vending cabinets through West Disinfecting Co.

    Ask to see the KOTEX BELT and KOTEX SANITARY APRON at any drug, dry goods or department store.

    KOTEX

    The New Sanitary Pad which deodorizes


  • Device Shows Bus Location (May, 1938)

    Device Shows Bus Location

    LONDON Transport plans to try an experiment never before attempted anywhere in the world, and if successful for regular use, will give the main office of a bus transportation company a “picture” of the city’s moving buses.

    Each bus will carry on its roof a coil of wire through which will pass an alternating current. At certain fixed points a wire will be suspended across the road where the bus will pass. As it passes, it induces a current in the wire which in turn records the passing on the “clock.”


  • Inventions for Convenience of Theatergoers (Jun, 1931)

    Inventions for Convenience of Theatergoers

    SCIENCE, with its ability to provide helpful inventions for every occasion, has now come to the assistance of theatergoers and furnished them with two new pieces of equipment for increased enjoyment of programs. For the deaf, inventors have devised a system of voice transmission consisting of a battery of “mikes” at the foot lights to pick up the voice of the players, and a series of plug-in connections at seats provided with headphones to convey the voice directly to the ears of the deaf persons. This unique system has been installed at the Goodman theater, in Chicago.

    The invention which theater patrons will welcome most heartily, however, is the new adjustable push-back seat which eliminates the nuisance of having to stand every time someone passes along the row. To prevent disorder, to say nothing of much suppressed swearing, the seated person simply moves back by pressing his body against the in accompanying photos. The bottom of the seat is fitted in grooved runners and held in normal position by a spring. Any old seat can be quickly converted by the installation of this simple mechanism.


  • All About Ham Nets (Feb, 1960)

    Reading through this I found my self continually wanting to make everything “.net” instead of ” Net”.

    All About Ham Nets

    By George Hart, W1NJM

    Yes, there’s a place for organized “rag chewing,” but the byword of most ham nets is “service.”

    ALL over the amateur radio bands you can hear them—between 500 and 1,000 groups of operators calling themselves “nets.” You might hear, for example, one station say: “Old man, you’re interfering with the Podunk Net. Wonder if you’d mind standing by or moving to another frequency so we can clear our traffic.”

    The offending station may or may not move. He doesn’t have to. A ham can operate anywhere in any amateur band (providing he has a Conditional Class license or better), and he has as much right to a particular frequency as the Podunk Net. Usually he will move since amateurs are courteous.

    What Are Nets?

    When a group of amateurs all get on the same frequency and one station at a time transmits while the rest listen, we have a “round table.” Usually they just take turns and each, in turn, talks about anything or about nothing. When one of the stations assumes charge and tells the others when to transmit and to whom, this station is called the “net control station” and the whole group operating in this fashion becomes a “net,” or network. Sound regimented? It is, to a certain extent, although no one has to be in the net if he doesn’t want to be.

    Nets operate for a number of reasons such as preparing to provide emergency communications, or handling traffic (third party messages). There are training nets, such as those attempting to build up code speed. Some nets involve special interest groups within or outside the field of radio, such as doctors, dentists, teenagers, YLs (young ladies), or fraternal organizations. And some of them operate just for the good old fun of yakking together.

    Some nets include only amateurs in a particular city or radio club, some extend through county or state, and some even spread from coast to coast and beyond!

    Depending on what it does, what it is for and who is in it, a net might operate by voice (‘phone), Morse code (CW) or radioteletype (RTTY). Amateur TV nets are also on the horizon. CW nets may be slow, medium or high speed, depending upon the proficiency level of the net members.

    How can you identify a net when you hear one? Almost without exception they begin with a “call up.” The net control station comes on at a prearranged time with a general call to all net members, something like this: “Calling the Podunk Net, calling the Podunk Net, this is K2ABC, net control station. The Podunk Net operates daily on this frequency starting at 7:30 P.M., Central Standard Time, for the purpose of emergency communication in the Podunk area. Amateur stations operating on or near this frequency are re- quested to stand by or move to another frequency while the net is in session.”

    He then invites net members to “report in,” stating their location, any messages they have to send (or “traffic on the hook”). This “reporting in” may be at random, by alphabetical or prearranged order, or by roll call.

    On CW nets the procedure is similar, except that abbreviations are used because it takes longer to say things via CW than by voice. The CW net control might send, for example: “PN (Podunk Net) PN PN DE (from) K2ABC K2ABC K2ABC QNN (net control station) QNZ (adjust your frequency to mine) QND (the net is directed) QNI (stations report into the net) QNA (by prearranged order) K (go ahead).

    Long ago amateurs discovered that they could be useful in providing emergency communications during floods, fires, storms, and explosions which would wipe out telephone and telegraph lines, isolating communities. A ham or two in the stricken area would crank up their rigs from batteries or gasoline generators and establish a communication with the outside world. As this kind of thing became more frequent, the amateurs decided that it could be done more effectively if they were prepared and trained for it.

    So about 25 years ago the ARRL organized the Amateur Radio Emergency Corps and encouraged amateurs to form local groups, prepare equipment, lay plans and conduct operator training for this specific purpose. Today there are about 1800 amateur Emergency Coordinators and over 40,000 amateurs “signed up” in the Emergency Corps.

    Radio amateurs in this country can do something that amateurs in most countries are forbidden to do: handle messages for third parties. What kind of messages? Why, any kind at all, just so they don’t get paid for it. They are usually written and handled in a standard amateur message form, not unlike the Western Union form. These messages are called “traffic,” hence the nets that handle them are called “traffic nets.” The idea is to get the message from its point of origin to its destination in the least possible time by passing it from one amateur to another.

    Traffic nets are generally well organized and some of them are set up in “systems.” One such system, sponsored by ARRL, is called the National Traffic System and consists of about 100 nets working together in chains covering the entire U.S., its possessions and Canada. In emergencies, these traffic nets and systems are often the means for handling important point-to-point traffic.

    In a sense, the above nets are training nets. Whatever their primary purpose, a great part of it is in getting trained to do a job.

    Newcomers to the amateur ranks via the Novice license need training, especially in Morse code. The Novice speed requirement is only five words per minute. You can’t handle much communication at that speed, hence the purposes of many Novice nets are to increase code speed and teach net procedure.

    Sometimes a group of amateurs with something in common will get together in a net. Doctors, dentists, religious groups, engineers, pilots, etc., have been known to form nets. A year or so ago a group of doctors formed a net to discuss latest medical developments. Teenagers discuss rock ‘n roll, scouting, sports, television shows (real crazy, dad!). The YLs have their own nationwide fraternal organization, the Young Ladies Radio League (YLRL) and have a number of nets consisting strictly of members of their own sex (no men allowed) , such as the Ironing Board Net, the Nylon Net and the Tangle Net.

    A few groups operate just for the sheer pleasure of getting to know each other. Usually started quite spontaneously, they might call themselves the Gum-Beaters Net, the Idiots Net, or the Hot Air Net. No telling what you might hear them talking about.

    Most nets are deliberately set up by responsible amateurs for a specific purpose, usually emergency preparedness or traffic handling. These hams are bent on doing something useful with their hobby. -$-


  • Conference on remote sensing of the sea

    Europe and its marginal seas, seen by SeaWiFS on 26 Feb 2001

    The 4th "Oceans fom Space" conference from 26 – 30 April 2010 – organised by the JRC, the European Space Agency (ESA), the US Office of Naval Research, Global (ONRG), the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) – is gathering specialists and experts on remote sensing of the sea to address every facet of satellite oceanography, including missions, satellites, sensors, passive and active techniques, calibration and validation, algorithms and models. The emphasis of the symposium will be on the key information provided by satellites to promote a sustainable use of marine resources and to improve our knowledge of the role played by the oceans in regulating climate.

  • WWDC 2010 Announced: June 7-11

    The “center of the app universe” will be at Moscone West in San Francisco this year, as WWDC10 kicks off on June 7 and runs through the 11th.

    In a press release, Senior Apple VP Scott Forstall doesn’t even pretend it’s about the Mac anymore. WWDC will provide “in-depth sessions and hands-on working labs to learn more about iPhone OS 4,” helping developers “make their iPhone and iPad apps even better.”

    And it doesn’t end there, unless we’re talking about information on the next iteration of Mac OS X.

    For developers, the $1,599 package gets you in on five technology tracks: Application Frameworks; Internet & Web; Graphics & Media; Developer Tools; and Core OS, but no IT/SysAdmin track. The sessions offer blanket coverage of iPhone OS development, but unless OS X 10.7 sessions will be super secret, there doesn’t appear to be a lot there. It sure seems telling that five design awards will be handed out for the iPhone and the iPad, but not the Mac.

    For those who are not developers, expect to see the next generation iPhone, rumored to be named the iPhone HD. If the infamous prototype revealed by Gizmodo is the final version, its hardware features will include: a front-facing video camera, camera flash, micro-SIM card, and two volume buttons. Also, John Gruber has suggested the resolution of the display will jump to 960×640. The launch date for the phone will certainly be announced, probably June or early July.

    That phone will be running iPhone OS 4, of course, which has already been previewed. There may be a few new features, along with information about a “unity release” of iPhone OS 4.1 for the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad sometime in late summer or early fall.

    As for what to expect that is not related to the iPhone, if one can expect anything, probably a quiet update of the MacBook is in order. There’s also the question of the MacBook Air, which was last updated at WWDC09. The iMac will almost certainly not see an update until the fall, same for the Mac mini, if then. The Mac Pro, which shockingly has not seen an update for over a year, is a candidate for the Intel’s Xeon 5600 CPU. That could mean a 12-core Mac Pro with two six-core CPUs running up to 3.33 GHz. That would be pretty amazing, run pretty hot, too.

    Or Apple could completely ignore the Mac and OS X for the desktop, but, hey, how about that magical iPad? No matter what is or isn’t at WWDC10, TAB will be covering the Keynote, product introductions, and new developments in development, of course.

  • 2011 Infiniti M56 – Road Test

    Control, Alt, Delete: While Infiniti decides what it is, the M’s computers decide what you’ll have for lunch.

    Pity Infiniti. After 21 years on the market and an amount of cash spent on advertising to at least equal this season’s Yankees payroll, Nissan’s upscale brand is still often misspelled with a “y.” One day last March, the Los Angeles Craigslist website had 79 ads for used “Infinity” vehicles.

    Keep Reading: 2011 Infiniti M56 – Road Test

    Related posts:

    1. 2011 Infiniti M37 / M56 – First Drive Review
    2. 2011 Infiniti M37 / M56 – Preview
    3. Still New and Improved: We Sample the Latest 2011 Infiniti M56 Prototype
  • Bucky Shades Sleep Mask With Earplugs

    Shades – Sleep Mask. For deep sleep or daydreams… anytime, anywhere. Super-soft padding cradles your eyes without pressure. Eye mask is 100% light blocking. Earplugs (included) store in handy pocket. Hand washable. Coordinates with Utopia, Fuzzy Wuzzy and Baxter.

    The World’s Most Perfect Sleep Mask. For deep sleep or daydreams… anytime, anywhere. Super-soft padding cradles your eyes without pressure. Eye mask is 100% light blocking. Earplugs (included) store in handy pocket. Hand washable. Coordinates with Utopia, Fuzzy Wuzzy and Baxter. Size: 4″ x 10″ Weight: 2 oz

    View Bucky Shades Sleep Mask With Earplugs Details

  • Shakira World Cup Theme Song “Waka Waka (This Time For Africa)”


    “Waka Waka (This Time For Africa)” English Version

    Have you heard Shakira’s new song, “Waka Waka (This Time For Africa)?” The single, which features Freshlyground — a South African Afro-fusion band formed in Cape Town — is the official theme song for the FIFA 2010 World Cup, which kicks off in South Africa this summer.


    “Waka Waka (This Time For Africa)” Spanish Version

    The uptempo track — full of traditional African beats mixed with modern pop rhythms — will be available for download the week of May 11.

    Both Shakira and Freshlyground will perform the anthem live at the Johannesburg Soccer City Stadium during the World Cup Final Closing Ceremony on July 11.


  • Video: Citroën Nemo fails European “moose test,” highlights value of stability control

    Filed under: , , ,

    Citroën Nemo on its tippy toes – Click above to watch the video after the break

    We’ve recently had two shining examples of the importance of having a properly functioning electronic stability control system (ESC) in new vehicles. The instability of the 2010 Lexus GX 460 is a known problem and Toyota is working to address it. The Lexus was equipped with ESC, it just wasn’t effective enough. Over in Europe, the Citroën Nemo failed miserably in a test conducted for a British consumer magazine because it lacked ESC entirely.

    Which? is something of a British counterpart to Consumer Reports and had recently worked with German auto club ADAC to evaluate a trio of compact MPVs from Fiat, Peugeot and Citroën. The Qubo, Bipper Teepee and Nemo all share the same basic design, but only the Italian variant offers ESC as an option (and then only on diesel models). The Peugeot and Citroën do not offer ESC at any price. Needless to say, the results on the dreaded “moose test” (also known as the “elk test”) were not good. This particular test is a double lane change obstacle avoidance maneuver at 50 miles per hour.

    After the Citroën Nemo flipped over in this test, the remaining testing of the Peugeot was abandoned. PSA, the parent company of the automakers, has announced that it will start installing ESC on the Nemo and Bipper diesel models in July of this year. A version for gas engined will have to be developed and installed starting in fall 2011. Video of the test is after the jump.

    [Source: Which?]

    Continue reading Video: Citroën Nemo fails European “moose test,” highlights value of stability control

    Video: Citroën Nemo fails European “moose test,” highlights value of stability control originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 10:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • M.I.A.’s Graphic ‘Born Free’ Video Pulled by YouTube

    M.I.A. has never backed down from making a statement even if it has meant trouble for her on more than one occasion. Her latest video is no different, a nine-minute clip, which can be hard to watch at times, directed by Romain Gavras. Some are praising it as no-nonsense political commentary, others are appalled by the gore fest. But the explicit… (read more)

  • Wakeboarding HD demo available tomorrow on PSN

    The Tik Games-Creat Studios team-up may be known for its addictive puzzle games, but now that they have a shiny new spot down at the PlayStation Store, they’ll be spicing it up a bit with Wakeboarding HD,

  • Massey Rips Senate Lawmakers for ‘Political Grandstanding’

    Massey Energy, the coal giant that owns the West Virginia mine where 29 miners were killed in a blast April 5, might be racking up thousands of safety violations at other projects since the explosion; it might have former workers decrying its safety policies; and it might be contesting more citations than any other mining company in the nation.

    But that, the company said Tuesday, doesn’t give lawmakers free license to attack its safety record. Responding to yesterday’s Senate HELP Committee hearing on mine safety, Massey said it’s “disappointed” that the discussion “degenerated into political grandstanding.”

    “Unfortunately, all the sound bites in the world will not improve the safety of a single miner in America,” the statement reads, adding that overzealous federal regulators — not the industry — are responsible for the enormous backlog of citation appeals.

    In 2006, according to MSHA records, MSHA assessed violations against the coal industry totaling $35.1 million. By 2008, this had grown to $194.2 million. The fines levied increased 5.5 times. With the number of violations much higher and the fines per violation much higher, it is not surprising that the number of contests increased.

    Of note, Democrats declined to invite anyone from Massey to testify at Tuesday’s hearing. A Senate aide said that lawmakers didn’t want to interfere with the current probe into the cause of the deadly blast at the Upper Big Branch.

    But that’s a curious argument, particularly in light of the fact that the other high-profile hearing on Capitol Hill yesterday — featuring executives from Goldman Sachs called to defend their investments prior to the recent global economic meltdown — came even as the S.E.C. has filed civil charges against the company, charges that didn’t prevent Senate lawmakers from grilling those executives for 11 hours.

  • Solar ‘Space Yacht’ Satellite to Be Launched

    Japan plans to launch a satellite powered by a  large solar sail for a six month mission.  A  solar sail captures the momentum of photons from the sun to propel the satellite, something like the manner in which a sailboat moves due to the thrust of wind. In this case, solar cells on the sail will generate electricity for propulsion.

    (more…)

  • Analyst: IW to be ‘essentially closed’ after the next MW2 map pack

    The next Modern Warfare 2 map pack may very well be Infinity Ward’s last release. One analyst predicts that the studio will be “essentially closed” after that.

  • Sprint Loves Your Mom, Do You?

    Wireless provider Sprint is doing what they can to have you looking like a champ this coming Mother’s Day.  Hesse and Co. have put together a list of Android apps designed to make mom’s life easier around the home and office. We’ve taken a little initiative and appended some links for you guys to check out. 

    • Baby Go! Keeps little ones entertained with colorful letter blocks that dance around the phone’s screen at the push of a button. Meanwhile, the app locks the device itself so information is protected.
    • BugMe!The quick and easy note-taker for Android and BlackBerry smartphones, BugMe! users can jot notes, ideas and errands and easily set reminders to sound an alarm and pop up an alert when the item is due.
    • Healthy Diet For Kids Helping kids lead healthy lifestyles begins with parents who teach their children to recognize healthy and unhealthy food. In this game your child’s goal is to select the healthy items to get “health reward” points.
    • MomsZeal Discuss parenting and anything about being a mom anytime, virtually anywhere on your phone. Community members can post thoughts, questions, comments and answers.
    • MobiZim Parental ControlsProvides parents peace of mind by showing them their children’s mobile phone usage, such as calls, text messages, location and Web browsing history.

    First things first!  Before she goes off on a downloading frenzy,you have to make sure your mom has an Android phone.  As of right now the HTC Hero and Samsung Moment are both $99.99 after a $100 mail-in rebate and a new two-year service agreement.

    So what are you waiting for? Get your mom on the Now Network, now.

    Might We Suggest…