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Brasso Gadget Care polish review

At Engadget, we tend not to make a big fuss about cleaning products, but this one deserves a little shout-out: Brasso, a well-established metal polish brand in good ol’ Blighty, has just pushed out its Gadget Care polish gel to the masses today. What really caught our attention was the fact that this will be Brasso’s first new product for a whopping 110 years, but of course, at the end of the day it’s all about whether the polish does what it says on the bottle, and whether it’ll leave your gadgets’ paintwork unharmed. The selling point’s simple: not only does this gel clean your gadgets, but it also leaves a layer of silicone that’s supposedly both anti-static (or dust-hating) and smear-preventing. Well, ’tis certainly a very bold claim, so join us after the break to see if this new Brasso’s worth your money. Gallery: Brasso Gadget Care polish review Continue reading Brasso Gadget Care polish review Brasso Gadget Care polish review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 15:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Ed Schultz: Companies That Buy Back Their Own Stock Are Un-American

The more I watch Ed Schultz on MSNBC, the more I realize he may actually be a bigger idiot than recently fired CNN anchor Rick Sanchez. Helping to prove my point, Schultz on Thursday said companies that buy back their own stock are un-American. “Large companies have purchased — here are the numbers — $273 billion — billion — of their own shares this year. And my friends, that is five times as much as compared to this time last year,” exclaimed a typically red-faced Schultz. “This is what they`re doing,” he continued. “They`re hogging. The American companies have no sense of economic patriotism” (video follows with transcript and commentary):  ED SCHULTZ, HOST: But this is the story that has me fired up tonight. At this hour, here are the numbers. About 15 million Americans are out of work, unemployed, 41.8 million Americans are on food stamps. That`s hard to say. Think about that, 42 million Americans are on food stamps. And where are Republicans? John Boehner is asking, Well, where are the jobs? And big businesses is wasting billions of dollars on themselves. According to “The Washington Post,” large companies like Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, Pepsico and others — well, they`re using their massive profits buying back shares instead of investing capital for job creation in this country. These American companies — what they`re doing is they`re taking advantage of the lowest interest rates in decades to buy back cheap stock — how American of them! — instead of investing cash to create jobs. It`s all about the record profits, folks, and going to the bottom line as fast as they can. And who`s paying the price for all of this? The American worker. Large companies have purchased — here are the numbers — $273 billion — billion — of their own shares this year. And my friends, that is five times as much as compared to this time last year. This is what they`re doing. They`re hogging. The American companies have no sense of economic patriotism. And a third quarter survey, just completed, of nearly a thousand chief financial officers by Duke University and “CFO” magazine shows that less than 1 percent of CFOs said that they expect to hire more full-time employees in the coming months. I mean, it`s all right there! This proves that greedy, selfish corporate suits — they don`t give a damn about the working class in this country, the American people who need a job. This is all about maximizing profits and creating a deeper divide between the haves and the have-nots, and they want the righties to get power in the Congress.  The ignorance on display here is astonishing. There are many reasons for companies to buy back their own stock and none of them have anything to do with politics or patriotism. Quite the contrary, it’s often good business sense. Here are some facts from the Washington Post article Schultz cited that he chose not to share with his viewers: Some companies are buying back shares partly because they don’t want to invest in developing new products or services while consumer demand remains weak, analysts said. “They don’t know what they want to do with all the cash they’re sitting on,” said Zachary Karabell, president of RiverTwice Research. Historically low interest rates are also prompting some companies to borrow to repurchase shares. Microsoft, for instance, borrowed $4.75 billion last month by issuing new bonds at rock-bottom interest rates and announced it would use some of that money to buy back shares. Indeed. When interest rates are low like they are now, it makes tremendous sense for companies to issue more bonds and buy back stock. This allows them to raise money at little cost while reducing the number of shares outstanding thereby increasing the value of their stock. This happens in every economic cycle which Schultz might know if he wasn’t so obviously uninformed about such things. Furthermore, there’s nothing nefarious about companies not doing a lot of capital or employee investing at this stage of a weak recovery. As the Post piece pointed out: Defenders of the practice say companies are better off buying back shares if they don’t see opportunities to spend while demand remains weak. “There are times when the best thing to do might well be to buy back your stock and issue it back again at higher prices,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management. “There’s nothing wrong with that.” Indeed. As for Schultz’s claim the Duke/CFO magazine survey “proves that greedy, selfish corporate suits — they don`t give a damn about the working class in this country, the American people who need a job,” maybe he should have read the entire paragraph on this subject: A third-quarter survey of nearly 1,000 chief financial officers by Duke University and CFO Magazine found that the executives’ optimism about the U.S. economy had dropped by more than 15 percent compared with the previous three months. That is nearly as low as survey results from the first quarter of 2009, when the economic turmoil was in full swing. Half of the CFOs said their companies will keep clinging to their cash, and only 0.7 percent said they expect to hire more full-time employees.  As such, CFO’s aren’t looking to hire because their optimism about the economy has declined in recent months almost back to levels in the first quarter of 2009. Either Schultz chose not to read those sentences in that paragraph or he didn’t understand them. Frankly, from what I’ve seen of this ignoramus in the past few months, I believe it’s the latter.

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NBC’s Willie Geist, substitute hosting for Matt Lauer, invited on CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo to talk about the new jobs report and the two had a startling message for those in its audience who may be unemployed right now – just get “used to it.” On Friday’s Today show, NBC’s Willie Geist, citing the liberal economist Joseph Stiglitz, asked the CNBC anchor if “higher unemployment may just be the new normal in this country. Do you agree with that? We just have to get used to this?” Bartiromo, eschewing any sort of American “can do” optimism, actually agreed as she responded: “Well I definitely think we are in a new normal. I think you have to have expectations of much lower growth levels in the United States, relative to the rest of the world.” Bartiromo added that business aren’t likely to hire in 2011 because they are expecting higher health care expenses, expecting higher taxes” but didn’t  blame Obama administration policies for those fears. The following exchange was aired on the October 8 Today show: WILLIE GEIST: Of course the economy is the key issue in the midterm elections and this morning we’re getting the final monthly tally of unemployment before Election Day. Maria Bartiromo is the host of Closing Bell on CNBC. Maria, good morning. [On screen headline: "Jobs, Jobs, Jobs, Is Higher Unemployment The New Normal?"] MARIA BARTIROMO: Hey Willie, good to see you. GEIST: Good to see you. We’ve already gotten some early indications of what we’ll see later this morning, what are you expecting? BARTIROMO: Well I’m expecting some job creation from the private sector, but it will be offset, likely, by a loss of jobs from government, the Census workers continue to be cut as that program winds down. So once again we’re going to see basically flat growth in jobs. And it’s not a great story, because we continue to see unemployment at a major issue for businesses and for the economy. GEIST: And we’ve seen this month after month now. The Nobel prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz saying yesterday, look higher unemployment may just be the new normal in this country. Do you agree with that? We just have to get used to this? BARTIROMO: Well I definitely think we are in a new normal. I think you have to have expectations of much lower growth levels in the United States, relative to the rest of the world. Because outside the U.S. is really where the vibrancy is happening right now. I think businesses managers today are very reluctant to add heads to the payroll, because they’re looking at 2011, expecting higher health care expenses, expecting higher taxes. And they saying, “Look if I add new people, that comes with new benefits packages that I have to pay for.” So they’re basically in lockdown, it’s a story, it’s a story which, in some cases, is a vicious cycle.

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Jerry Brown calls Meg Whitman a “whore ” over pension reform (AUDIO). October 8, 2010 by randyedye. In a private conversation that was inadvertently taped by a voicemail machine (audio below), an associate of Democratic gubernatorial …

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US Federal Trade Commission Proposes Update To "Green Guides"

FTC Green Guides logo. Image credit:Federal Trade Commission. The long overdue FTC updated guidance – the “Green Guides – on what is appropriate for those making ‘environmental product claims’ is by no means a stretch change from the old guidance. The Commission’s Proposed Revisions To Green Guides sidestepped the questions of what it means to have a product that is “natural” or “sustainable.” Mr. Natural gets to keep on truckin.’ On the other hand, the FTC’s Draft Guidance revisions do cover important new ground. Green claims will never be the same. As reported to me by the pre… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Iowahawk invites us all to Carbon Action Day on 10-10-10: Dear Reader: Good news! This coming

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Gaikai game streaming service on target to launch in December, with all ‘major publishers’ signed on

The OnLive gaming service may be free now , but that doesn’t mean that others aren’t gunning for its members. Similarly fee-free competitor Gaikai was announced back in July and was initially said to be launching in September. However, the plan apparently wasn’t to launch in September, rather to be done in September, which Dave Perry is insisting they are. The company is now just waiting to finalize some publishing deals before sending out invites to members in 60 days. Those won’t be a sort of public beta like OnLive went through , with Perry saying “There will be no ‘you’re in a beta.’ It’ll just be ‘go ahead and play.’” EA is still the only big fish the company has hooked thus far, but Gaikai officers expect to have “all the major games publishers” onboard by the end of the year. Say what you like, you can’t knock their optimism. Gaikai game streaming service on target to launch in December, with all ‘major publishers’ signed on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 14:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Biofuel’s Bumpy Road: Algae’s Still Over the Horizon, There’s Lots More Sustainable Palm Oil + The Ups & Downs Of Bioelectricity, Feedstocks & Birds

photo: Kevin / Creative Commons The biofuel craze passed a while ago and more sober assessments of their promises and problems took over, but that doesn’t mean by a long shot that there isn’t plenty of interesting ongoing work being done. Here’s just a sampling of what’s gone on just this week trying to turn plants into power:… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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JVC introduces SP-A230 and SP-A1M: portable speakers for portable players

We’d tell you these things are probably too easy to lose, but it probably matters not — after all, you’ve already been suckered into buying one based on how insanely janky / adorable it is. JVC has just introduced the SP-A230 and SP-A1M portable speakers , with the former being shown above. That guy is a bar-styled stereo unit with a pair of 30mm drivers, a brain-melting 160mW x 2 of power and a 3.5mm auxiliary cable for connecting to any ‘ole PMP. The A1M ships with a single 30mm driver and relies on a pair of AAA batteries, compared with a pair of AA batteries necessary on the larger A230. Pricing remains elusive, but you can expect ‘em in a variety of colors this November… well, in Japan at least. JVC introduces SP-A230 and SP-A1M: portable speakers for portable players originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 13:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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From The Corner : Throughout the country, accusations have flown that Democratic operatives have secretly been backing faux tea party candidates in an effort to siphon away votes from Republican challengers. A South Jersey newspaper delivers the goods on just such an effort in New Jersey’s Third Congressional race. The Courier Post reports that campaign and legislative staff from Democratic Congressman John Adler, assisted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, have concocted a plan to siphon off votes from Republican challenger, former Philadelphia Eagle offensive lineman, Jon Runyan. Dems have recruited and collected enough signatures (apparently they only needed 100) to get an unknown Mount Laurel picture framer on the ballot as the “New Jersey tea party” candidate. The paper reports that the goal of the plan was to confuse voters and siphon off about 5 percent of Runyan’s support, enough to preserve the seat in a tight race. People who support the Tea Party tend to pay attention, so hopefully this fraud won’t take voters away from the Republican. In this political environment the fake Tea Party guy may actually take some moderate independent votes from the Democrat, people who don’t like where the Democrats are going but can’t bring themselves to vote for a Republican. The whole thing could backfire on the Dems.

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