Best Buy Will Now Send a Salesperson To Your House To Sell You Things

An anonymous reader writes: Starting next month, Best Buy will launch a free service where salespeople will come to your house to make recommendations about gadgets and services to try and sell you stuff. The service has been in testing in five markets and will be expanded to more cities around the U.S., according to the Associated Press. The Verge reports: “Best Buy has found that shoppers spend more money when at home than in store. CEO Hubert Joly says the in-house service is one way the company will open up ‘latent’ customer demand. Sales associates are responsible for promoting the service — when customers ask about certain products, the salesperson will suggest an in-home visit. The topics discussed during the home visits usually involve recommendations for products and gadgets, and other services. Best Buy says the salespeople working in the in-home service receive hourly rates, or a salary, and not commissions. The company already operates a ‘Geek Squad’ facility, but that’s a paid service that offers repairs and installations.”

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Source: Slashdot – Best Buy Will Now Send a Salesperson To Your House To Sell You Things

Best Buy plans to send sales consultants to more homes this fall

Best Buy, the company that’ll sell you overpriced HDMI cables and charge a premium for making basic adjustments to your TV, wants to put its sales people in more houses. The Associated Press reports that the expanded service will be free, and this fa…

Source: Engadget – Best Buy plans to send sales consultants to more homes this fall

Why Does Fitbit's New Watch Skip a Feature Fans Were Clamoring For?

I’m a big Apple Watch user, and every time I strap on a Fitbit, I run into the same problem. Instead of opening the Fitbit app to look at my heart rate and sleep cycle, I open Apple Health and then am immediately disappointed because none of the data from my Fitbit actually syncs with Apple Health. Which means it…

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Source: Gizmodo – Why Does Fitbit’s New Watch Skip a Feature Fans Were Clamoring For?

How to Change Your Voice to Sound More Confident

We all know that being seen as confident, but not cocky, at work can have a positive effect on our careers. From one-on-one meeting with your boss to giving a presentation to the whole team, your voice is one of the most important parts of project confidence. Here’s how to adjust your voice so that how you say…

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Change Your Voice to Sound More Confident

Power Use, RAM + Boot Times With Unity, Xfce, GNOME, LXDE, Budgie & KDE Plasma

One of the first follow-on requests from this morning’s Razer Blade Stealth Linux testing was for on top of all the other data-sets shared in that article to also look at the RAM usage, battery power draw, and boot times for the different desktop options on Ubuntu 17.04. As the request came in from a Phoronix Premium supporter, I jumped on that and here are some of those numbers.

Source: Phoronix – Power Use, RAM + Boot Times With Unity, Xfce, GNOME, LXDE, Budgie & KDE Plasma

Trump Administration Hires Former DeVry Dean to Run Unit Inspired by DeVry's Bad Behavior

Let’s imagine you’re the Trump administration’s secretary of education, Betsy DeVos. Sure, people don’t like you. They really don’t like you. But you’ve got an opportunity to hire an official who will stand up for working class Americans and crack down on for-profit schools that exploit their students. What would you…

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Source: Gizmodo – Trump Administration Hires Former DeVry Dean to Run Unit Inspired by DeVry’s Bad Behavior

Researchers create a new fusion recipe that boosts energy output

Nuclear fusion is an attractive way to create energy. It generates hardly any waste, doesn’t pollute the planet and takes advantage of elements that we have plenty of. But fusion takes a lot of work and the energy payout isn’t yet at the level that m…

Source: Engadget – Researchers create a new fusion recipe that boosts energy output

Official Blade Runner 2036 Short Film Bridges the Gap Between the Sequel and the Original

Between the events of Blade Runner and Blade Runner 2049, much has happened in the dystopian, neo-Los Angeles future, including the era of replicant prohibition. To help bridge the first Blade Runner, which was released in 1982, with Blade Runner 2049, director Luke Scott has created a short film (YouTube) that examines Niander Wallace’s role in the decision to overturn the prohibition ruling. From an article, shared by several readers: As explained by Blade Runner 2049 director Denis Villeneuve in the introduction for this video, he invited a few filmmakers to create three shorts that set the stage for his film. Blade Runner 2036: Nexus Dawn was directed by Luke Scott, and it reveals that Replicant technology was outlawed in the intervening years. That can’t be considered too much of a surprise, considering the Replicants of 2019 were able to elude conventional detection. The short officially introduces Jared Leto’s Niander Wallace, as he makes a personal request to repeal the anti-Replicant laws. In reality, Wallace had no intention of abiding by those rules, and he’s already created at least one new Replicant whom he describes as an “angel.” Intriguingly, Wallace argues that the new Replicants are necessary for humanity’s survival in the off-world colonies, and he promises that his Replicants will never rebel and will only obey. But we’ve heard that promise before! And it never ends well.

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Source: Slashdot – Official Blade Runner 2036 Short Film Bridges the Gap Between the Sequel and the Original

Kaspersky Lab turns the tables, forces “patent troll” to pay cash to end case

Enlarge / Eugene Kaspersky, CEO and founder of Kaspersky Lab, at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. (credit: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In October, Kaspersky Labs found itself in a situation familiar to many tech companies: it was sued (PDF) by a do-nothing patent holder in East Texas who demanded a cash settlement before it would go away.

The patent-licensing company, Wetro Lan LLC, owned US Patent No. 6,795,918, which essentially claimed an Internet firewall. The patent was filed in 2000 despite the fact that computer network firewalls date to the 1980s. The ‘918 patent was used in what the Electronic Frontier Foundation called an “outrageous trolling campaign,” in which dozens of companies were sued out of Wetro Lan’s “headquarters,” a Plano office suite that it shared with several other firms that engage in what is pejoratively called “patent-trolling.” Wetro Lan’s complaints argued that a vast array of Internet routers and switches infringed its patent.

Most companies sued by Wetro Lan apparently reached settlements within a short time, a likely indicator of low-value settlement demands. Not a single one of the cases even reached the claim construction phase. But Kaspersky wouldn’t pay up.

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Source: Ars Technica – Kaspersky Lab turns the tables, forces “patent troll” to pay cash to end case

Expensive Pet Foods Aren't Any Healthier Than Cheap Ones

Pet food aisles are full of packages that claim to hold “natural” and “holistic” foods, with pictures of fresh vegetables and roast chicken on the front. But there’s not much difference between these foods and the cheapest by-product-filled kibble. Here’s what you can expect to find in your pet’s food.

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Source: LifeHacker – Expensive Pet Foods Aren’t Any Healthier Than Cheap Ones

Freaky Deaky: Video Of A Monarch Caterpillar Forming Its Chrysalis

monarch-caterepillar-making-cocoon.jpg

This is a video of a monarch caterpillar forming its chrysalis in anticipation of metamorphosing into a beautiful butterfly. It’s weird how all its stripes come off. You know, I wish I could hang out in a cocoon for two weeks straight and emerge a butterfly. Unfortunately, I can’t, although I did zip myself up in a sleeping bag for over 60 hours once with nothing but a bag of Bugles and an empty Gatorade bottle (wide mouth) to pee in. Sadly, I did not emerge a butterfly, just a really dehydrated version of myself with Bugle fingers.

Keep going for the video.

Source: Geekologie – Freaky Deaky: Video Of A Monarch Caterpillar Forming Its Chrysalis

'Nexus Dawn' explores story leading up to 'Blade Runner 2049'

Blade Runner 2049 picks up 30 years after the classic original movie, but what happened in the interim? Denis Villenueve, the sequel’s director, tapped three creators to make short films exploring the events between the films. Watch the first one, 20…

Source: Engadget – ‘Nexus Dawn’ explores story leading up to ‘Blade Runner 2049’

A Fascinating Potential Link Between Gut Bacteria and Health

These days, you can’t throw a rock without hitting some start-up trying to boost our microbiomes. For the health-obsessed, microbiome has become the buzzword of the day. That’s because it’s becoming ever-clearer that all the trillions of microorganisms that inhabit our bodies, and particularly our gut, play an…

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Source: Gizmodo – A Fascinating Potential Link Between Gut Bacteria and Health

Bain Capital Brings In Apple For Bid On Toshiba Chip Unit

In a last-ditch offer Bain Capital has brought in Apple Inc to help bolster it’s bid for Toshiba’s flash memory unit. Toshiba has been trying to sell it’s flash memory unit to cover billions in losses at its bankrupt U.S nuclear business Westinghouse. The revised offer is worth $18.2 billion (2 trillion Yen), with SK Hynix responsible for the majority. A Western Digital-led consortium has offered 1.9 trillion yen, which Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry has encouraged Toshiba to accept. The company needs to raise the money by March to avoid seeing its shares delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The auction has been complicated by legal action from Western Digital, which has argued it should have a say in any sale because of its partnership with Toshiba in the chips business.



I have to agree with Western Digital, following their purchase of SanDisk in 2016 they jointly own the NAND design and manufacturing facilities. Hopefully this gets sorted out quickly, and starts to get NAND flash prices back down.

In the past week, Toshiba’s banks have stepped up pressure to reach final terms by Thursday, so that it can complete the sale by March, people familiar with the matter have said. Western Digital Chief Executive Officer Steve Milligan also returned to Japan to work on the deal, they said. But Toshiba and Western Digital remain at odds over several points.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Bain Capital Brings In Apple For Bid On Toshiba Chip Unit

Dumbest "Gaming Rig" Ever Built

Friends don’t let friends drive drunk, and friends don’t let friends get screwed out of their hard earned cash buying a “gaming rig” like this. While Derek Kessler of Windows Central thinks this is the “most impressive production gaming PC” he has ever seen, I take issue with that. First, let’s start with the fact that no “gaming rig” needs nor in fact wants an Intel Core i9 processor with 10 to 18 cores. You know as well as I do that all those cores do dick for you in gaming, and also give you a slower clock than what you would get with a healthy, and much less expensive 7700K. He also talks about installing four NVIDIA or AMD GPUs for this “gaming rig.” What a bunch of horseshit. Those configs are not even supported in gaming nowadays. Hell, RX Vega drivers currently do not even support CrossFire, much less getting into a discussion about how CrossFire and SLI seem to be moving to the gallows when we talk about support and scaling. And of course we all know we need up to 128GB of RAM for those hardcore gaming sessions. All that said, the Acer Predator 9000 specs are off the charts, but it is NOT a gaming PC. If you buy it for PC gaming, you should be kicked in the nuts, along with Acer marketing, and along with Derek Kessler for what comes across to me as a paid advertisement.

Intel tried this same line of marketing in 2011 with its Core i7-3960X. We called it horse shit then (and Intel cut us off for the first time after that), and this type of marketing is horse shit now. Hell of a workstation or rendering farm though!



Oh, and Alienware called, they want their case back! Of course Alienware never had a “faraday cage.” And come on, we were putting wheels on our LAN rigs back when my beard was not gray. Thanks to cageymaru for the linkage. And of course…epeen.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Dumbest “Gaming Rig” Ever Built

For politicians, the more data, the more they ignore

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Source: Ars Technica – For politicians, the more data, the more they ignore

PayPal Debuts a Credit Card That Offers 2% Cash Back

PayPal is turning to its old nemesis, plastic, to help it expand beyond the digital realm. From a report: The online payments venture is introducing a credit card that offers customers 2 percent cash back on purchases — one of the industry’s highest rebate rates — with no annual fee. The rewards will appear in users’ online wallets and can be spent immediately on additional PayPal purchases or transferred to a bank. The move is part of Chief Executive Officer Dan Schulman’s effort to transform PayPal from a payments button on websites into a versatile financial tool for everyday use, even in brick-and-mortar stores. He’s forged 24 deals over the past 18 months with technology and financial companies including Apple, Visa and JPMorgan Chase, looking to make PayPal ubiquitous in the lives of its 210 million customers. The company already tested the card with some of them.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – PayPal Debuts a Credit Card That Offers 2% Cash Back