Wednesday July 16, 2008 at 6:31am
Nothing like watching Charlie Rose late at night because you can't sleep, and watching two newspaper national economy beat writers throw the "D" word around. Not only did it make it harder to go to sleep, but now all the tortilla chips are gone.
Tuesday July 15, 2008 at 6:19am
What do Bud drinkers have to say?
"It saddens me that a large, truly American company has become just a fraction of a larger, homogenized global corporation," said Michael Coakley, a Bud Light drinker from Hoboken, New Jersey. "However I doubt that quality or pricing ... will change much at all."
If I had to pick the worst beer in the world, it might just be Bud Light. Not that it's the absolute worst beer - I find it grotesque but I actually have had worst - but because it is so emblematic of America's Big Corporation beer swill. Bud sucks, Miller sucks, Coors sucks, etc...
It makes me wonder... why would a Bud Light drinker even think about beer quality?
Thursday July 10, 2008 at 6:48am
I'm sure some find it heroic, and perhaps in some rare, rare cases that could be the case - such as finding the cure for a disease that kills, or stopping an asteroid from destroying the earth... but anything less than that isn't heroic, but a sad lapse of wisdom in both culture and individual.
Tuesday July 8, 2008 at 8:34am
This isn't a mood enhancer for West Virginians:
Do you think West Virginia's graduating seniors have a bright future to look forward to in this state?No, they'll have to find opportunities elsewhere 62%
Only if substantial changes are made 30%
Yes, West Virginia offers opportunities 8%
But I do kinda wonder if you'd find some negative numbers in almost any state at this time.
Thursday July 3, 2008 at 6:15am
Um, call them what they are. Tent cities.
Thursday July 3, 2008 at 5:41am
In an effort to fight dwindling conference attendance, hotels are promoting to associations that if they hold their meetings at their facility, the hotel will provide each guest a $10 (or similar amount) gas card for every night they stay.
Wednesday July 2, 2008 at 6:22am
Actually, platinum, and thieves know it.
The Marion County Sheriff's Office continues to investigate the stealing of Catalytic converter from vehicles, as several more have come up missing.
Chuck Whitehead had eight converters, two chain saws and a chain hoist stolen from his property last weekend, estimated about $2,000 worth of goods. He said they used bolt cutters to cut the chain at his gate sometime between 7 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday, when he discovered his gate open.Catalytic converters have been installed under cars since the mid-1970s. They use a small amount of platinum, palladium and rhodium to convert harmful engine emissions, including nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide, into less harmful ones, like nitrogen and carbon dioxide.
Platinum's value can be up to $2,075 an ounce. A catalytic converter contains between three and seven grams of platinum. This recent price spike is largely the result of fears of mine closures due to power cutbacks in South Africa, which controls some 80 percent of the world's platinum output. Smaller amounts of palladium and rhodium are also used as catalysts and they are running about $445 and $7,300 an ounce, respectively.
The average converter brings at least $100. Replacing a catalytic converter can cost about $300 to $1,000. Bigger cars and SUVs make inviting targets, as they can have two converters or even four converters.
Monday June 30, 2008 at 10:40am
We all need to start realizing where we are as a society, and how every one of us has responsibility in the mess we've made. I think that's probably started, but we're early on in the stages of grief relating to our energy abuse. It's mostly the blame of others state - politicians, oil companies, oil countries, the news media - and not of ourselves, not of our lack of thought and vision into how the world was and is expanding, how wasteful we have been of relatively cheap energy. ALL OF US. I'm a sinner as well as you, perhaps more than you, in the scope of this point. But it is not too late for us, and particularly, it is not too late for the next generation.
We have to get past the grief of the passing of cheap energy for an unprioritized lifestyle. This will take some leadership. The institutions that provide that leadership - that reteach Americans how to create a life they consider wealthy regardless of the cost of gasoline - will be the institutions of tomorrow. There are opportunities for the institutions of today for that leadership. Clearly, science and educational institutions are part of that. But there are opportunities for local government, for community organizations, for churches, for neighborhoods, in the retrenchment of our values.
But we must get past the grief.
Saturday June 28, 2008 at 6:43am
Interesting post about the whims of the Google AdWords marketplace...
Preferential PricingGetting your account Google slapped is a well known phrase amongst many affiliate marketers. One day your ads are going great, and then the next day every keyword has a minimum bid of $5 or $10 per click.
I guess I really don't understand what is going on with Google's pricing. I have a regional purchase for the term "Camp Hill", it's not that effective but it's worth a shot. It keeps going up in price per clickthru - today my ad is inactive for search because I'm refusing to pay the new price of $1.00 per clickthru.
What I don't understand is why that is the price. There's ONE ADVERTISEMENT currently on that keyword. What is the deal? Market demand couldn't be responsible for the increase from twenty cents to 1 dollar per clickthru. What up with that, Google?
Saturday June 21, 2008 at 6:01am
APTA has an online calculator that will help you compare the price of using public transportation with the price of paying at the pump and then parking your car in town, set with default values based on national averages for June, 2008.
Friday June 20, 2008 at 6:19am
These emails I get from Countrywide, they would be funny if they weren't so pathetic...
XXXXX, exciting news — we're offering a Special Online Discount1 only to select customers.We've reviewed your account. Because you have kept your account current, made consistent payments during the past year, maintained a good loan-to-value ratio, and because your loan and property type meet our lending profile, we invite you to call 1-800-XXX-XXXX to see if you qualify to refinance.
Don't wait. Learn more about our wide variety of refinance programs — if you qualify, you may discover how a new refinance loan could:
* Allow you to save now with this Special Online Discount. * Reduce your monthly payments and interest rate for the life of the loan. * Give you access to extra cash from your available home equity to use however you wish. * Have a shorter term, saving up to thousands of dollars in interest payments over the life of the loan.
In theory, we could reduce the interest rate on the mortgage a bit, but perhaps a quarter percent at best. It's not worth it at this point to do this, and they know that. This is completely driven by their needs, not my mine.
Sunday June 15, 2008 at 6:45am
Okay, I promise I'm going to drop the ice cream truck blogging. I know, I seem obsessed, I'm really not but I do find the whole little niche industry somewhat interesting. I actually had my first job - if you want to call it that - on an ice cream truck. I worked three days before I realized how bad the deal was going to be for me as an "employee" (how profit and cost were split) and quit.
Anyway, I ran into this website that sells ice cream trucks. It's not the fanciest web site in the world, but I guess I didn't realize there was such a business and trade.
Friday June 13, 2008 at 5:44am
Is the music REALLY that annoying? Doesn't bother me...
But in Dearborn Heights, after complaints from anonymous residents, city leaders are looking to silence the ice cream man, saying the nursery rhymes from trucks are too noisy.On Tuesday, the City Council is expected to adopt an ordinance that will allow ice cream vendors to ring bells only while they are selling their goods.
Using loud music on the trucks to attract ice cream lovers has been a point of contention in many communities in Metro Detroit.
And it's not isolated in Michigan...
Wilmington City Councilman Samuel Prado is getting an ice cream headache from those mobile vendors who blare tunes from their trucks.
He says some ice cream trucks are roaming neighborhoods and blaring their jingles at 11 p.m., while people are trying to sleep.
Prado say it happens every summer and he intends to keep making his own noise about the situation at council meetings until something gets down.
The city has a law that requires ice cream truck drivers to stop the music when they pull over to make a sale, and to refrain from using music after 9 p.m. Prado says he wants to know how the city will enforce the law.
Grumpy.
Thursday June 12, 2008 at 9:43am
Are they on the increase?
Kansas: Ice-cream truck driver thwarts armed robbery
Delaware: Ice cream truck driver robbed on street
You have to feel sorry for the ice cream truck drivers. They're losing their wallet at the gas pump, too.
For the ice-cream man, it might be time to dump his traditional Pop Goes the Weasel ditty with something more fitting, such as Stormy Weather. The mobile vendors are among the many gasoline-dependent service companies that are watching profits melt away.Whether the business is Bomb Pops, pizza delivery or lawn care, managers face the same question: How much of the fuel bill should be passed along to customers?
"We're still able to operate, but it definitely eats into profits," said Dale Lack, owner of Polar Bear Ice Cream in Columbus.
His company operates 17 ice-cream trucks, with the drivers sharing in the costs and the profits.
Thursday June 12, 2008 at 6:34am
Speeding up. They're even being stolen now.
It costs Cheryl Norris just $6 to $8 a month to fill up the vehicle she uses to get to work, run small errands, go to church and even to visit her mother across town."I fill up about once every three weeks," she said. "That's it."
For about two years, weather permitting, the Lafayette woman has favored riding a Tomos mo-ped, or motorized bicycle, not her car with a 15-gallon tank.
Norris said the scooter gets between 80 and 100 miles a gallon, saving her about $120 a month in fuel costs.
As the price of gasoline -- a gallon of regular unleaded hit a national high of $4 this past weekend -- continues to climb, so does the demand for the fuel-efficient scooters, some Lafayette-area retailers say.
Action Motor Sports typically has between 30 and 40 motorized bikes available for purchase.
On Tuesday, that number was 10, general manager J.D. Corey said.
"We've seen a big increase in scooter sales over the last 90 days," he said. "Motorcycles also. But it's the scooters that are becoming a rare item."
Wednesday June 11, 2008 at 5:05am
Animals don’t sign contracts to be hired as family pets, but they probably wouldn’t mind the extra security. Pets increasingly are becoming victims of increasing home foreclosures and a tight economy.“Our most common reason why people turn in animals is because they are moving, but it’s safe to say that they might be moving because of big housing problems,” St. Cloud Tri-County Humane Society director Vicki Davis said. “I had three in a row in a matter of three or four days of people who lost their home and were evicted and couldn’t afford their pets anymore.”
Tri-County Humane Society has seen a 6 percent increase in the number of animals it received as of Monday compared with the same time period last year, and it’s not even the busy season, Davis said.
Davis isn’t the only shelter director experiencing an upswing in surrendered pets.
Petfinder.com recently conducted a survey of its adoptable pet database that has more than 11,000 member animal rescue groups nationwide.
About half of the 1,055 animal shelters and rescue groups that replied had pets surrendered to them in the past six months because of a home foreclosure.
Monday June 9, 2008 at 5:04am
So how much do you know about hypermiling, and how it can save you gas dollars?
Sunday June 8, 2008 at 7:41am
Less trucks means less delivered stuff...
High fuel prices are taking semis off the road.With diesel surpassing $4 a gallon, trucking operations as small as one person and as large as 1,000 drivers are closing down and parking their semis.
"In the first quarter of 2008, more than 1,000 companies declared bankruptcy," said Steve Schuster, the president of trucking company Schuster Co. in Le Mars.
Last week, the national average for a gallon of diesel was $4.70. The 2007 yearly average was $2.77. A nearly 100 percent increase is a tough bullet to bite, especially with rigs that get six miles to the gallon.
"When it costs 75-80 cents per mile just in fuel, that adds up very fast," said Schuster, whose fleet includes 300 semi-tractors.
Saturday June 7, 2008 at 6:48am
If you don't get rid of it now, you're probably not going to be able to sell it...
Pickup trucks and SUVs are hurting. In May sales numbers, the Ford F-150 was knocked from its perch as the best-selling vehicle in the U.S., and sent reeling all the way to the fifth spot. A glut of SUVs sits on used car lots, almost unsellable in today's market.The New York Times reports that large trucks and SUVS that were "the first generation of mass-market …to approach the six-figure mark" in price are now selling for "much closer to $50,000."
Brent Robinson, sales manager of a GM dealership in Minnesota, told the Toronto Star "We haven't had anyone crack the door on a Yukon or a Denali in 30 days."
Is the death knell of the gas guzzler here?
Friday June 6, 2008 at 5:23am
Stupid and painful ways to run (and close) a business:
Two Hardee’s restaurants — one in west Davenport and one in Aledo, Ill. — were closed abruptly Monday, apparently as part of a corporate refranchising effort.According to employees at the Davenport location, 2202 Rockingham Road, there was little to no notice.
“I spoke to my manager and she said she was in there working around 10:30 when (managers from other area stores) came in and told her it was being closed,” said Steve Schutters, a cook and cashier. “They started throwing all the food away and were pulling things down and packing them up.”
...
Schutters, a junior at Davenport West High School, said he is scrambling to find a new summer job now that Hardee’s has closed.
“I just got a new car and I have a $3,000 loan and I don’t know how I’m going to pay that off,” he said.
Among other employees suddenly severed was a senior citizen who lives near the store who came in each morning to make fresh biscuits, Schutters said.
“We were busy, I don’t see why they’d come in and say ‘you’re done. Clock out and leave,’” he said. “We had just hired people a week before that were supposed to start on Tuesday and they just came in and closed everything down.”
Employees deserve better than this, period.
Tuesday June 3, 2008 at 7:49am
Manufacturers are scaling back the sizes of products ranging from dog food to chewing gum.And although prices are staying about the same, if you use a product regularly, "package shrink" could hurt your wallet.
"Downsizing is decades old, but because of the economy, we are seeing more of it," said Edgar Dworsky, a former Massachusetts assistant attorney general for consumer affairs who now edits two consumer Web sites, Consumerworld.com and Mouseprint.org.
I wish there was a web site that tracked consumer product sizes over time, something like an inflation index on price but a deflation index on quantity.
Monday June 2, 2008 at 7:17am
In a tough economic environment, thrift stores are seeing people they've never seen before all over the country, said Adele Meyer, executive director of the National Association of Resale & Thrift Shops."There's just an influx of customers coming into retail thrift stores for the first time, who are becoming more cautious in their spending," she said.
Resale stores, which include more than 25,000 thrift and consignment businesses, have increased in number of stores by 5 percent annually in recent years, and will continue to grow, according to the association. That's a sharp contrast to other national retailers that are laying off employees and closing stores because people are shopping less.
"This is a recession-proof industry. ... It's natural to turn to consignment and thrift stores where they can get quality goods for their dollars," Meyer said.
Another change in the $200-billion-a-year industry, she said, is that new donors are showing up who need the tax write-off to make ends meet. "They may donate things they would have just given away."
Thursday May 29, 2008 at 6:50am
Garbage trucks eat a lot of fuel.
A daily gas bill for Kevin and Dawn Wright averages about $3,200.The couple owns K&D Disposal Inc. in Palmyra, and that’s what it costs these days to keep their fleet of 13 garbage trucks on the road.
Six months ago, their daily gas bill averaged around $2,100. Eighteen months ago, it was about $1,700 — or close to half of what it is now.
“It’s terrible — it really is,” said Kevin, seated in the small office in the back of a giant pole barn at the business’ Garnsey Road headquarters. “That’s our biggest thing, and it is for everybody. It’s the fuel.”
Think the mileage on an SUV is bad? Each of the Wrights’ giant garbage trucks gets a wee two-and-a-half to three miles for a single gallon of diesel, which last week was up to $4.89.
It’s not just the size of the trucks that makes the miles-to-fuel ratio so dismal, it’s the fact that garbage trucks are stop-and-go, stop-and-go. They’ve got 75-gallon tanks, and by day’s end, about 50 gallons have been spent.
Saturday May 24, 2008 at 7:27am
How will the art gallery survive?
First Fridays at Fusion Art Gallery have been among the most popular events in the downtown Bentonville area since the art supply store and gallery venue opened its doors in 2005. The first Friday of every month, a new exhibition featuring local artists opened - and Fusion's doors opened to masses of art enthusiasts. It was a monthly celebration of not only original art, but local art.But the First Friday event scheduled for June 6, which will feature every artist that's even shown at Fusion, will be the last. Owner Cindy Suter recently made the decision to close Fusion Art Gallery for good.
"It's going to be difficult," Suter said of closing the business. "When the economy is struggling the way it is, artwork, galleries and art supplies are normally the first to go. People have to buy groceries, put gas in their car and pay their mortgages. We've clearly felt the effect of what's going on in the economy today."
Thursday May 22, 2008 at 6:41am
I'd be curious to see if, ten years later, this has changed.
Percent of Trips by Travel Mode (all trip purposes) |
|||||
| Country | bicycle | walking | public transit | car | other |
| Netherlands | 30 | 18 | 5 | 45 | 2 |
| Denmark | 20 | 21 | 14 | 42 | 3 |
| Germany | 12 | 22 | 16 | 49 | 1 |
| Switzerland | 10 | 29 | 20 | 38 | 1 |
| Sweden | 10 | 39 | 11 | 36 | 4 |
| Austria | 9 | 31 | 13 | 39 | 8 |
| England/Wales | 8 | 12 | 14 | 62 | 4 |
| France | 5 | 30 | 12 | 47 | 6 |
| Italy | 5 | 28 | 16 | 42 | 9 |
| Canada | 1 | 10 | 14 | 74 | 1 |
| United States | 1 | 9 | 3 | 84 | 3 |
| Source: John Pucher, Transportation Quarterly, 98-1 (from various transport ministries and depts., latest avail. year) | |||||
Wednesday May 21, 2008 at 3:11pm
And in the light of the information marketplace, it ought to be called idiocy.
Its creators admit it is the ultimate in decadence: a $175 hamburger.The Wall Street Burger Shoppe just raised its price from $150 to assure its designation as the costliest burger in the city as determined by Pocket Change, an online newsletter about the most expensive things in New York.
"Wall Street has good days and bad days. We wanted to have the everyday burger (for $4) ... and then something special if you really have a good day on Wall Street," said co-owner Heather Tierney.
Hey, you want to know what I want? A federal 50% sales tax on any restaurant item that costs over $150. If these people are stupid enough to waste their money like this, at least somebody ought to benefit besides a marketplace that promotes such excess.
Monday May 19, 2008 at 7:43am
Most of the suggestions listed in the article "How consumers can cut their grocery bills" are painfully obvious to anyone who spends more than a couple of times each year doing grocery shopping, but at least the writer didn't recommend going to more restaurants.
Friday May 16, 2008 at 1:22pm
I'm going to have to take The UPS Store up on this for our mailbox service.
Call-in MailCheck® Save time. Save a trip. Call us to find out if you have mail.
It's just not worth going down there if the mailbox is going to be empty.



